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The Charity Commission for Northern Ireland
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The Irish Landmark Trust Limited

  • Status

    Received: on time

  • Income

    £279.1K

  • Spending

    £343.8K

Charity no. 101205 Date registered. 09/07/2015

Public benefits

The work of Irish Landmark increases public awareness and knowledge (and thus educates the general public) historic properties; it operates as an educational resources demonstrating how historic buildings can be re-used in a purposeful and beneficial way; and by making its conservation and restoration records available, it operates as an

educational resource for students of architecture; and for owners of historic properties who might wish to undertake a conservation/restoration project HOW THIS IS DEMONSTRATED This public benefit is demonstrated by the feedback from those guests who stay in the properties; (examples available if required) comments about not realising the potential that historic properties have to contribute to local communities . It is also demonstrated when local communities then take the example of an Irish Landmark conservation project and see it was the trigger to conserve othe properties in their areas. WHO BENEFITS The general public. IS ANY HARM CAUSED : No harm is caused by the work of Irish Landmark IS THERE ANY PRIVATE BENEFIT The people who work on the restoration/conservation projects benefit through their employment doing this work. Once the conservation work is completed one local individual who will be employed to manage the property and welcome guests benefits from the new job created. These are necessary private benefits to achieve the aim.

What your organisation does

Irish Landmark rescues and restores architecturally important historic buildings, and gives them as new use as holiday homes. This use promotes the enjoyment and celebration of these buildings. All restoration projects are carefully documented and recorded and the files are available to other historic property owners and others who may wish to

use them as a resource for educational or professional learning opportunities. Irish Landmark also runs seminars and workshops particularly aimed at built heritage professionals and students of architecture and also the general public.

The charity’s classifications

  • The advancement of the arts, culture, heritage or science

Who the charity helps

  • General public

How the charity works

  • Cultural
  • Education/training
  • Heritage/historical

This display is a broad summary of the charity’s financial information. For a full understanding of the charity’s finances, the reader should view the PDF accounts and reports under the Documents tab above.

Income

£279.1K

Spending

£343.8K

Charity accounts & reports for financial year end 31 December 2023

Independent examiners report Charity accounts Trustee annual report

Charity accounts & reports for financial year end 31 December 2022

Independent examiners report Charity accounts Trustee annual report

Charity accounts & reports for financial year end 31 December 2021

Independent examiners report Charity accounts Trustee annual report

Charitable purposes

To act as an Educational trust for the purpose of conserving, improving and restoring buildings of character and architectural merit, and to that end, to rescue, restore and make available to the public architecturally significant small buildings which form an important part of the landscape in which they are set but whose restoration could not be economically justified and to document the construction methods used in the buildings rescued, document techniques used in restoration, promote and develop the skills required to enable historic buildings to be restored in a manner consistent with their original character and to promote public appreciation and understanding of the historic and architectural importance of the selected buildings.

Governing document

Memorandum and Articles

Other name

Irish Landmark Trust
  • 10 Trustees
  • 12 Employees
  • 0 Volunteers

Contact details

Public address

  • Irish Landmark Trust, 50 Bedford Street, Belfast, Bt2 7Fw, BT2 7FW

Trustee board

Trustee
Michael O'boyle
Emer Bell
Galen Bales
Mr William John Cumming
Mr Niall Meagher
Mr David Canty
Mrs Primrose Wilson
Mr David Lowe
Ms Ethna Murphy
Ms Marian Quinn

List of regions

  • In Northern Ireland