Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

 
 
Wednesday, 9th December 2009

A £7m overhaul for Da Vinci Code chapel

Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date:
23 March 2007
ROSSLYN Chapel, the 15th century masterpiece whose mysterious carvings and star role in The Da Vinci Code book has made it one of Scotland's top visitor attractions, is to get a £7.2 million overhaul.
Grants of £4.5 million from Heritage Lottery Fund and £2.7 million from Historic Scotland will pay for a new waterproof roof, allowing for the unsightly metal scaffolding and canopy over the chapel to be removed.

A seven-year programme of conservation and repair is also planned, targeting the stained glass windows and stonework to the Victorian baptistery, and creating a new visitor centre to accommodate tens of thousands of tourists every year.

The Culture Secretary, Patricia Ferguson, said: "This building does matter and it matters because of its unique mystery, architecture, and carvings, and we want to make sure many more generations of Scots admire and enjoy it."

Last year 120,000 people visited the chapel, up from just 30,000 in 2000. This followed the 2003 publication of The Da Vinci Code, the massive best-seller by Dan Brown. This book and others have theorised that the chapel and its elaborate carvings held hidden secrets and treasures.

Andrew Russell, managing trustee of the Rosslyn Chapel Trust, said he now hoped to "manage down" visitors closer to 60,000.

"We hope that the association with The Da Vinci Code will die away into a more targeted kind of audience," he said.

The funds are part of a £13 million overhaul.

Plans include properly heating the building through Victorian ducts under the floor, rather than the standing electric heaters currently used.

The metal covering over Rosslyn has allowed the building's walls and roof to dry out over the last ten years, and a new wooden roof may now be built.

A new visitor centre is designed to take some of the "footfalls" pressure off the chapel when as many as 1,000 people come through on peak days.

The Countess of Rosslyn, whose husband's family have owned the chapel since it was built, said: "It's the start of the road rather than the end of the road.

"We will be able to preserve it through this generation as it's been preserved through generations from the 15th century."

It was important to manage visitors to preserve the spirit of the chapel, she said. "The magic is the quietness."

• THE restoration of Rosslyn Chapel relies, as so often, on reversing earlier conservation work. Many of the major problems with Rosslyn Chapel's stonework date back to the mistakes in the 1950s.

They included coating the interior of the building with a thin layer of slurry or cement, meant to hold the famous carvings together. The roof, made of a thin layer of stone, was covered with asphalt. Years later the building had become so damp the water was running down the walls and the roof was mouldy green. The new materials had trapped moisture inside the fabric.

Only now, after eight years under a metal canopy, has it dried out.

The trust will explore if it is possible to remove the 1950s coating.

Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 22 March 2007 11:18 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Rosslyn Chapel
 
1

MarkInAlpine,

Alpine, Texas 23/03/2007 00:38:54

In Arizona, an eighteenth century church constructed of Adobe, was misguidedly "preserved" by the application of Portland cement to the rooftop and exterior walls. Even in their arid climate, the retention of moisture, from worshippers breath and burning of candles, started causing the building fabric to start crumbling, with interior frescoes and statuary swelling and splitting.
They found local artisans who still used the traditional construction methods, and began correcting the errors by removing the cement and going back to a top coat of adobe mud made in part with prickly pear cactus pulp.

2

Androsthenes,

Edinburgh 23/03/2007 01:36:10

So Rosslyn Chapel is now the 'da Vinci code' chapel.
How humiliating......

3

Professor22,

Fife 23/03/2007 07:49:33

It will be good to see the Chapel without the metal roof again.

Although the metal walkway gives the public the option to see parts of the Chapel that was never really investigated before.

http://www.scottishknightstemplar.org/

4

Jay Kay,

Dunfermline 23/03/2007 08:40:00

The carvings and ornate stonework in this building are fantastic and I would challenge any modern day builder to produce work of the same callibur. I couldn't see it somehow.

However, the building would benefit from expert advice from todays building sciences. Modern materials and practices could be employed to preserve the building in its entirity and it might be worth those who look after the building, to contact specialist at Napier university school of Engineering and the Built Environment.http://www.napier.ac.uk/sebe/

5

karenbryan,

berwick upon tweed 23/03/2007 08:47:57

I'm happy to read that the metal roof may be replaced by a wooden roof. I saw the exterior of the chapel for the first time last weekend and was rather dismayed by the metal roof. As I drove through Roslin Glen I wondered what I saw in the distance. I thought it probably was the chapel but it looked more like a modern warehouse.
http://www.europealacarte.co.uk/blog/?p=263

6

Scaramouche2,

A Free Man!! 23/03/2007 09:24:54

Maybe they'll reduce their totally rip-off admission charges (£7 a head) to pre-movie prices now??

7

Nick Nick,

23/03/2007 11:01:27

#6 Don't think so. The funding gap between the £7.2m grant and the £13m total project cost still has to be found.

8

Dave From Barra,

Western Isles 23/03/2007 13:39:40

It's the Rosslyn Chapel, not "Da Vinci Chapel" muppets! Has stood there for a lot longer than some sh*t film from Hollywood.


 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.