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Working in Partnership 23 rd March 2017 David Stuart Historic Places Adviser [email protected]

Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser [email protected]

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Page 1: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Working in Partnership

23rd March 2017

David Stuart – Historic Places Adviser

[email protected]

Page 2: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Agenda

Role of Historic England

Heritage – what it is and why it matters

Heritage and regeneration

Cases/projects

Page 3: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

….champion and look after the historic environment,

providing expert advice, helping people protect and care

for it, and helping the public to understand and

enjoy it…

Our role is to…

Page 4: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Egan Wheel Heritage Pizza

Heritage and Sustainability

Page 5: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

• Built heritage tourism

= £5.1 billion of GDP

in 2011 - £1.2 billion

in the SW in 2013.

• Repair and

maintenance on

historic buildings =

£4.1 billion of GDP in

2010 - £974m in the

SW in 2015

Headline Figures – National

Stats:

Heritage & the Economy

Page 6: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Heritage and Society

• Plays an important part in our

wellbeing and quality of life –

93% of residents say that local

heritage has an impact on their

personal quality of life.

• Improves places – 80% of

people think local heritage

makes their area a better place

to live.

• Is viewed positively by the

general public – Nearly all

adults (95%) agree or strongly

agree that it is important to them

that heritage buildings and

places are well looked after.

Page 7: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

• Individual assets

• Places - to work, live

and visit

• Local distinctiveness

• USP/Competitiveness

• An underpinning &

holistic consideration

which adds value

Heritage

Page 8: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Best Places to Live in

Britain

• Bristol – 2017 winner

• Falmouth – voted

overall winner

• Slice of history/local

character

• Long established

communities

• Scattering of modern

additions

Page 9: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Hidden Restaurants – Clifton

Lido

Page 10: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

High Streets

• Change in role

• Decline in retail

performance

• Shift to leisure and food

and drink

• More discerning

audience

• Emphasis on Quality

and Experience

Page 11: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Other High Streets in the SW

Page 12: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Place Branding

• Place branding is a holistic and strategic concept

that focuses on developing, communicating and

managing the perception of a place.

• Place branding targets the perception and

reputation of place in the eyes of residents,

businesses, investors, workers, visitors and the

wider public.

• Organisations use brands to help consumers

identify their products and services and to

differentiate them from competitors.

Page 13: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

HERITAGE AND PLACE

BRANDING

Distinctive places prosper

“Every place must identify its strongest, most distinctive features and develop them or run the

risk of being all things to all persons and nothing special to any. […] Livability is not a

middle-class luxury. It is an economic imperative.”

Robert Solow, Economist and Nobel laureate, in Economics of Uniqueness (2012)

Page 14: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Place Branding

The number of BIDs and other

local place-making

organisations is growing in the

UK. As they grow and mature,

the role of heritage in place-

making and place branding will

also grow.

Page 15: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Place branding researchConsultants researched the way Business Improvement

Districts (BIDs) use heritage in local place branding

• Heritage is used extensively by BIDS in local place branding (images, canvas for events)

• 80% agreed heritage important to visitor perceptions

• 89% felt heritage has an important role in place image/identity

• 51% BIDS rated heritage important to their objectives

Page 16: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Place branding research

Main benefits:

• Heritage assets help differentiate places (!!)

• Heritage provides an authenticity to place brand which has wide appeal

• Heritage can extend ‘dwell time’, esp local visitors

Page 17: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

What Historic England can

do for you - Resources

• Guidance/Publications

• Advice

• Research

• Evidence/Information

• Campaigning

• Partnerships/Sharing

• Funding -

• Building repair

• Area enhancement

• Consultants

• Training

• Capacity Building

• Events

• Project Management

• Heritage Action Zones

Page 18: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Falmouth HERS

• 3 years 2001 – 4

• Linked to community

strategy & other initiatives

• Building Repair & Public

Realm

• £930k common fund

• LAs £225k

• ERDF £362k

• SRB £150k

• EH £190k

Page 19: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

• 20 buildings improved

• 1005 sqm of underused

residential/commercial floor space

returned to productive use

• 84.10 sqm additional extra commercial

floor space generated

• 4829 sqm of commercial/residential

space improved

• 51 habitable rooms improved

• 7 vacant commercial buildings brought

back into use

• 3 residential buildings brought back into

use

• 8 new shop fronts

Falmouth HERS

Page 20: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

• 28 SME’s assisted

• 10 Opes improved

• 1389 sqm of grant aided environmental

enhancements

• £544,807.80 private sector

contribution to match fund grant

applications

• £124,043.27 private investment on

improvements to grant-aided

buildings

• 35 FTE direct temporary jobs created

• 25 FTE gross direct jobs safeguarded

• 23 FTE gross direct jobs created

• £2.7 million sales generated

• £3.83 million gross sales safeguarded

• £3.17 million gross additional sales

Falmouth HERS

Page 21: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Plymouth

South Yard

Royal William Yard

City Centre

Page 22: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Masterplanning:

South Yard, Plymouth

Page 23: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

South Yard, Plymouth

Page 24: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Royal William Yard

Page 25: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Plymouth City Centre

Page 26: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Princesshay, Exeter

Page 27: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Princesshay, Exeter

Page 28: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

• CA At Risk

• Neighbourhood Plan

• BATHNES regeneration

priority

• High Street traffic and

public realm

improvements

• Joint funding of

buildings audit

Keynsham High Street

Page 29: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

They will:

• Deliver a range of services

targeted towards a historic

place

• Support productivity and

sustainable economic growth

• Focus upon working with

partners and across HE

groups

• Deliver interventions tailored

to local circumstances

What are Heritage Action

Zones?

Page 30: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Aims and Objectives

• Make more productive use of heritage assets to

support sustainable growth

• Deliver flexible response to local circumstances

• Coordinated use of resources through

partnership working

• Generate creative solutions to managing change

• Lasting legacy

Page 31: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Eligibility criteria -

Fundamentals

• be delivered through a partnership, this could consist of

public, private and third sector organisations;

• include at least one local authority partner;

• deliver opportunities for sustainable long term growth in

historic places;

• be based around local heritage assets, either designated or

undesignated; AND

• be capable of delivery within a 3-5 year time frame.

Page 32: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Weston-super-Mare HAZ

• To complement town centre regeneration agenda

• Begin with evidence gathering by HE Research and

Listing teams to then:

• Inform a review of existing heritage designations

• Identify areas in need of investment & deliver eg shops

• Set up joint initiatives to optimise outcomes

• Scope opportunities for positive change eg development

• Enhance the policy & management regime

• Foster better understanding of heritage value

• Encourage celebration and promotion

• Generate a sustainably legacy

Page 33: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Weston

Page 34: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

• Clarity

• Consensus

• Collaboration

• Commitment

• Comprehensiveness

• Complementarity

• Coordination

• Consistency

• Concentration

• Continuity

• Communication

• Completeness

• CONFIDENCE

What we look for – The High Cs

Page 35: Working in Partnership - Local Government Association · 2017. 3. 27. · Working in Partnership 23rd March 2017 David Stuart –Historic Places Adviser david.stuart@historicengland.org.uk

Thank you!

https://www.historicengland.org.uk/