Scaffolding has gone up and the site fenced off ready for the fitting of a new roof at Llangollen Museum.
The Parade Street building has been closed for the past few weeks in preparation for the work which is being paid for by the Community Ownership Fund and another funder which they museum cannot yet disclose.
The entire roof will be replaced with a new structure with steel girders and museum says the appearance of the building will change slightly as the new roof will not have a parapet and the rainwater will drain through external pipes, rather than the internal ones that have caused flooding problems when they have become blocked.
Building work by the contractor, Team Roundhouse of Frodsham in Cheshire, began yesterday (Monday).
The work is estimated to take around six months, meaning the museum will be closed until January 2025.
For updates on the work, and exact dates of re-opening people are invited to keep an eye on the museum's own Facebook page.
However, heritage will not stop in Llangollen, according to the museum.
A spokesperson said: "During the period of the closure some of our display cases will be relocated to other public venues around Llangollen. Look out for displays in the Tourist Information, the Library, the Dory Gallery, the Health Centre and St Collen’s Church.
"Our programme of talks will continue. There will be no talk in July but the next talk will be on Wednesday, August 28, at 7.30pm, in the Council Chamber on the opposite side of Parade Street from the museum.
"Entitled ‘The reasons the Welsh went to Patagonia in 1865 and how they overcame early hardships,’ it will be a presentation by Graham Edwards.
"On Wednesday September 25, again in the Council Chamber at 7.30pm, the Portable Antiquities Scheme Officer, Susie White, will give a talk entitled ‘Buried Beneath our Feet’. She will describe what the Portable Antiquities Scheme is – who they are, why they do what they do – and then look at some of the objects recorded on the database from the local area.
The spokesperson added: "Plans for the Llangollen Museum Young Archaeologists’ group are well on the way, and will continue during the period of closure. We are hoping to have a full programme in place by the end of 2024.
"Young Archaeologists’ Club (YAC) is the only UK-wide club where young people aged 8–16 year olds can participate in real archaeology and discover why it matters. If you want to become a professional archaeologist in the future or just feel like taking up an amazing new hobby, YAC is the right place for you.
"Anyone wanting to join our mailing list for updates please email cdv.yac@gmail.com"
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