Tudor manor house undergoes major restoration work

Richard SteadNorth West
BBC Tudor-era Bramall Hall in Stockport. The image shows some of the parkland and the building surrounded in scaffolding.BBC
Bramall Hall is currently surrounded by scaffolding during the restoration work

Work to repair the roof of a timber-framed Tudor manor house has been described as "extremely challenging" by the workmen who are restoring the building.

The £1.6 million project will help secure the future of Bramall Hall, which is the only grade I-listed building in Stockport.

Luke Barlow, who leads the Under Our Roof project, said: "We try to do it using the traditional materials but every corner you turn there seems to be a new challenge because nothing is straight and there are quirky details everywhere.

"I don't know how they managed to do this 500 years ago with no machinery or lifting equipment, so to be able to do this is pretty special."

Luke Barlow on the roof of Bramall Hall in Stockport. The 36-year-old is leading the restoration project. He wears a yellow hi-vis over a dark green zipped fleece jacket.
Luke Barlow leads the restoration project to repair Bramall Hall's roof

The oldest parts of Bramall Hall date from the 1380s, when King Richard II was on the throne of England.

The building was significantly enlarged in the mid-15th Century by the Davenport family.

Today's timber-framed mansion was built during the Elizabethan era, when a second storey was added, and further alterations took place in Victorian times.

In 1936, the hall and its surrounding parkland was handed over to the local council.

One of the rooms at Bramall Hall. There is a billiard table, antique furniture and oak panels on the walls.
The restoration of Bramall Hall will fix the leaking roof and protect the antique features inside

As part of the work on the roof, Elizabethan brick chimneys have been repointed, stone slates have been replaced, centuries-old wooden timbers have been repaired, carved oak decorative finials have been installed and new guttering has been fitted.

Rosie Horrod, a tour guide at Bramall Hall, said: "Prior to the roof restoration, every time it rained we would be running around with buckets and towels, trying to catch the drips which were appearing in new places all the time.

"That rain can cause a lot of damage to the artifacts we have here so hopefully the work will help secure the building for many hundreds more years to come."

Photograph of Rosie Horrod - a tour guide at Bramall Hall. The 46-year-old is pictured on scaffolding, with a tarpaulin sheet behind. She wears a yellow hi-vis on top of her coat and scarf. She is also wearing a white hard hat.
Rosie Horrod is a tour guide at Bramall Hall

The work is being funded by a £1.6m grant from Arts Council England and follows a major restoration of the interior of the building which was completed in 2016.

That project involved cleaning hundreds of panes of stained glass, restoring some of the antique furniture inside, and converting the old stable block into a gift shop.

Photograph of the roof undergoing repairs at Bramall Hall in Stockport. The image shows scaffolding, timber roof beams and an Elizabethan brick chimney.
The £1.6m restoration project at Bramall Hall focuses on repairing the roof and its Elizabethan chimneys

The hall is of national significance due to its architecture, which includes a rare surviving example of an Elizabethan pendant plaster ceiling.

The building also includes Tudor wall paintings and the mansion stands in about 70 acres of parkland designed in the Victorian Romantic style.

Photograph of one of the rooms at Bramall Hall in Stockport. The image shows the timber frame on the walls and a banqueting table with antique chairs.
Bramall Hall is a timber-framed Tudor manor house and the only grade-one listed building in Stockport

When stone roof slates were removed during the restoration work, Tudor wall paintings were uncovered inside a loft space, which was home to a colony of bats.

Jany Baxter, museums collections officer at Stockport Council, said: "It's mind blowing to think that 500 years ago somebody painted these walls and there is also graffiti from people who've been here, so there are names which have been carved into the wood.

"The beautiful rafters and the paintwork are just stunning."

Photograph of Jany Baxter from Stockport Council. She is pictured inside a loft which is undergoing restoration work. She wears a yellow hi-vis on top of black jacket. She has long blonde hair under a white hard hat.
Jany Baxter is the Museums Collections Officer at Stockport Council

Trending Now