Girton Town Charity welcomes HRH Duke of Gloucester

A glorious day for Girton Town Charity who welcomed HRH The Duke of Gloucester on Thursday 13 June 2024 for a special visit.

Girton Town Charity welcomed our Royal Vice Patron, His Royal Highness The Duke of Gloucester to their new award-winning “Passivhaus” almshouse development in the heart of Girton in Cambridge.

His Royal Highness was warmly received by His Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire Julie Spence, Nick Phillips, CEO of The Almshouse Association, Willie Hartley-Russell, Chairman of The Almshouse Association, and Ann Bonnett, Chair of Girton Town Charity.

The Duke was introduced to trustees and staff at Dovehouse Court, after which he embarked on a tour of the UK’s first fully accredited Passivhaus almshouse development.

During the tour, Ian Bramwell, Director of Mole Architects and the mind behind the development showcased the interior of one of the new almshouses. The Duke also had the pleasure of visiting resident Diana Henderson in her home and sharing some homemade pastries and cakes with residents.

The event was commemorated with the unveiling of a plaque and Ann Bonnett expressed the Charity’s gratitude to The Duke, saying

it has been a great pleasure to show you around our new almshouses so you could see first-hand these homes for the future.”

Ann then presented His Royal Highness with a signed copy of local photographer Martin Bond’s new book, ‘Cambridge: Town & Gown.’

Before departing, The Duke remarked,

I am delighted to have been able to come to Dovehouse Court today to see and hear about your ground-breaking development. It is very impressive that your charity, which has a 500-year history, is now looking to the future with these inspiring homes which have preserved the principles of traditional almshouse design with shared gardens and a community courtyard.”

Nick Phillips, CEO of The Almshouse Association, added,

We are very honoured to receive HRH The Duke of Gloucester at one of our member charities, particularly to show off this fine example of a new Passivhaus-certified almshouse development. The Duke seemed very interested in how the charity blended historic design with cutting-edge environmental engineering around a welcoming community courtyard, synonymous with almshouse architectural design.”

Earlier this year, Dovehouse Court was highly commended in the Best New Building Over £2 Million category at the 2024 Greater Cambridge Design and Construction Awards, hosted by the Cambridge Forum for the Construction Industry (CFCI) at Pembroke College.

See also: Charity scoops award successes for new almshouse development | Cambridge Network


Almshouse resident and D Day veteran attends RBL Service of Remembrance

D Day Veteran Phil Sweet is attending the Royal British Legion Service of Remembrance to mark D-Day 80, at the National Memorial Arboretum today, Thursday 6 June 2024

We are proud to announce that Phil Sweet who is a resident of an almshouses in Stratford-upon-Avon is attending the Royal British Legion Service of Remembrance to mark D-Day 80, at the National Memorial Arboretum on Thursday 6 June 2024 . 

Phil who is now 99 recalls the following about his war time experience:

“I was sent to a place called Lochailort in the Highlands where I did six weeks of hefty nautical and ability training. Those six weeks were the toughest I have experienced in my life both physically and mentally. At the end of each week you had exams and if you were not good enough you would be dropped. But I lasted and was appointed an officer then sent to Troon for officer training for another six weeks and then appointed to a tank landing craft ready for the D-Day landings.

The war had been going for quite a considerable period of time for my training was in readiness for the D-Day landings the time of which we did not know then.

Terry (centre) in naval uniform

I was part of the initial wave that landed at the village of La Rivière as part of the Gold Beach landings. I was in a flotilla which were the first to go into the beach with two tanks on top of each other on the landing craft so that they could bombard the beach with shells as they were coming in to land. We didn’t lose anybody that day although the landing craft was damaged by the underwater objects as we were going in. 

Then following the landing we were offloading equipment to the beaches and whilst doing so I had to go to the tented hospital at Bayeux with suspected peritonitis which turned out to be appendicitis.

I was sent to Plymouth to HMS Foliot, running all the movement of landing craft. We were tropicalizing (adding refrigeration and air conditioning) landing craft ready for the Far East but of course that collapsed because they dropped the atomic bomb.” 


Almshouse resident commissioned to create huge artwork

‘Art has been and still is my life’: 93-year-old commissioned to create huge artwork using drawings from sketchbook

24 May 2024 Claudia Lee for South London Press

A 93-year-old who has spent her life teaching and creating art has covered the panels outside her former home with drawings from her old sketchbooks as part of a special commission.

Jenny Adams, who is a resident of Hopton’s Almshouse in Hopton Street, Southwark, was set the task to make a site-specific artwork for the hoardings in Blackfriars Road and Nicholson Street, as part of Tenderground and Southwark Charities art programme.

Ms Adams’ large-scale drawings are enlarged from several sketchbooks which documented her daily life living in Edward Edwards House, the almshouse behind these hoardings. 

Jenny Adams’ hoarding installation in Blackfriars Road (Picture: Tenderground/Southwark Charities)

She said: “My first experience with art was a jumble of nothingness. 

“Then the colours hit me in my eyes, now I get the joy of smelling, touching and tasting, through art.

“Everything is a beauty. Art has been and still is my life.”

Southwark Charities’ almshouses offer self sufficient, low-cost community housing for elderly people in the borough. Tenderground is a commissioning programme for the almshouses of Southwark Charities.

The works, designed in collaboration with graphic designer Charlie Noon, record the often overlooked details of Ms Adams’ daily life – plants, the stages of decaying fruit, roadworks happening outside her window or flowers picked in the garden and left on her windowsill by a neighbour.

Ms Adams was born in Nairobi, Kenya in 1932. She attended Central Art School in Holborn from 1950 until 1954, and worked as a commercial artist, illustrator and designer for John Lewis.

Jenny Adams with members of Tenderground, Southwark Charities and developers JTRE London (Picture: Tenderground/Southwark Charities)

Now in her early 90s, Ms Adams continues to sketch every day. 

As well as celebrating its residents, Ms Adams’ work marks the next phase of the Edward Edwards House, which is currently under development by Southwark Charities in partnership with developers JTRE London, to create a new almshouse and office building.

This hoarding installation is the first public commission from Tenderground, directed by Laura Wilson and Clare Cumberlidge.

Ms Wilson said: “We are thrilled to be working with artists and the residents of the almshouses to deliver a programme of world class art to Southwark.

“We are lucky to have an artist as inspirational as Jenny Adams amongst the residents and are proud to launch the programme with her work.”

Southwark Charities has occupied the site in Blackfriars Road since 1752. For more than 250 years it has been home to Edward Edwards House, an almshouse for the people of Southwark. 

Caroline Croft, Southwark Charities Chairwoman of Trustees, said: “I am delighted that our charity has embarked upon an art strategy that is so ambitious and creative. 

Tenderground is already showing that high-quality art can make a positive difference to the lives of our beneficiaries and the wider community. I’m so excited by the programme and what is to come.”

[Pictured top: Jenny Adams and The commission marks the next phase of Edward Edwards House, which is currently under redevelopment (Picture: Tenderground/Southwark Charities)]


Richmond Charity helps raise the profile of almshouses

Promoting the almshouse brand is so important for the future success and stability of the almshouse movement.

Here at The Almshouse Association, we are working hard to make sure we get the message out about just how good almshouses are and what we need from the Government to make sure our members can continue to provide safe and warm community homes for people in need, but we are one voice. With almost 1600 members, just imagine how load our messages could be!

The Association is always very proud when we see positive media activity from our members – United St Saviours Appleby Blue and the Trinity Homes Almshouse exhibition in Brixton have both been making headline recently – and we were really pleased to receive a copy of an article Samantha Maskell of The Richmond Charities helped put together for publication in Venture, Atkins Ferrie‘s June 24 newsletter.

It begins…

If you walk down Sheen Road in Richmond upon Thames, you may stop to admire a row of attractive Grade-II listed buildings. What you may not realise is that these buildings are almshouses – built in 1834 for ‘14 poor men and 14 poor women’. Over time, additional almshouses have been built on the site, and altogether they now provide a home for more than 50 people.

The estate is called Hickey’s Almshouses, after the man who bequeathed the estate back in 1728. It’s
owned and managed by The Richmond Charities. We caught up with Samantha Maskell (right), Head
of Finance, Policy and Governance at The Richmond Charities, to find out more…

To read the article in full, please click here


Grand Opening of Appleby Blue almshouses

Hugh Graham, Senior Property Writer for The Times attends the opening of the Appleby Blue almshouses.

Not only am I hoping it signals an almshouse revival, I found myself hoping that I end up living in one in my sunset years.

Read his article below

The affordable housing for over-65s that could lengthen your life

Almshouses in Britain are over a thousand years old — and new ones are still being built. We visit the latest example, designed to provide community and security

When most people hear the word almshouse, they think back to Victorian or medieval times — rows of pretty cottages around courtyards or greens, built by the church or charities to house the elderly poor. But I attended the opening of a brand new almshouse last week in Bermondsey, southeast London. Not only am I hoping it signals an almshouse revival, I found myself hoping that I end up living in one in my sunset years.

Appleby Blue, the new almshouse, has 57 flats and 65 residents, and is a welcome addition to an ancient British tradition of low-cost housing for the elderly. The oldest almshouse still in existence is thought to be the Hospital of St Oswald in Worcester, founded circa 990 by the Bishop of Worcester to create 21 homes for the sick and the poor. Almshouses flourished in Victorian England, as philanthropists felt it their duty to house retired workers or the elderly destitute. But in the 1950s, with the rise of council houses and the welfare state, new supply dried up; philanthropists assumed the state would take over. The ancient ones endure, however: there are currently (1,600 almshouse charities,) 30,000 almshouses in England and 36,000 people living in them, says Nick Phillips, the CEO of The Almshouse Association.

Designed in weathered brick by Stirling prize-winning architects Witherford Watson Mann, Appleby Blue carries on with the courtyard tradition — the 57 flats look down onto an enclosed communal garden filled with foxgloves and a babbling water feature; elderly residents tend to their rhubarbs and strawberries in another rooftop garden. But Appleby Blue is not a cloistered world: the glass-fronted garden room opens directly onto the high street, so elderly residents can sit and watch the world go by. This is a far cry from many retirement homes, which are hidden in dull suburbs, rather than in the heart of a bustling city.

The courtyard at Appleby Blue almshouse BENOIT GROGAN-AVIGNON

To prevent loneliness, residents’ kitchen windows look onto internal glazed walkways — no institutional corridors here — so they can wave at neighbours as they pass; benches outside their doors encourage chatting. Appleby Blue also has a cooking school that is open to the public and residents alike, so the oldies still mix with the outside world.

Appleby Blue is managed by United St Saviour’s Charity which was founded in 1541 and has two other almshouses in London. Residents must be over 65, in financial need and live locally. They pay about £850 a month: most residents’ costs are covered by housing benefit. Many residents were empty-nesters living alone in three or four-bedroom council houses, simply because they couldn’t find anywhere to downsize. So almshouses are a useful valve to relieve housing pressure: five times as many people are housed if you build homes for elderly people, because it frees up family houses down the chain, said Lord Best, who declared Appleby Blue open at the ceremony last week.

They’re also better for the wellbeing of the elderly than social housing, says Phillips. He cites a 2023 study by Bayes Business School that concluded that a 73-year-old male entering the Charterhouse almshouse in London would live 2.5 years longer compared with his peers from the same socio-economic group.
“They encourage the model of the good neighbour, which you sign up to when you come in,” Phillips says. “It creates an environment of companionship to eradicate isolation. And they are led by volunteer trustees who take an interest in the welfare of the residents.”

He cites one example of a resident who stopped coming to social events. When the warden checked up on him and inquired why, the man said he was embarrassed by his dirty clothes — his washing machine had broken, so the charity paid to have it fixed.

With the current dearth of council houses, and the government’s depleted coffers, we clearly need more almshouses to help pick up the slack. “There’s a time bomb of older people living in market-rented property — what will happen when they hit retirement?” said Stephen Burns, the chair of trustees at the charity. “They won’t be able to pay.”

But how do you fund new almshouses? This one was developed by United St Saviour’s Charity in collaboration with the developer JTRE, which recently completed Triptych Bankside, a development of luxury flats in the borough. Instead of building the required quota of affordable housing in its luxury scheme, JTRE came to an agreement with Southwark council to develop this almshouse on the site of a derelict care home, on land owned by the local authority. It’s a model that should be replicated, says Phillips, who says there is a revival of interest in almshouses in recent years, as housing pressures increase — he estimates 400 were built last year.

Now we just need a new generation of philanthropists to step up and fund more of them — where are all the future Peabodys and Guinnesses? “I read an article about Jeff Bezos going to the moon and billionaires wanting immortality,” says Chris Wilson, the CEO of Southwark Charities. “If they want immortality, fund an almshouse. Your name will live forever.”

Indeed, this new almshouse is named after Dorothy Appleby, a pub landlady who died in 1682, and left her money to the poor through United St Saviour’s, all those centuries ago. Cheers to Dorothy.

For older readers who are homeowners, this week’s reader question is: if the government cut stamp duty for downsizers, would you consider moving to a smaller home? Why or why not? I’d love to know why you’d be happier remaining in the family home or making a fresh start in a retirement home or bungalow. Send your answers to property@thetimes.co.uk, and we’ll feature the best replies next week.

Until next week,

Hugh

See also: Is this Bermondsey almshouse the ideal way of living for over 65s? – Southwark News


Search for lost portrait of Sir Thomas Dunk of Hawkhurst as almshouses celebrate 300 years

by Alan Smith for www.kentonline.co.uk, 21 May 2024

The hunt is on for two lost portraits of a 17th century knight and his wife.

Sir Thomas Dunk, from Hawkhurst, made a fortune during his lifetime from two principal businesses – the production of cloth and iron. But although he lived a lavish lifestyle at his impressive estate at Tongs Wood – now home to St Ronan’s School – he was also a generous benefactor to his village.

When he died, Sir Thomas (1657 to 1718) left land in Hawkhurst with a large bequest and instructions that almshouses should be built there, along with a boy’s school and a house for the schoolmaster. The result was the Dunk’s Almshouses that still stand in a prominent position in the Highgate end of the village, and which still provide subsidised accommodation for those in need.

This year, the Dunk’s charity which runs the almshouses will be celebrating its 300th anniversary, with events including an exhibition about Sir Thomas and the history of the almshouses and the school he created.

However, what would have been the centrepiece of the exhibition – contemporary portraits of Sir Thomas and his wife – have been missing for more than 70 years. The portraits, the only known images of Sir Thomas and Lady Cornelia (1668–1717), hung for more than two centuries in the almshouses he created.

But in 1927 the Dunk’s trustees asked Hawkhurst Parish Council to hang the paintings in the Victoria Hall – then Hawkhurst’s main village hall (now The Kino cinema) – so they could be admired by more members of the public. They are known to have still been there in 1950 but around 1951 the hall was refurbished and somehow the paintings disappeared.

As a consequence, the charity does not have a single image of its most generous benefactor and has no idea what happened to the artwork.

A spokesman for the trustees said: “We really haven’t a clue. It would be complete speculation after all this time. But we’d dearly love to know.”

Sir Thomas Dunk’s will
Dunk’s School circa 1911

It was not until Elizabeth Clark began researching the history of the charity in 1989 and found references to the paintings that it was even realised they were missing. Sir Thomas came from a family of “great clothiers” with their wealth derived from centuries of textile production. But it was Sir Thomas who diversified into iron-making using the rich timber from Hawkhurst’s woods to fuel the furnaces to smelt the iron ore. He received his knighthood from Queen Anne.

He and his wife had no surviving children but Sir Thomas also owned a large house in London and a further estate in Chieveley in Berkshire. He left the latter to William Richards (1690–1733), who is believed to have been an illegitimate son, on condition that he changed his name to Dunk. William had a daughter Anne, who, in 1841, married George Montagu, 2nd Earl of Halifax, who also took on the surname Dunk, finally making the family part of the aristocracy.

Sir Thomas Dunk's gravestone within St Laurence Church in Hawkhurst
Sir Thomas Dunk’s gravestone within St Laurence Church in Hawkhurst

Sir Thomas had served as Sheriff of London in 1711 and was also a governor of St Thomas’ Hospital in the capital. His initial bequest provided for six almshouses in Rye Road but over the years they have been expanded and there are now 10 one-person flats and four bungalows.

Sir Thomas is buried at St Laurence Church at The Moor in Hawkhurst.

He also provided for a school, initially for 20 pupils. Two other famous sons of the village were educated there – William and Reginald Rootes – who went on to establish the Rootes Motorcar Company.

A Dunks school photo from the early 1900s. William and Reginald Rootes are among the pupils
A Dunks school photo from the early 1900s. William and Reginald Rootes are among the pupils

But the school closed in 1923. The school hall remains and is let out for village meetings and events, the income from which is used by the Dunk’s Educational Foundation to support the education of Hawkhurst’s children with grants where needed.

The Dunk’s charity will celebrate its tercentenary with an exhibition open from 10am till 4pm each day in the old schoolroom over three days from June 20 to June 23.

Children from Hawkhurt’s three schools – the primary school, St Ronan’s and Marlborough House – are also taking part in an art competition to reflect its long history. There will also be a grand raffle.

The chairman of trustees, Nigel Collinson, said, “By making a bit of a splash in celebrating the 300-year milestone, the trustees are hoping to spread the word about Hawkhurst’s great son and to encourage active involvement from the wider community so that Dunk’s can sail safely through the turbulent waters of the next 300 years.”

Lord Halifax and his secretaries, a painting by Daniel Gardner
An interior of one of the Dunks Almshouses


Case Study: The Frances Geering Almshouses

Case Study Phase 1, part 1: Drainage works, replacement windows and replastering,

In the early part of 2024, The Frances Geering Almshouses Charity was awarded a £50,000 loan from The Almshouse Association to support various planned works to resolve damp problems in the charity’s two almshouses, covering drainage works, replacement front windows and replastering and painting with lime based materials.

photo taken circa 1904

The Frances Geering Almshouses in Harwell, Oxfordshire are a Grade II* listed building, built in the 1740s. The building is U-shaped and single storey, with a fine example of brickwork on its front façade. 

It originally housed ‘6 poor widows’ who each had one room with a well and brick privy (now a shed) in the garden.

In the 1960s and the 1990s alterations were carried out, reducing the number of residents to two, so that each had a living room, bedroom, kitchen and bathroom.

With no damp proof course, and restrictions on what the Historic Building Officers would allow in a listed building, perennial damp problems were becoming unacceptable for residents in the 21st century. 

The trustees advised that if they cannot find residents, the charity will have no income and the building will deteriorate.

The Quinquennial Review in 2022 showed that some of the remedial work carried out over the years had been undertaken using inappropriate materials which were exacerbating the major problem of dampness in the almshouses.  The residents have to keep their clothes in plastic bags; the walls and curtain linings develop damp patches, which become black and mouldy, which cannot be good for their health.

The original endowments of the Charity have been gradually sold off over the 300 years to maintain the upkeep of the building, and no endowments remain.  Their annual income is about £20,000 with just two residents.  In recent years they have had a surplus of about £5,000 per annum, which has been invested.

With a healthy financial balance, the trustees decided it was time to carry out a major renovation to reduce the damp problems. 

The plan included:

  • the removal of the external cement rendering to the whole of the south wall and low level cement rendering to the east wall of the almshouse
  • stripping out the gypsum plaster on the internal walls in the bedroom, sitting room, kitchen and hallway
  • insulating the walls and replastering all with lime plaster. This work will allow the building to breathe.

The Quinquennial Review also recommended that a CCTV survey of the drains should be carried out and this revealed that the foul drains that were constructed in pitch fibre were showing signs of collapse and fluid retention.  New pipework for the foul drains and the storm drains needed to be installed and a new soakaway dug, both of which will ensure that water is correctly taken away from the building.  New gutters and drainpipes were also needed.

The trustees have now also had agreement to remove the rotting wooden frames of the sash windows and replace them with double glazed units. The new plastering will be done during the summer months, to help the building to dry out, and the new windows will be fitted at the same time.

The trustees are using local building companies with a good reputation who are known to them.

Whilst the drainage work was being carried out the contractors liaised closely with both residents to ensure that they were aware of when the changeover from the old to the new system would take place. 

When the internal works commence it will be necessary to provide alternative accommodation elsewhere in the village for approximately two months.

Having obtained Listed Building Consent, the trustees set up a small sub-committee to supervise the work, reporting at regular intervals back to the trustees. 

They obtained quotes for the 3 areas of work, totalling approx. £120,000.  With savings to cover half of this amount, they have been applying for grants. The Almshouse Association granted the Charity a loan of £50,000 to be repaid over 10 years to support the works.


We would like to thanks all the trustees and contractors for their hard work and determination to ensure these beautiful almshouses have been preserved and can continue to provide safe and warm homes to people in need for many more generations to come.

We would also like to thank the people who so kindly donate to The Almshouse Association or leave gifts in their Wills. Without their generosity, we would not be in a position to help support almshouse charities with their renovations and new builds.

The Almshouse Association awards loans and grants to our member charities every year. In 2023, £804,624 was approved in new loans and grants approved totalled £78,590. Charities pay no interest on the loans, just a small administration fee. As they make repayments on the loans over a ten year period, the Association can continue to offer loans to charities year after year, meaning that your donations continue to support almshouses and their residents in perpetuity.

If you are interested in making a donation to The Almshouse Association or leaving a gift in your Will, please do visit our Support Us pages here.


Construction work begins on new almshouses in Gosport

A groundbreaking ceremony in Gosport has marked the start of construction on a new Thorngate Churcher Trust development of homes in the town.

Representatives from Thorngate were joined by local councillors, construction staff, funders and professional advisors involved in the project to mark the start of construction of 30 warden-assisted flats for the over 50s. As an almshouse charity, Thorngate Churcher Trust has been offering low-cost community housing for local people in housing need since 1868.

Speaking at the event Mark Hook, chair of the board of trustees for Thorngate Churcher Trust, paid tribute to everyone who had worked so hard to reach this point.

L-R Oliver West from Vale Southern, Thorngate trustee chairman Mark Hook and chief executive Anne Taylor; photo credit: Thorngate Churcher Trust

Our responsibility as a social housing provider is to respond to the needs of our residents and that is a passion that drives not only the board but the whole team at Thorngate,” he said.

Thorngate currently has 124 sheltered flats for assisted living and Mark said the current waiting list is almost long enough to refill each of these homes.

We are conscious that we can’t satisfy all the demand for specialist housing for older people looking for independent living with people-based support but what we are doing here is maximising the potential of this site,” he said.

It has all the key features we know are most popular for our residents such as a multi-use space in the resident lounge, easily access for buggies and parking, and great transport connections. It is also a very green building with renewable energy.”

Funding for the new project has been made possible thanks to a grant from Homes England and support from Charity Bank. Carolyn Sims, director of lending from Charity Bank said she was pleased that the bank has been able to help Thorngate with this project.

“Older people should have somewhere decent to live and almshouses like Thorngate play a great role in this,” she said. “I’m personally thrilled we can support this project and look forward to the homes taking shape.”

Vale Southern, based in Portsmouth, has been awarded the contract to build the new homes and its managing director Oliver West said,

“This groundbreaking marks the start of a much-needed development, which we’re very proud to be delivering on behalf of Thorngate Churcher Trust. With spades now in the ground, we’re looking forward to getting the project underway and collaborating with Thorngate to create a high-quality development of sheltered flats for assisted living.”

Thorngate’s chief executive Anne Taylor said with work now underway the homes will be ready for occupation in 2025.

“Our new development on the corner of Grove Road and Sealark Road in Gosport will provide safe, comfortable, and modern homes with communal facilities and warden support,” said Anne.


Behind the blue doors..

To mark the 200th anniversary of Trinity Homes Almshouse in Brixton, photographer Jim Grover stepped inside to meet some of the current residents and delve into its history.

Read BBC News article here and below:

Image source: Jim Grover: Resident, Guy Hunting

“I’ve often wondered what lay behind the blue front doors of this distinctive Georgian building on Brixton’s busy Acre Lane,” says Grover.

“Who lives there and what are their stories?

“How did it come to be here and who was the man whose name is prominently displayed above its doors? It’s been a wonderful voyage of discovery for me, full of extraordinary revelations that span 200 years.

“I am so pleased to be able to throw open the doors and share the remarkable and inspiring stories that lie behind them.”

The almshouse was built in 1822 and endowed in 1824 with £2,000 (equivalent to about £275,000 in today’s money) by Thomas Bailey, a Brixton resident. Originally from Staffordshire, Bailey made his money as a partner in Neale & Bailey, a very successful retailer of china and cut glass in the late 18th and early 19th Century.

Image Source Jim Glover: Trinity Homes wall tablet

Trinity Asylum (as it was originally named) was for “pious aged women”, it was not a mental asylum. Successful applicants for one of the original 12 apartments had to be aged between 57 and 67, single, have a small income, and have references that included confirmation of their religious faith.

Today Trinity Homes is a registered charity administered by a group of voluntary trustees. Residents can furnish their rooms however they wish.

Guy Hunting, a published author and previously a footman at Buckingham Palace, has been a resident for 14 years. He scours local charity shops for artworks to add to his enormous collection.

“People aren’t here by choice, some are here for unfortunate reason, by ‘force majeure’, but some are great fun.”

Image source Jim Grover: Resident Christine Holding

Christine Holding became a resident in 2004. Her mother was previously a resident for more than 20 years.

Holding retired in 2020, at the age of 72, having previously spent 20 years as a dinner lady and housekeeper in a local school. Now 76, she has signed up to be a volunteer for The Patients Association in her local GP surgery.

“I’ve worked all my life, I’ve got to be doing something as I love meeting people,” she says.

In 1996, Peter Avery became the first male resident of Trinity Homes, and men now comprise seven of the 17 residents.

Avery, now 84, a former senior lecturer at Central School of Art and Design, continues to be a very active artist and is currently designing a stage set for a south London theatre.

I don’t have a bedroom, it’s my studio instead. I have a fold-up bed which I wheel out each night,” says Avery.

Image source Jim Grover: Peter Avery
Image source Jim Grover: art materials in Peter’s room

Traces of former artist residents can be found in the communal gardens.

Image source Jim Grover: a wooden sculpture of a chair
Image source Jim Grover: an apple tree

Like many almshouses, the layout includes a central communal area, in this case a garden. In the summer, some of the residents gather under the apple tree for a glass of wine together.

Image source Jim Grover: Andrew Taylor, Trinity Homes Warden

Andrew Taylor is the live-in warden, a role he has held since 2013.

I’ve decided that now we have a newly decorated meeting room I’m going to see if we can get together a bit more. Start with a coffee morning and some homemade scones. We’ll take it from there.”

Image source Jim Grover: Wallee McDonnell

Wallee McDonnell is 72, and a resident since 2018. He volunteers for Celebrate Life, a Community Interest Company, for which he was a finalist in the 2024 Lambeth Civic Awards. He also facilitates peace education workshops in prisons.

I was homeless” says McDonnell, “I’d never had my own place, my own front door with a key.


Pickering and Ferens Homes share preview of new development

The Almshouse Association was delighted when Pickering and Ferens Homes (PFH) shared a preview of their latest development of almshouses at Padstow Close Hull with partners on 13 March 2024.

This £3.96 million development delivered by Unity Homes and supported by Homes England Funding of £1.32 million, comprises of 24 bungalows specifically designed for living in later life which are a welcome addition to the area. Incorporating innovative designs inspired by resident feedback, the development will be completed by late Summer this year. 

“We are committed to building as many new, high-quality homes as possible, and to be an organisation that people look on with local pride. We are delighted to be in the final stages at Padstow and know these properties will become much loved homes for our residents to enjoy.”

Claire Warren, Chief Executive of Pickering and Ferens Homes

“Good quality housing is in huge demand, and these will provide much needed, homes for people to live independently that have been sensitively designed to complement the character of the area, as well as utilising technology that ensures they are energy efficient.”

Cllr Paul Drake Davis, Portfolio Holder for Regeneration and Housing at Hull City Counci

“These wonderful new bungalows are the first to be built in Bransholme for many years and Unity Homes & Enterprise are proud to support Pickering & Ferens to deliver these well-designed energy efficient homes for the local community. This development demonstrates Pickering & Ferens commitment to the city of Hull and its communities.”

Wayne Noteman, Development Director at Unity Housing and Enterprise