COULD this be the right time to launch a new business? As the country moves towards life after lockdown, there are plenty of opportunities to find a new direction for your life - whether that be launching a restaurant or reviving an old clock repair business. It may not cost you as much as you think. The commercial property offerings available in Cumbria currently include: A former trophy shop in Crosby Street Maryport, which comes with a flat, comprising a sitting room, shower room, dining kitchen, and two bedrooms. It s due to be sold at the forthcoming Auction House Cumbria sale on July 15, starting 12 noon. The guide price is £35,000.
COULD this be the right time to launch a new business? As the country moves towards life after lockdown, there are plenty of opportunities to find a new direction for your life - whether that be launching a restaurant or reviving an old clock repair business. It may not cost you as much as you think. The commercial property offerings available in Cumbria currently include: A former trophy shop in Crosby Street Maryport, which comes with a flat, comprising a sitting room, shower room, dining kitchen, and two bedrooms. It s due to be sold at the forthcoming Auction House Cumbria sale on July 15, starting 12 noon. The guide price is £35,000.
Purcell and Nissen Richards rework Wordsworth Museum in Lake District
17 May 2021 By Rob Wilson, photography by Gareth Gardner
1/46
Source: Purcell
Source: Purcell
Source: Nissen Richards Studio
Source: Nissen Richards Studio
Source: Nissen Richards Studio
Source: Nissen Richards Studio
Source: Nissen Richards Studio
Source: Nissen Richards Studio
Previously disparate buildings – including Wordsworth’s home, Dove Cottage – have been reconfigured and extended in the redevelopment
The museum at the edge of Grasmere in Cumbria sits in the landscape that profoundly inspired Wordsworth, a place he called ‘the loveliest spot that man hath ever found’.
Advertisement
It reopens to the public today (17 May) following the five-year, £6.5 million project, which was supported by The National Lottery Heritage Fund. The project was won by Purcell and Nissen Richards Studio in 2016 and was led for Purcell until 2019 by Rob Gregor