DUDLEY Zoo and Castle has been awarded £120,000 to kickstart plans to restore four of its iconic Tecton buildings.

The cash, from the Getty Foundation’s Keeping It Modern initiative, will pay for repairs to be carried out to the Discovery Centre, Queen Mary Restaurant, Tropical Birdhouse and Elephant House, ahead of planning and Listed Building submissions.

Dudley Zoo and Castle contains the world’s largest single collection of grade II listed Tecton buildings, which were granted World Monument Status in 2009.

The Tecton Group, led by Russian-born architect Berthold Lubetkin, were pioneers in bringing Modernist architecture to the UK and between 1935 to 1937 designed and built many of the zoo’s enclosures using a specialist system of reinforced concrete.

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Derek Grove, zoo director, said: “This grant is great news for DZC. Our Tectons have helped define the zoo’s unique character for more than eight decades, but over time and with changing animal husbandry practices, some of these structures have become unused which has inevitably led to deterioration.

“We are delighted that an organisation with a long history of philanthropic interventions to iconic architectural structures, such as the Getty Foundation, have been able to assist us and help us maintain these assets for future generations.”

The grant will fund initial site investigations, structural reports and concrete testing on the four buildings, while further funding is sourced for the renovations.

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In recent years restoration work has already been carried out on four of the zoo’s remaining 12 structures – the safari shop, entrance, bear ravine and kiosk one – thanks to funding from Heritage Lottery and repair work was also completed on the sealion pools and Reptillary enclosure, which is currently home to the attraction’s meerkats.

The Castle Hill attraction's Tecton collection is one of just 13 20th century buildings across the globe to receive a share of $2.2 million from the Getty Foundation’s final year of the Keeping it Modern scheme and is the only project to benefit in the UK in 2020, with other grantees in Chile, Kuwait, Nigeria, Portugal and Senegal.

Joan Weinstein, Director of the Getty Foundation, said: “Modern architecture, with its experimental materials and structural innovations, is a powerful cultural expression that took many forms worldwide.

“These buildings embody human ingenuity, but many are showing their age and face irreversible damage or even demolition if we fail to act. Our Keeping It Modern grantees across the globe are working to safeguard this modern heritage for future generations, and to produce models of best practice that other stewards of modern architecture can learn from.”