Happy New Year

A very Happy New Year from all of us at Winterbourne Medieval Barn.

New floor in the main Barn

2020 is going to be a big year for us as we get ready to open our Barn doors once again later in the year. Our building works are due for completion in the Spring and the site is really starting to take shape.

In the Main Barn a new underfloor heating system has been laid at one end with a new floor going in on top. Aside from a clean up and a few coats of lime wash, not much else has been done in the main part of the Barn.

 

 

It’s around the rest of the site that the main striking transformations are taking place. The old cow byres are shaping up to look like wonderful artisanal workspaces. These will be available to rent from the Spring.

Inside the cow byre spaces

External view of the cow byres

 

 

 

 

 

 

Elsewhere, the old dilapidated West Barn is looking very different having been initially gutted and then split into two levels with new seminar rooms, a kitchen, and toilet facilities. New glass doors have been added on the North side to make a light and airy entrance hall.

Inside one room of the West Barn

External view of the West Barn

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The interpretation corridor is now weather tight. This space links the Main and West Barn to allow people to travel between both without having the need to go out of doors. It will also contain our interpretation display about the history of the Barn and surrounding area.

Interpretation Corridor

Into the West Barn

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

When we re-open later this year, we’ll be back with our full programme of events including music, film, and theatre performances. We’ll be a local learning centre with schools able to visit for workshops about life in the past, as well as adult learning opportunities with the continuation of regular craft workshops, and our lecture series. The Barn and seminar rooms will be available to hire for a range of celebration events, conferences, and meetings.

Keep an eye on our social media pages for regular Barn updates. We look forward to welcoming you back at the Barn very soon!

 

Thanks to Ryan from Corbel Construction for the site photographs.

New Business and Development Manager Role

Applications are now closed

Are you looking for a new challenge where you can use your commercial and operational skills working in an exciting heritage redevelopment project?

Winterbourne Medieval Barn is preparing to re-open its doors to the public in Spring 2020 and we need your skills to help deliver our vision for the future.

Please click on the following links to download documents.

  1. Job Advertisement
  2. Applicant Letter
  3. Job Description
  4. Application Form
  5. Equal Opportunities Form
  6. Winterbourne Barn Information

Please download, complete, and return the Application and Equal Opportunities Form.

For an informal conversation about this role, please email suefox42@btinternet.com and include your contact number and availability.

The closing date for this role is 9.00am on Monday 9th December 2019 with interviews taking place on Monday 6th January 2020.

Builders Blog #3

We’re well into the build now, just over the half way mark and the works are moving at quite the pace!

Inside the main Barn, underfloor heating is starting to go in at one end which should help to take the chill off if you’re watching a performance, and a coat of lime wash has been added to the walls.

The Main Barn

Around the site elsewhere, the West Barn which was dilapidated has been transformed. The upstairs floor has gone in, and partition walls are going up to mark out what will be seminar rooms, a kitchen, and new toilets. Work has also begun on the new interpretation gallery which will link the main Barn to the West Barn so you’ll be able to access both without going outdoors.

Inside the West Barn

The New Interpretation Gallery

 

 

 

 

 

 

The extension to the cow byres is in place, and the roof tiles are now on. The doors are being hung and work is continuing inside to make them artisan workshop spaces.

Cow Byres

Cow Byres

September News

Autumn at the Barn

Apple varieties on display at Orchard Harvest Day

Events still available for 2019:

Wet-Felting Workshop                 – Sat 12 Oct, 10am – 1pm.  £35
AGM – building update and social            – Tues 15 Oct, 7.30pm
Talk: Honey – from Flower to Jar       – Thur 17 Oct, 7 – 9pm.  £5
Kids’ Halloween Costume Workshop     – Sat 26 October. Free
Talk: Brewsters, Alewives & Beer Witches   – Thu 14 Nov 7pm
Fabric Xmas Wreath-making Workshop    – Sat 7 Dec 10 -12.30
Talk: The Twelve Plants of Christmas         – Sat 14th Dec, 2pmComing up in the next month:
Wet-Felting Workshop – Make your own unique felt
one-strap shoulder bag with expert Fi Harris. A
perfect next step for those who have tried wet-felting
before. £35 includes all materials and tuition.
Talk: Honey – from Flower to Jar –  Hear from Master
Beekeeper Marin Anastasov how bees find suitable
flowers, collect nectar, and process it in to honey.
Learn about the organisation in a hive and how the
bees communicate to form a cohesive unit.

Missed out?
Some of our workshops and visits are already fully booked, but keep an eye on our website and facebook page to check for additional sessions that might be added at short notice.

Currently ‘sold out’:
Halloween workshop – 10am, 26 October
Family Advent Workshop – 30 November
Fused Glass workshops – 1.30 & 4.30pm, 30 Nov

Still thinking of booking?
Best do it now!

There may be last minute tickets available for some talks, although this cannot be guaranteed. All workshops and tours must be pre-booked, even if there is no charge.
Full information is on the website

www.winterbournebarn.org.uk

Donations to WMBT that cost you nothing!

WMBT is signed up to both Give as you Live and
Amazon Smile,
so that when you buy things online the Trust receives a percentage of the sale price as a donation.

Just register and log into these websites when you are shopping online, and WMBT will benefit at no extra cost to you.
Contact us if you have any queries about how this works.

wmbtrust@gmail.com

AGM

Tues 15 October 7.30pm All welcome.
Followed by Barn activities update and social.
2020

The full site will re-open again mid-way through next year – details to be announced nearer the time.
Before that, activities will continue in the Cart Shed.

The first event of 2020 will be another Apple-grafting workshop run by Ben Raskin of the Soil Association on 22 February from 10am – 4pm.  The cost is £45 for the day.  This workshop might make an unusual present for a keen gardener. Bookings can now be made on Ticketsource

 

Heritage Open Days

We took part in Heritage Open Days again this year with a Cartshed drop in over the weekend where you could find out the latest Barn news and listen to some of our volunteer stories and memories of the Barn. We also ran a mosaic taster session where participants could mosaic their own plant pot to take home, and we had a behind the scenes hard hat tour of the building works.

If you weren’t able to join us over the weekend but are interested to know what’s been happening at the Barn this year and what’s in store for the future, take a look at our latest presentation by clicking the button below.

Barn Slides HOD 2019

Keep an eye on the website as we’ll be adding a page for our Barn Sounds project where you can listen to our volunteers talking about life at the Barn past and present.

Mosaic Taster Workshop

Summer at the Barn

The Big Build

Work is progressing well on the Barn site, despite some very wet weather in June. There is scaffolding everywhere!  From the outside many changes are obvious, including the re-roofing of the West Barn, and the start to the cow byres’ extension to provide an additional workshop unit.  

The scale of the internal work can only be seen on an official ‘Hard Hat’ tour like the recent one for barn volunteers pictured above. The West Barn has been completely gutted and is full of scaffolding and props while the structure is made safe.  The insides of the Medieval Barn and South Barn have been cleaned, and new limewash is being applied – you can certainly see where the builders have got to.  Whitened walls are making each space lighter and brighter, and the barn rafters look even more stunning now that they have been ‘relieved’ of all their cobwebs and dust. 

If you would like to see for yourself, there is a Hard Hat tour on 17 September as part of the Heritage Open Days – it is free but spaces are limited and pre-booking is essential.

 

What’s On 

The programme of events for the rest of 2019 has now been announced and new leaflets are available.  All details are on the website and online bookings can be made now at  www.ticketsource.co.uk  . Numbers are limited by the space we currently have available on site, and so early booking is advised.  There are still a few tickets available for the July events but you will need to book very soon.  To allow more space, the West Gallery Music day in July and the Male Voice concert in August will be held in St Michael’s Church nextdoor to the Barn.

Coming up in 2019:

Fun summer clubs for children – archaeology or art activities

Workshops – Wine-tasting, Singing, Basket-weaving, Mosaics, Wet Felting, Christmas fabric wreath

Talks – Newport Medieval Ship, Apples, Bees and Honey, Female Brewers in History, and Christmas plants

A summer concert from Bristol Male Voice Choir and the Frampton Shantymen

Heritage Open Days – see how the building work is going, plus craft activities for children

Workshops at Hallowe’en and Advent for children and families to make seasonal things

And in February 2020 there will be another Apple-grafting workshop

Builders Blog #2

Volunteer Hard Hat Tour

The summer might feel like it’s on hold, but building work at the Barn certainly isn’t!

With demolitions and groundworks having taken place, the Corbel team have turned their attentions to the West Barn at the far end of the site. What once was a dark, pokey space with breeze blocked rooms is now a bright open space. Scaffolding has been erected to enable repair works to the roof. Some of the windows are being blocked up, and bat roosts and bird boxes have been put up to minimise any impact to wildlife.

Work on the cow byres is progressing well with preparations having been made for a large additional workshop unit on the end of the existing byres. An old french drain was found under the main grassy area onsite which explains why water was always quick to soak away after heavy rain.

Speaking of heavy rain, with the onset of relentless bad weather over the past couple of weeks, Corbel moved inside to do some jobs on the main Barn including giving the whole space a good clean (goodbye cobwebs!), and applying a coat of limewash to the walls.

Walking around on the volunteer hard hat tour, we started to get a sense of how the site will look and feel upon completion next Spring. Although we won’t be running large scale events at the Barn site until we re-open, there’s still plenty going on. See our events page for the latest information.

Builders Blog #1

We’re approaching the end of April and the recent glorious weather has been bathing the Barn grounds in spring sunshine. From our position in the Cartshed, the view is starting to look very different already. Corbel Conservation have moved onto site, the cider press and mill stone have been dismantled and moved into storage, and demolition work is well and truly underway.

The South Range

Donning a hard hat and looking around with the site manager, it’s easy to see where the builders have been. Stepping into the main Barn, very little has changed. However, as you round the corner to the South range, the view opens out. What was the sad looking lean-to adjacent to the kitchen garden has been demolished to slab level. From there entering the West Barn, what was a dark rabbit warren of breeze block rooms, has now been gutted to reveal a large, bright space. On the North range, another lean-to has been demolished, exposing the side wall of the main Barn.

Demolition of the North Lean-To

Inside of the West Barn

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As the demolition progresses, Corbel are cleaning and storing stone materials that can be repurposed elsewhere. This is an approach that will continue throughout the build with an emphasis on reusing and recycling.

We’ll be writing a monthly building update so do keep coming back to check on the progress. We’ll also introduce you to different tradespeople with a closer look at some of the specialist techniques used in renovation. And of course, although the main site is closed, we are still running small events in our Cartshed so check our events page for the latest information.

Funding News

Winterbourne Medieval Barn Trust will be getting a brand new toilet block and kitchen facility as part of the conservation and building works taking place throughout 2019. This work has been made possible due to a £15,498 grant from Ibstock Enovert Trust (IET), an Environmental Body funded through the Landfill Communities Fund (LCF).

The money will be used to develop much needed facilities at the Barn site on Church Road in Winterbourne. It will allow us to bring the site into use as a heritage hub for the whole community with these facilities helping to ensure the sites future sustainability.

Keep an eye on the website and social media channels for the latest information on how the build is going, and for information of current events running in the Cartshed.

For more information on Ibstock Enovert Trust and the projects they support, please click here.

 

Meet the Builders

Winterbourne Medieval Barn Trust and South Gloucestershire Council have been working together to transform the Winterbourne Medieval Barn site into a heritage hub for the local community. This £1.7 million project is supported by an award from The National Lottery Heritage Fund of £936,600.

Work to conserve, redevelop and find new uses for the magnificent Grade II* listed 14th century Winterbourne Medieval Barn (Court Farm Barn) will begin on Monday 18 March with work anticipated to last one year. Corbel Conservation Ltd have been appointed as the main contractor for the build.

Although this work is set to start, the Trust are still fundraising the final amounts to support the project including a Raise the Roof campaign.

Our volunteer team meeting the site team from Corbel Conservation.

During this time, conservation work will be carried out on the main barn to preserve the timbers (which date back to 1342) and supporting infrastructure for years to come. There will also be work carried out on its two ranges – the South Barn, and the dilapidated West Barn which will see the installation of new facilities including a kitchen, office, and historical interpretation gallery, celebrating the history and heritage of the site and its environment.

The existing Victorian Cow Byres will be transformed and brought back into use for local micro-businesses. Once completed, the units will be let to small ventures including artisan trades.

Vice-Chair of South Gloucestershire Council Cllr Brian Allinson said: “It’s fantastic to see this project progress and the conservation and development work begin on one of our area’s most important heritage sites. These improved facilities will ensure the long-term sustainability of this nationally-significant heritage asset by placing it at the heart of the community.”

Chair of Winterbourne Medieval Barn Trust, Sue Parsons, said: “Winterbourne Medieval Barn Trust are thrilled that work is about to start and it marks the culmination of many years effort by the Trust and the local community. We are also looking forward to the site reopening next year with new and exciting events and activities in the enhanced facilities.”

Access to the site is restricted throughout the year but members of the public will be able to participate in ‘Hard Hat Days’ during significant parts of the works programme.

The Cartshed, which opened after renovation in May 2018 will remain open to the public for use throughout the year for various events, lectures, and workshops. See here for the latest events.