Green Party Senator Pauline O’Reilly has today welcomed the funding of €3.8 million under the Town Centre First Heritage Revival Scheme.
The funding will be used to renovate the existing Nun’s Island Theatre and completely refurbish the Church House to the rear linking the buildings into a new multi-purpose creative (Hub) centre, named CreativeSpace on Nun’s Island Galway City.
The two historic buildings located on the site, situated on the Western side of the Corrib River, the Nuns’ Island Theatre (built Circa 1835), is a former Presbyterian Church and the Church House, also known as ‘The Manse’, (constructed between 1855 & 1872) attached to the rear of the Theatre, originally served as a home for the church’s various Ministers.
Public Consultation on the role and functions of the Nuns Island site and its place within the creative and cultural landscape of the city was conducted by Urban Lab Galway on behalf of Galway City Council and the University of Galway in 2021 and 2022. Responses from the consultation identified that people wanted to see a multifunctional space that could be used for rehearsals, studios, meetings, events and administration.
Creative Space will offer Galway’s artistic community rehearsal and performance space and will promote the venue as the space for innovative and experimental work by emerging companies, individuals and minority communities in Galway.
Galway City Council state ‘that the long-term aim of the CreativeSpace concept is to consolidate Galway Arts Centre’s position as a key resource for artists. This will be achieved by promoting Nuns’ Island theatre as Galway’s ‘go to’ venue for emerging theatre and performing companies; by providing space at affordable rates to enable Galway’s artists to bring their projects to stage; and by nurturing amateur artists through our comprehensive youth led programme’.
Local authorities in receipt of funding will promote the values and working principles of the New European Bauhaus – an initiative of the European Union – in their projects to ensure their projects are sustainable, aesthetically pleasing, inclusive and accessible.
The Southern Regional Assembly and the Northern & Western Regional Assembly will open a second and the final call under THRIVE Strand 2 in early 2025 for capital funding for the adaptive reuse of heritage buildings owned by local authorities.
THRIVE is co-funded by the Government of Ireland and the European Union under the Southern, Eastern and Midland Regional Programme 2021-2027 and the Northern and Western Regional Programme 2021-2027. Further information is available on the websites of the Southern Regional Assembly and the Northern & Western Regional Assembly at www.southernassembly.ie and www.nwra.ie.