Victory under the scaffolding

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25 May 2022
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Artist's impression of HMS Victory with multi-level temporary covered access and work platform, part of new visitor experience Artist's impression of HMS Victory with multi-level temporary covered access and work platform, part of new visitor experience
Major new conservation phase for national treasure heralds a temporary new look for HMS Victory and once-in-a-generation visitor experience.

One of the world’s best-loved ships and national treasure, HMS Victory, reaches a hugely significant conservation milestone in the 10-year-long project to ensure she is protected for the next half century with the announcement that the ship will go under wraps and be partially enclosed by temporary covered scaffolding.

A century since Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson’s flagship at the Battle of Trafalgar was moved into dry dock in 1922, scaffolding specialists, PHD Access has been awarded a £4million contract to enable the next phase of conservation work, which is akin to a modern-day great repair that echoes the tradition of large-scale work carried out on a First-Rate line-of-battle ship in the 18th and 19th century.

The scaffolding installation is due to complete in time for the busy summer holiday period and the ship will remain open to visitors but access may be restricted for limited periods. Visitors are strongly advised to keep up to date with the website www.nmrn.org.uk.

Specialist 160t cranes will dwarf the 62m high ship to erect a multi-level temporary covered access and work platform around the 257 year old ship which sits in a dry dock, itself an ancient monument.

A temporary building will be constructed over Victory by PHD Access, in stages, to start the process of drying the ship and keeping her weather tight during conservation works. Platforms will eventually surround the ship in phases, encasing it in a secure structure that in phase one will run from the mizzen mast to the fore mast then moving, in phase 2 to cover the bow, and stern at stage 3.

This temporary building will also provide full public access at three levels for viewing of the works allowing for the development of a fascinating new visitor experience where visitors will be able to ascend scaffolding for an exceptionally rare opportunity to see specialist shipwrights at work.

Professor Dominic Tweddle, Director General of The National Museum of the Royal Navy said, “After 10 hard years exhaustively studying HMS Victory from bowsprit to beetles (yes really) and then designing and fitting a new high-tech support system, the next stage of the works begins.  Victory will be partly covered to allow rotten wood to be painstakingly removed and replaced.  And the brilliant thing is that our visitors will be able to see the works close up under the guidance of our expert shipwrights!  I for one cannot wait and I work with the ship every day!”Andrew Baines, Project Director for HMS Victory explained, “Conservation work on HMS Victory steps up a gear now as we enter a hugely significant phase that will temporarily transform her and open up an incredibly exciting opportunity to see her in a new light and interpret her story in a way never done before.

“We need to construct access scaffold, inside the temporary building, to allow our shipwrights and conservators access to the rotten hull planking in order to remove it. Once removed, we must then let what’s left dry out, before we can then make repairs and then re-plank with new timber.”

The decade-long project will ensure the ship is protected for the next half century, as the ship’s rotten outer shell is removed and replaced with new oak. Repairs will be made to the ship’s structural framework and she will be fully re-rigged, in a process lasting 10 to 15 years and costing £35 million.

Victory’s ceremonial function as flagship of the First Sea Lord will continue and the white ensign will still be flown from the ensign staff. Details of the brand-new visitor experience allowing access onto the scaffolding will be announced shortly. Visitor access to the Mary Rose Museum, which sits alongside the ship, will remain open but with potential small-scale re-routing of visitors.

 

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