Tuesday 23 November 2010

TALK FEATURES IN YORKSHIRE POST

The next talk to the Society, by Vice President Maurice Taylor, is featured in today's Yorkshire Post. The article about the talk, on 'Historic Houses around Ripon', is illustrated with pictures of Markenfield Hall and of Norton Conyers. We may need more chairs out on 2 December!

Saturday 13 November 2010

Eric Wright Group celebrates Civic Society Award

You can read about the reaction to the latest award from the Society to the Eric Wright Group, designers and constructors of the new Booth's supermarket complex, on the Group's website; http://www.ericwright.co.uk/news/eric-wright-wins-best-new-building-award-two-years-running/

Friday 12 November 2010

Society's response to the 'Ripon Vision 2015' proposals

The Society has set out its response to the 'Ripon Vision 2015' proposals. The text of the response is as follows:


RIPON CIVIC SOCIETY’S RESPONSE TO THE ‘RIPON VISION 2015’ PAPER PUBLISHED BY STANLEY MACKINTOSH


Ripon Civic Society believes that there is a pressing need to change the traffic and parking policies for Ripon, and it urges action as soon as possible to achieve this.


In March 2010 Ripon Civic Society published a Policy Statement about traffic management in Ripon. That statement remains the Society’s policy. It encompasses many of the ideas now put forward by Mr Mackintosh in ‘Ripon Vision 2015’.


The Civic Society does not endorse Mr Mackintosh’s plan as a whole, though it acknowledges that many of its elements have a common purpose with our Policy statement and, if implemented, would lead to some of the same ends.


It may be helpful, therefore, if the Civic Society sets outs its points of difference with ‘Ripon Vision 2015’, and offers a different perspective on priorities.



  1. The Society does not accept that there is a need for a multi-storey car park behind Sainsbury’s. Ripon does not need huge amounts of additional parking, and what is needed could be achieved by our proposal to extend the car park opposite the hospital in Firby Lane, with an extra deck under it approached from Somerset Row and additional surface-level parking abutting Black Swan Yard.


  2. The Society does not accept the need for any extra shopping provision behind Sainsbury’s store. It is appreciated that the suggestion is made as an enabling measure, to provide income, but the Society believes that there would be significant disadvantages in terms both of effect on the commercial heart of the city and on the landscape.


  3. The Society believes that there is great value in implementing the first part of the Mackintosh plan, but does not approve of routeing the No 36 bus along Westgate.


  4. The Society urges that a priority for any change should be the construction of a new link road from Low Skellgate to Firby Lane, which is the key to unlocking the road system in Ripon. The other link road, from the roundabout by the Bus station to St Marygate is not so urgent, but could be part of a one-way system that would allow Allhallowgate to become one-way and assist in allowing coaches to approach the city centre, drop off passengers and then park elsewhere.

  5. The Society believes that taxis should not remain in the Square but should be relocated near the bus station.


The Society urges that consideration be given to the purposes and use of the Market Square once it is pedestrianised. While it sees the removal of the traffic as an important part of moving Ripon forward, it will not do just to have the Square as an empty space all the time. That was never the purpose of the Square, and should not be once traffic is removed. The Society will put forward plans for the Square in the near future.

Thursday 11 November 2010

Grammar School talk

In a brief talk to the Upper VI Form at Ripon Grammar School, Ripon Civic Society Chairman David Winpenny told them about the Society and its work, and how important it is for them to be civic-minded wherever their life takes them. They are the future - even more so if the Big Society idea works.

Friday 5 November 2010

AGM Report

Last night's AGM marked the retirement of our President, Barrie Price, after seven years in the post. Unfortunately, Barrie was unable to be with us, but the Society has a picture to present to him in the near future, to mark his generosity to the Society.

In his place the committee has appointed Nigel Rawlinson, formerly Vice-Chairman, as President. Vice-President Dorothy Taylor, who took the chair for the first part of the meeting, welcomed Nigel to his new role.

In Nigel's former place as Vice-Chairman, the meeting voted Graham Taylkor to the post. The other officers were voted back in - David Winpenny as Chairman, Keith Surman as Treasurer and Sheila Winpenny as Secretary.

With the retirement of former committee members Chris Tunnard and Diana Howard, to whom the Chairman paid tribute in his report, there were two vacancies on the committee. They were filled by Richard Taylor and Chris Hughes. Joan Rosher, Membership Secretary, who retired by rotation, was re-elected to the committee.

The Chairman's report on the state of the society is given below:

Madam Vice President, Ladies and Gentlemen

I’d like to start this evening by paying tribute to one of our Vice Presidents, Ted Pearson, who died not long after our last AGM. A long-serving member of the Committee and a stalwart of not just our Society but of Ripon as a whole, Ted was always supportive of us, and we are grateful to have had him on our side for so many years. He will be missed by many people.

A number of our other older members have also died this year – we are grateful for their support. A younger member, who joined us not too long ago and was a regular at meetings and on our visits, was Ian Macdonald. His recent death after illness robs us of another member who was willing to play his full part in the Society. Our sympathy goes to his family and, of course to the families of all our other deceased members.

Turning to the past year’s event, it’s always good to begin on a high note, with our awards! This year we were again a runner up in the Civic Society’s Week Competition organized by the Yorkshire and Humberside Association of Civic Societies (known as YHACS) – as ever, the award is on display tonight! Just as an aside to that, I should mention that the idea of a competition for civic societies has now been copied from us to be used as a national event by Civic Voice, the successor to the Civic Trust. Where Yorkshire leads, others follow!

This year Civic Voice also ran its first competition – for Civic Society newsletters and websites. And while our newsletter didn’t achieve a place in the top few – we were up against some glossy publications from much bigger societies – I’m pleased to report that our website was equal second alongside Wakefield, just behind the winner, which was Brighton. It’s really gratifying that we did so well, and we’ll try to keep the site bright and shiny over the next year, too. If you’re part of the digital generation (or even if you’re not, but you can use a computer!) do have a look at the site – it has plenty of information on it. And so far this calendar year we’ve had getting on for 60,000 ‘hits’ on it, so it must be of some use, we hope!

The committee believes that it is important that Ripon Civic Society is part of the larger Civic Societies movement, especially now when economic pressures are affecting all aspects of civic life. We have joined both YHACS and Civic Voice. I am a member of the executive committee of YHACS, and the Society is regularly represented at the YHACS main meetings – the Secretary and I will be at the one in Selby on Saturday – and if you want to go along, you’ll be welcome, too! It’s a good opportunity to meet representatives of other societies in Yorkshire and the Humber area, and pick up ideas and tips from them. We are also in regular contact with Civic Voice, which provides useful information and is running campaigns and training sessions.

As far as the City of Ripon is concerned, we also try to play our full part in matters that affect its wellbeing and which could lead to its improvement. I am a member of the board of the Greater Ripon Improvement Partnership – GRIP – and I am responsible for looking after the interests of the environment and infrastructure. I know that there are different opinions about whether GRIP should exist, whether it has any powers or whether it is trying to do the right things. My view is that, under the chairmanship of Judith Donovan, the group has brought together a wide variety of disparate bodies who are trying to work together – and that includes not just people like us in the voluntary sector, but also the three tiers of local authority under which we work (I had nearly said labour, but that might be inappropriate!). Of course, ‘by their deeds shall ye know them’ – and it will be by its achievements or its failures that GRIP will ultimately be judged. It is a genuine attempt to TRY – and it’s important that we support it rather than take the easier route of sniping.

Many of you will have attended the presentation last week by our member Stanley Mackintosh about the possibilities of pedestrianising parts of the city by rerouting traffic, adding additional parking and building two new link roads. This is not a Civic Society plan, nor have we wholly endorsed it, but we set up last week’s meeting because we believe that it sets out clearly the problems that Ripon has and offers solutions. It has, we hope, opened up the debate to a wider audience, and we shall continue to put pressure on the relevant authorities to try to take at least some of Stanley’s plan forward. We are very grateful to Stanley for all his hard work – and there was an impressive amount of it! – in helping to push this matter up the local agenda.

In my report last year I mentioned two concerns – the Spa Baths and the Cabmen’s Shelter. As you will be aware, in the current economic climate we are unlikely to see any progress towards a new swimming pool for Ripon, and therefore part of the threat to the current Spa Baths has been put into abeyance. We will, though, continue to monitor what is happening to the maintenance of the Baths, and we shall continue to discuss with others what should eventually happen when – if ! – the country finds itself reasonably well-off again.

Last year I reported that the Cabmen’s Shelter had been listed – and the City Council was not very happy about it. This year Ripon City Council has been awarded a grant by Harrogate Borough Council for its restoration – a grant that is available because it is a Listed Building! We rest our case. We were promised that the Shelter would be taken for restoration in October; as far as I am aware it is still there. We hope that restoration will begin soon – in its current state it will deteriorate even more rapidly over the winter, even if we are spared the cold and snow of last winter. Once it is returned to the Square, we would look to the city council for a plan of regular upkeep, so that it never returns to its current dilapidated state.

You will, I hope, be aware that there is to be an Extraordinary General Meeting after the talk by Maurice Taylor on 2 December, to discuss the changing of the Society’s boundaries. We have been discussing this for some time in Committee, and we appreciate the comments that some of you have made. As your recent letter will have told you, we now have the Charity Commission’s go ahead to put the change to a meeting. We hope you will come along in December to make your thoughts known and to vote on the change, which we feel is important for the Society’s future – 25 per cent of you, our members, live outside the city, so the move seems to meet a need.

In association with the local branch of the Ramblers, we have put together a series of six walks leaflets that take people around the city, along the canal and the rivers and out to Studley Royal. We are about to apply, with the help of Harrogate Borough Council’s Economic Development Unit, to the Awards for All part of the National Lottery for funding to print them and supply extra waymarking,. This application may be made under the GRIP banner, because Lottery like to see bids from all-inclusive groups – but the leaflets will still have the Civic Society brand and the Ramblers’ brand on them. One other leaflet is in preparation – one that has been specially requested by the manager of the Tourist Information Centre in Ripon. This is a new plaques trail leaflet, which is constantly being requested. So that will form part of the lottery bid, too.

And, speaking of plaques, we have one new one already up, to astronomer and pyramidiot Charles Piazzi Smyth at his former home, now Clova House Care Home, and another on its way at the Canal Basin. We are grateful to Chris Tunnard and Brian Carroll for their help with these new plaques. In a new departure, we yesterday ordered some new, small stainless steel circular plaques with a diameter of 100mm (that’s 4 inches to the non-decimal among you – are you the same as the non-digital, I wonder!). They will have on them the Civic Society’s name and logo, as the simple words ‘Award Winner’. They will be available for anyone who wins one of our Annual Awards, at a modest cost to them. The idea is that they can place them on their buildings, shops or offices to show that they have won one of our prestigious accolades. It will help them to show others that they have been given an Award, and will help the Society by getting our name even more around the city.

There are other ways we do that, too. The regular column in the Ripon Gazette still seems to interest people, and the Gazette is still happy to take it – it does help to fill the empty columns, I suppose! Our regular monthly talks, like the one earlier this evening, are well attended, although we were a little disappointed with the turnout for the special lecture by Dr Jonathan Foyle. The talk attracted people from as far away as Hull and Sheffield, but very few from Ripon, which was a shame.

The Heritage Open Day in September was again well-attended, with lots of people coming to the Gazebo, which we open specially, to the Masonic Hall and, for the first time this year, the cathedral’s ringing chamber and bell tower. We are grateful to everyone who helped at the Gazebo, and to our Masonic and Cathedral friends who gave their time to open their buildings.

We have had two successful visits this year – a visit by cars to Helmsley Walled Garden and to the English Heritage Store, and one by coach, on a sunny day, to Grantham, where we were given a tour of St Wulfram’s Church, and to nearby Harlaxton Manor, where we enjoyed the over-the-top decoration. We are very grateful to committee member Daphne Allen for her work in ensuring that both these trips went smoothly. There are already plans afoot for next year’s visits – one, in May, will be to Hellifield Peel, featured on Grand Designs and to nearby Gledstone Hall, one of Sir Edwin Lutyens’ last country houses; the other is planned to go to Hexham and the new Sage Building at Gateshead. Members will receive information as soon as it’s available.

And we haven‘t forgotten the fountain! Nigel Rawlinson is looking after it, and we now have one of the foremost fountaineers (if there is such a word) on the job. We hope to see progress soon!

This year membership numbers have kept very steady, at just over 180. That means that since 2006 we have increased our membership by 50 per cent. Thank you very much for your support – we really do appreciate it, and a strong membership means we have a strong voice in the city.

Of course, the Society cannot be run without a good committee, and I’m very pleased that we have such a thing! I am very grateful to everyone on the committee – I’m sorry that I probably haven’t time to mention you all by name now, but feel free to polish your halos! I must, though give special thanks to two committee members who are retiring at this AGM. First, to Chris Tunnard, who, in at least his second incarnation on the committee, has been especially helpful on the plaques and on steering us away from any legal pitfalls. He has kindly indicated he will be available for consultation in the future.

The other committee member who is retiring is Diana Howard, to who we are very grateful for all her hard work, especially in organising the programme of talks, being in touch with the speakers and making sure that we always have a good talks series each year. This is a very important job, and we have much to thank her for.

I hope that you will agree that Ripon Civic Society is currently in good heart, and that we are making some progress. You may know the church at Staunton Harold in Leicestershire, now owned by the National Trust. It was built by Sir Robert Shirley in 1653, during the upheavals of the Commonwealth. Over the door is an inscription which speaks of Sir Robert having ‘done the best things in ye worst times and hoped them in the most callamitous’. We may not be living in calamitous times (though your point of view may depend on your choice of newspaper), but the times are difficult. Nevertheless, Ripon Civic Society hopes to continue to do the best of things to our own utmost ability, and I and the committee are very grateful for your support.

Thursday 4 November 2010

AGM AND TALK TODAY!

Don't forget TODAY'S talk on Listing Buildings from Alison Clarke of English Heritage, and the important AGM that follows. Note, too, the EGM after the talk on Thursday 2 December, when we shall discuss the motion to widen the Civic Society's boundaries.

PEDESTRIANISATION ON THE MOVE

The public meeting about Stanley Mackintosh's plans for pedestrianisation, traffic and parking in Ripon showed that there is a great deal of interest and concern about the problems that the city faces. An informal show of hands indicated that a large majority at the meeting was in favour of making the Square and Kirkgate into pedestrianised areas.

We now need to keep up the pressure on the authorities that have the determining voice in the matter. But we are moving in the right dircetion!