SAVE Britain's Heritage

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SAVE Britain's Heritage is a pressure group in the United Kingdom that campaigns for the conservation of buildings. It is a registered charity with offices at Cowcross Street in London's Clerkenwell. Its president is Marcus Binney. It has expanded into France, Germany, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and Hungary, under the name SAVE Europe's Heritage.

SAVE Britain's Heritage was founded in 1975 (European Architectural Heritage Year), in the aftermath of the 1974 exhibition "The Destruction of the Country House" held at the V&A. It campaigns for the preservation and reuse of endangered historic buildings, placing particular emphasis on finding new uses for them.

SAVE was instrumental in saving buildings such as:

It is not always successful. Its campaign in 1977 to 1978 to save Mentmore Towers and its collection for the nation failed; it was unable to stop the demolition of historic buildings in the City of London to make way for No 1 Poultry, and could not prevent the disposal of the interior of the Baltic Exchange which had been damaged by a Provisional Irish Republican Army bomb in 1992. It is currently campaigning to save the General Market Buildings of Smithfield Market on Farringdon Road and the Royal Aircraft Establishment in Farnborough.

It has also established charitable trusts to restore:

SAVE Britain's Heritage has published many campaigning books and leaflets, including The Concrete Jerusalem (1976), Elysian gardens (1979), Vanishing London: A catalogue of decay (1979), The Fall of Zion (1980), The Country House: to be or not to be (1982), Estates Villages who cares? (1983), Crisis at Saltaire (1986), Pavilions in peril (1987), Bright future: the reuse of industrial buildings (1990), Stop the destruction of Bucklesbury (1992), Beacons of learning (1995), Mind over matter (1995), Silence in Court (2004), and The Guildhall Testimonial (2006), advocating the preservation and reuse of, inter alia, nonconformist chapels, redundant Anglican churches, Victorian mental hospitals, country houses, their gardens and outbuildings, and industrial buildings. It also publishes an action guide, to assist campaigners with setting up their own groups to advocate the case for particular buildings. It maintains an electronic register of around 700 "buildings at risk", and publishes a paper version of the register annually.

An exhibition highlighting the first 30 years of its work was held at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 2005.

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