Renovation not restoration for Arkwright House

This is the third instalment from the short dissertation that Preston Polytechnic journalism student Nick Clark wrote in 1980, just before Arkwright House in the Avenham district of Preston was reopened after a major renovation. It was in this building that Richard Arkwright developed the water frame that was to transform Britain’s and then the world’s textile industry.

Some of those involved in the project had wanted the building to be restored as an 18th-century gentry house. They were to be disappointed, as the architect’s plan pictured below shows.


The renovated Arkwright House and its future

Arkwright House will be officially opened by Princess Alexandra on July 4th 1980.

The building has not been restored, but renovated. The new annexe represents ultra-modern 20th century architecture, and incorporates a lift and fire escape, which will be necessary when the building is open to the public,

During the renovation, the roof and ceilings had to be renewed, together with one of the walls.

Nevertheless, as much of the original structure as possible has been retained, including the 18th-century wooden panelling in some of the rooms: The frontage of the house has been painted raspberry pink, a popular colour in Georgian times.

The building will serve many purposes. It will house a permanent exhibition recording the development of the cotton industry and Arkwright’s work. A local cabinet maker, Mr. Peter Walmsley, has made a model spinning frame, which will go on display in the room Arkwright occupied.

Local societies and groups will be able to hold meetings, lectures and exhibitions in the house, and there will be a coffee bar and shop. It was recently proposed that part of the could be used to accommodate adult students attending foundation courses in Preston. And the North West Tourist Board is to include Arkwright House in its future guidebooks and illustrated maps.

As well as this, Preston Borough Council is to build a sheltered housing scheme in the vicinity of Arkwright House, thus helping to improve the Avenham area.

Ground-floor plan of Arkwright House
Ground-floor plan of the renovated but not restored Arkwright House

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