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Local contractors Harrabin Construction Ltd. have been awarded the contract to build  the planned new pavilion annexe at Coventry Cathedral.

The work includes moving the Swedish windows by Einar Forseth into the new build from their current position on the outside wall of the new Cathedral. ​​ The Swedish windows will be taken off site for preservation and repair by York Glaziers Trust during the build period.

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The annexe will include creating 12 step-free accessible toilets which will include a disabled facility and separate baby changing facilities, a passenger operated lift to the lower floor where a café is situated and a new education centre which will also be used for community and external events.

In 2018, around 16,000 pupils visited the Cathedral with their schools and the new education centre will allow students to take part in pastimes such as messier craft activities which currently can’t be provided since there are no moppable floors and few hand-washing facilities.

The building will also benefit from direct access on the north and south sides when other areas are busy.

The £3.5 million scheme has secured £2.2 million from the Cultural Capital Investment Fund from Coventry City Council which is a consolidated fund of contributions from the Department of Culture, Media and Sport, the Government’s Local Growth Fund through the Coventry and Warwickshire Local Enterprise Partnership (CWLEP) and Coventry City Council as well as over £1 million in grants or donations from Allchurches Trust, Laing Family Trusts, Friends of the Cathedral, Eranda Rothschild Foundation, Eveson Charitable Trust, Barbara Whatmore Trust, Garfield Weston Foundation, Wolfson Foundation, Glaziers Trust, the Jerusalem Trust, the Armitage Trust and individual donations.

The exciting project is part of a wider four-phase programme of improvements to prepare the Cathedral for events when Coventry is UK City of Culture in 2021.

The Very Rev John Witcombe, Dean of Coventry, said: “The 2021 development project at the Cathedral is a hugely significant moment for us. It will transform the welcome we are able to give people when they visit and we are enormously grateful to all those supporters who are making this possible.”

The initial demolition work to clear the site began in February 2020 and the main construction work on the annex started in June following a break as a result of the pandemic. The building is expected to be ready in May 2021.