Kew Palace wins prestigious RICS Building Conservation Award 2007

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Kew Palace wins prestigious RICS Building Conservation Award 2007

This week Kew Palace is ending its summer season on a high note as it celebrates winning the prestigious RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors) Building Conservation Award.

Press release

22 October 2007

The award recognises the extensive restoration work that took place at the palace, the countryside retreat of King George III and his family, during its 10-year, £6.6 million conservation and restoration project by the charity Historic Royal Palaces. Kew Palace was one of only eleven buildings on the short-list for the award, and the only contender in London.

Simon Pott, Chairman of Judges, says: “This restoration has been done with great care and attention to detail, involving extensive research. The visitor is able to enjoy the history and atmosphere of this wonderful place, and can follow signposts to extra information in the restoration. Historic Royal Palaces are custodian of some of our finest buildings, and this is an outstanding example of their work carried out over a 10 year repair project.”

The Building Conservation Award honours conservation in all its forms and covers renovation or conversion to new or original use. The judges paid particular attention to the construction materials and techniques used, conservation achievements, background research undertaken and the project’s long-term prospects. Regarded as the ‘Oscars’ of the built and natural environment, the RICS Awards recognise excellence, value for money and a commitment to sustainability.

Faithfully presented as King George III and his family would have known it in the early 1800s, Kew Palace was the setting for many personal family dramas that made history. The palace is well known as sanctuary for George III during his bouts of illness, presumed as ‘madness’ but now known to have been porphyria. Queen Charlotte, his devoted wife, spent her last days at ‘dear Kew’ before she passed away in her bedroom at Kew Palace. And two of their sons, including the Duke of Kent, father to the future Queen Victoria, were married in the first floor Drawing Room. The palace made royal history again when it hosted the private 80th Birthday party of HM The Queen in April 2006 just days before it was reopened to the public.

Kew Palace closes after its 2007 season on Sunday 28 October, so this week is the last chance to see the award-winning palace before it closes for winter.

Note to editors

For further information about Kew Palace please contact Sarah Watson on 020 3166 6166 or email sarah.watson@hrp.org.uk . To download images of Kew Palace and some of the objects on display please visit HRP’s online photographic library at hrp.newsteam.co.uk.

Visitor Information
Kew Palace Opening:

  • Kew Palace is open Saturday 24 March to Sunday 28 October 2007
  • Tuesday to Sundays 1000 to 1800 (last admission 1700)
  • Mondays 1100 to 1800 (last admission 1700)

Ticket prices (Kew Palace only):

  • Palace Adult: £5.00,  Palace Concession: £4.00, Palace Child: £3.00
    (NB: admission ticket to the Kew Gardens must be purchased for access to Kew Palace – for gardens admission prices visit www.kew.org)

Further information:

Historic Royal Palaces
Historic Royal Palaces is the independent charity that looks after the Tower of London, Hampton Court Palace, the Banqueting House, Kensington Palace and Kew Palace.  We help everyone explore the story of how monarchs and people have shaped society, in some of the greatest palaces ever built (registered charity number 1068852).

We receive no funding from the Government or the Crown, so we depend on the support of our visitors, members, donors, volunteers and sponsors. These palaces are owned by The Queen on behalf of the nation, and we manage them for the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport.

We believe in four principles.  Guardianship: giving these palaces a future as long and valuable as their past. Discovery: encouraging people to make links with their own lives and today’s world.  Showmanship: doing everything with panache. Independence: having our own point of view and finding new ways to do our work.
RICS
RICS (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors) is the mark of property professionalism worldwide. It covers all aspects of property, construction and associated environmental issues. RICS has 140,000 members globally and represents, regulates and promotes the work of property professionals throughout 146 countries. RICS is governed by a Royal Charter approved by Parliament which requires it to act in the public interest. It is also a professional regulatory body approved by Government (HM Treasury).

The RICS Awards scheme was set up in 1990 to reward a diversity of projects that have regard for the natural and built environment.  The categories are as follows:

  • Building Conservation Award sponsored by Wesleyan Group,www.wesleyan.co.uk/
  • Regeneration Award sponsored by Interphone Security Group, www.interphone.co.uk
  • Sustainability Award sponsored by HSBC, www.hsbc.co.uk/
  • Community benefit Award sponsored by Nat West, www.natwest.com/

These categories are chosen to ensure that every aspect of urban and rural regeneration is recognised.  Value for money is fundamental to the success of every winning project, regardless of scale, in respect of both capital expenditure and lifetime running costs.
The RICS Awards 2007 Judging Panel was led by Simon Pott FRICS FRAgS, Chairman of Judges and Past President RICS.  Fellow judges in 2006 included: Deborah Dance MSc MRICS, Director Oxford Preservation Trust; Jim Ure MSc CEng MIEE FCIBE, Managing Director ABS Consulting and Stephen Robinson MA FRICS MRTPI Partner, GVA Grimley LLP.

Estates Gazette are the official media partner of the RICS Awards 2007, see
www.estatesgazettegroup.com
Anna Sweetman
RICS Corporate Communications
Press Officer
T: 020 7334 3703
E: asweetman@rics.org

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