Belsay Awakes

Belsay Awakes: Latest Updates

Keep up to date with our major conservation project, Belsay Awakes. From the progress on the gardens, led by Dan Pearson, to the conservation of the hall and the steps we’re taking to make Belsay more accessible, follow this exciting project. Belsay Hall, the castle and gardens will all remain open throughout the project and you can get involved via our Conservation in Action activities. 

Thanks to National Lottery players and a grant of £3.4 million from The National Lottery Heritage Fund we are delighted to be transforming the visitor experience at Belsay Hall, Castle and Gardens.

July to September 2023

Belsay Awakes is complete!

After two years of hard work, the new Wild Man themed woodland play area and Coach House café next to the Castle is now open! New information has been installed throughout the grounds, castle and hall telling Belsay and its past inhabitants’ stories, including a projected animation inside the castle.

Access throughout Belsay has been hugely improved with new paths and a ramp into the castle. The Kennels has been converted into a Learning Space for visiting school and community groups and new resources for teachers are now live here.

Come along and see it for yourself!

January to June 2023

Car park, café and play progress

Construction work has focused on the castle area of the site. The once ruined Coach House that will become a new café was given foundations, a new roof, windows and floor. Underfloor heating, photovoltaic and solar panels and air source heat pumps will give this building a sustainable focus. Large play equipment has been installed in the new Wild Man themed woodland play area, with toddler play, an accessible path network and an outdoor classroom all awaiting completion. New access ramps have been installed at doorways into the Castle too.

A new car park opened for Easter and was built in the paddock near the Hall, giving much needed surfaced and additional accessible parking bays. This allows the area around the Hall to be a landscaped, greener space for visitors. This was completed once the scaffolding was removed from the tearoom after it was reroofed, leaving only the gardener’s yard new roof to be finished.

We’ve hosted a range of wildlife and garden themed events, and created training opportunities for site staff and volunteers, as a big part of the project involves people development opportunities as well as conservation repairs and construction.

The new visitor facilities are due to open later this summer.

October to December 2022

Construction and festive fun

As the work on the main hall ended and the scaffolding came down, other works began. The north wing of the Hall was clad in scaffolding as it’s time for it to get a new roof reusing the existing Westmorland slate. The new car park, located in the paddock, is also underway, along with key conservation repairs in the Castle, including pointing and masonry repairs. New access ramps into the Castle were installed. The gardening team also began work in Hall Wood and the winter garden.

Autumn and the festive season saw some fun activities for our visitors, including an autumnal tree trail and festive wreath making workshops!

May to September 2022

Key conservation repairs plus tours, events and activities

Reroofing the Hall was a key part of the project. The work involved replacing the existing unsuitable Welsh Green slate with Burlington Blue and reusing the historic Westmorland slate. The work was shown to over 2,000 visitors who took part in conservation in action, hard hat, scaffolding tours delivered by a team of newly trained volunteers. Participants also made the most of the Wild Man scaffolding slide as an option of returning to ground level post tour, as did over 28,000 visitors! 

Behind the Closed Door tours took visitors into the servants quarters of the Hall (a previously inaccessible area) to look at the conservation work involved with Belsay’s collection. Events, including Workshops at the Conservation in Action campervan and Be a Belsay Builder day where families could join in with construction tasks through have a go stations and play, also took place.

November 2021 to April 2022

Construction begins!

Assembly of the scaffolding on the Hall started, luckily, the day after the site was hit by Storm Arwen, and took two and a half months to build. It’s an immense structure that is free standing (not attached to the building) with 28 miles of scaffolding tubing, held together by 28,000 clips and sleeves and weighs more than the Statue of Liberty! Nine giant roof trusses were built in the car park and lifted by a giant crane allowing a weather proof seal to be created so the stripping of the roof could begin.

There was a huge amount of collections care conservation work carried out in the Hall too by a team of volunteers, our conservator and curator. Sorting, cataloguing, cleaning and treatments took place on architectural items like fireplaces, fire extinguishers, doors, wallpaper and more!

Work also began on the Coach House next to the Castle, beginning its transformation into a café and toilets for visitors. With no foundations and an asbestos roof, this was the start of a mammoth task.

January to October 2021

Garden redesign and access improvements

Following a new design created by celebrity garden designer and plantsman Dan Pearson, the garden team cleared and replanted the Lower Terrace, Magnolia Terrace, Yew Garden, Hall Wood and the meadow area in the east quarry. The planting aims to extend the seasons with a range of plants that will flower over a longer period of time and adding a sea of colour.

Access improvement works were also undertaken to open up historic views and areas of Crag Wood (owned and managed by Belsay Estate), upgrading the visitor toilet block to include a changing places facility and adding a new access for all path leading from in front of the Hall to the Lower Terrace.

Thank you

We would like to thank The National Lottery Heritage Fund, Garfield Weston Foundation, The Foyle Foundation, Historic Houses Foundation, The Catherine Cookson Charitable Trust and other generous supporters.

A project made possible thanks to a £3.4m grant from The National Lottery Heritage Fund.

Please visit The National Lottery Heritage fund website

Follow @HeritageFundUK on TwitterFacebook and Instagram and use hashtag #NationalLotteryHeritageFund

'step into englands story