Town's 'crown jewel' undergoes £50m restoration

Richard SteadNorth West
News imageBBC Haigh Hall in Wigan, a manor house surrounded by wooden boarding. There is a man with a dog in the foreground. The building is three storeys high, and features rows of large windows, with small chimney stacks seen across the flat roof. BBC
Haigh Hall was built between 1827 and 1840 by the 24th Earl of Crawford

Work has begun on the £50m redevelopment of a country house and surrounding gardens at a historical country estate in Greater Manchester.

Haigh Hall has been described by the local council as the "jewel in Wigan's crown".

Wigan Councillor Chris Ready said: "I got married here, and it means so much to the people of the borough, so everything has got to be checked."

The newly-restored Haigh Hall will include an art gallery, an education area for children, an event space for weddings, a rooftop terrace and a restaurant.

News imagePhotograph of the Wigan Councillor Chris Ready. He is pictured in a hard hat and a yellow high-vis jacket.
Chris Ready is the cabinet member for communities at Wigan Council

Ready said: "This is for the people of Wigan and I want the restaurant to be affordable, so I don't want £100 steaks in here.

"I don't want people looking through the window at rich people eating food."

Haigh Hall was built between 1827 and 1840 by the 24th Earl of Crawford before the estate was transferred to Wigan Corporation (now Wigan Council) in 1947.

Exterior works on the hall were completed in the summer of 2025, and included restoring the stonework and making the roof of the building watertight.

News imageWigan & Leigh Archives A black and white archive photograph of the zoo at Haigh Hall in Wigan. A young child is looking over a fence at some camels.Wigan & Leigh Archives
The zoo at Haigh Hall in Wigan had camels, reptiles, monkeys and zebras

Work is also underway to transform the Bothy Yard and the walled kitchen garden at Haigh Hall, which will be used as a space to teach horticultural students.

The site was once home to a zoo which had camels, reptiles, monkey and zebras.

The yard will have a heated glasshouse for tender plants, such as bananas and pineapples, and a cooler zone for hardier plants, such as grapes and peaches.

There will also be a small shop in the yard, which will stock produce grown in the kitchen garden, and supply food to the restaurant in the hall.

News imageThe walled kitchen garden at Haigh Hall in Wigan. Victorian brickwork can be seen surrounding a polytunnel for growing vegetables.
The walled garden at Haigh Hall will have new glasshouses for horticultural students

Work is also set to begin on repairing the lining of the ornamental pond, which will mean carefully removing the fish, draining the water and maintaining the fountain.

The restoration of Haigh Hall is expected to be completed in the spring of 2028.

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