Re-Bourne: Town Hall passes to Trust

Members of the Bourne Town Hall Management Committee hand the building over to the Town Hall Trust.
Members of the council's Bourne Town Hall Management Committee hand the building over to the Town Hall Trust.

Milestone moment as Lincolnshire County Council passes over ownership of Bourne Town Hall so £3.6m redevelopment can begin.

Dating back to 1821, the Old Town Hall’s unique and varied history has seen it used as a fire station, courtroom, market stall storage, and district council office.

As part of a legal agreement made in 2018, Lincolnshire County Council agreed to pass the building over to the Bourne Town Hall Trust once planning permission had been granted for their exciting regeneration project, and once the funding had been secured to carry out the necessary works.

Planning permission was granted in September 2024, and earlier this year a £3.3m grant from The National Lottery Heritage Fund was the final puzzle piece, alongside funding grants from other local and national organisations.

Cllr Charlotte Vernon, chairman of the council's Bourne Town Hall Management Committee, said:

“The Trust has done a brilliant job over the last few years tirelessly preparing for the regeneration of this excellent building. Recognising the work that has gone into the project already, the committee was delighted to vote to transfer the Town Hall over, and now the exciting work can start in transforming this space.

“Bourne is incredibly lucky to have such a large group of committed and welcoming volunteers; what a fantastic legacy to leave in the town.

“I know the residents of Bourne will join me in thanking all those who have given so much time over the last few years and will continue to do so as the building work begins.”

The project will see a large community space created on the ground floor for activities and events. Upstairs, an 80-seat auditorium will be created in the old courtroom, with the adjoining retiring room acting as a dressing room for acts or a breakout space.

Up on the roof, solar panels will help cut the building’s carbon footprint and reduce running costs, whilst an extensive restoration will take place on the clock tower so the chimes will ring out across Bourne town centre once again.

Charles Houseago, chairman of the Bourne Town Hall Trust, said:

“It’s a pleasure to accept this building from the county council on behalf of the town. We’re all looking forward to seeing it fully restored and operational for the benefit of the whole town.”

Cllr Sue Woolley represents the Bourne North and Morton division on Lincolnshire County Council and is a volunteer at Bourne Town Hall. She said:

“I’m just one small cog in a well-oiled machine that has seen the Old Town Hall go from strength to strength.

“More than 100 events have been run in the building since 2019, and the team has learned how to create a warm and welcoming space, and about what visitors want to see and do. This will create a unique cultural and heritage destination within Bourne town centre and I can’t wait to see it take shape.”

Keep up to date with the Bourne Town Hall project by visiting bournetownhall.org.uk.

Published: 28th February 2025