Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • yesterday
Crowds gathered for the reopening and regeneration of the Old Lifeboat Station and Watchtower in Looe, Cornwall
Transcript
00:00Well, Brian, a very successful day for you and a special day, your labour of love has finally come to fruition.
00:06Yes, it has. Well, it's not just my day, but I was just glad to have a good team working through the process.
00:12It's been a long one, but once we managed to secure the money from the Good Growth Fund,
00:19that was the right start and we could actually do the work we needed to get the building properly sorted out.
00:26Tell me a bit about the project and how it started.
00:30Well, it started really with the watchtower being in such a poor condition that it really did need taken in hand.
00:39It couldn't be used for any sort of purposes at all, apart from that it was used as a building store,
00:47this watchtower part here, because it's too damp, etc. and so forth.
00:51And similarly, the gallery here was also not really fit for use as a commercial premises.
01:02And that whole thing was deteriorating and needed putting in hand.
01:07But we had a survey done and basically they recommended a full restoration and bringing the building up to date.
01:15The thing is, it was only ever built originally as an industrial building.
01:20It was built to house a lifeboat and provide a shelter for the crew.
01:26But of course, nowadays, if we were to use it, the building properly, it's going to be brought up to scratch.
01:31We have done now and it's now a superb watchtower, which we're going to use as an office for the Eastview Town Trust.
01:38It's got photovoltaic electricity, sustainable electricity, and we've got an exciting new venture operating in the boathouse,
01:53which is Penrock Distillery, and they will be producing rum and selling it in a rum bar.
02:00And people can actually see what's going on.
02:02So we'll be wishing them every success and see how that goes.
02:05And how much have you had to generate funds yourself and money that you've brought in from various sources?
02:10Yes, well, the major funder, of course, was the Good Growth Fund, which was ÂŁ289,000.
02:20We, as a trust, were putting in well over ÂŁ100,000.
02:26But there obviously has been increased costs, inflation, unknown pieces of work that needed doing on the way,
02:36and the trustees had to pay that as well.
02:38So it's quite a considerable sum of money.
02:40But at the end of the day, this part of Loo, the Church End area, has got a really superb building as a landmark space
02:51that I think is going to be a credit to the town and hopefully boost the prosperity of this part of Loo.
03:00Hopefully also support the seafront, which is a lovely seafront.
03:04But the old building was really letting it down.
03:09This doesn't. It's going to be good.
03:11And for the future, there's lots of optimism, I guess.
03:14There certainly is.
03:15The building is sound and it's multi-use, so it's very, very flexible how we use it.
03:22And we can have confidence in the future that a building that was first put up in 1866,
03:29it's now good, we hope, for another 150 years.
03:34And this is my home.
03:36Oh, this is my home.
03:42And this is my home.

Recommended