British Library Temple Works scheme in Leeds gets £5m boost
Plans to develop a Victorian mill into a site for the British Library have received a £5m boost.
The Egyptian-style Temple Works building in Leeds could be converted into a northern outpost of the national collection by 2028.
The money will pay towards stabilising the foundations of the former flax mill before its planned £70m conversion.
West Yorkshire's mayor Tracy Brabin described the scheme as a "really exciting opportunity for Leeds".
According to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, Ms Brabin was speaking at a meeting of the West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA) which voted in favour of the £5m grant.
"I would also like to see the opportunity for renovation in an area that has traditionally been an area of deprivation," said Ms Brabin.
"It is a really exciting opportunity for Leeds. To bring in tourism and academics and to be one of the best in the country is just fantastic."
A report into the plans by WYCA officers claimed the site could create extra jobs and bring in an extra half-a-million visitors to Leeds every year.
It is hoped the site will one day play host to a British Library northern exhibit, sitting alongside its major base in Boston Spa, which is home to more than three-quarters of the Library's collection.
The British Library described the Temple Works project as "a major new public-facing centre for audiences and users in the north of England" with exhibitions, cultural events, schools programming, business support services and access to research collections.
The Grade I-listed building in Holbeck was built in 1836 with a facade based on the Temple of Horus at Edfu, Egypt.
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