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What English Heritage says about the garden |
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After being consulted by Crewe and Nantwich Borough Council, English Heritage gave this advice (edited): THE application affects the former walled garden of Townsend House, which was built in 1580 for Richard Wilbraham, a wealthy town person with court connections. Whilst the house has regrettably been lost, the walled garden is a rare national survival of a late 16th century urban garden structure, and notwithstanding its dilapidated condition, it deserves to be fully repaired and conserved.
English
Heritage was consulted on an earlier application for development of the
walled garden in 2004, when we recommended that the site should not be
developed with buildings, but should be repaired as part of the wider
development of Kingsley Farm. The application was refused on the grounds
that it was detrimental to the special interest of the listed structure
and that no justification had been presented why development within the
walled garden was required. ON THIS WEBSITE: tOpening pages tAGM tBackground tEnglish Heritage tThe garden tHistory tInaugural meeting tIntent tJoin us tLinks tNews tPhotos tPress coverage tStory so far tSupport tWho's who? |