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£11,500 CLOCK FACELIFT
Mackworth was
brightened up with the restoration of an old landmark
clock. The clock, which was installed by Derby clockmaker
John Smith and Sons when the estate was built in 1958,
stopped working in November 2001. £11,500 was put up by
Derby City Council to have the clock in the Prince
Charles Avenue shopping parade entirely refurbished and
set its hands in motion again.
Councillor Richard Gerard, member for Mackworth ward,
said, "The estate was built in the fifties and it
would have been put in then, so it's a local landmark.
But it's not working at the moment and it just looks a
bit tatty. We asked our estates department to work out
the costs of putting it back in working order and it came
to a lot of money. But, if it looks nice, then it will
lift the whole area."
The restoration of the clock cost £7,500 and came out of
the Area Panel Five annual fund for improvements in the
area which covers Allestree, Darley Abbey and Mackworth.
That was almost a third of the panel's £22,059 budget
available for the 2002/2003 financial year. A further
£4,000, came out of the council's general capital
expenditure budget, and was promised by the cabinet to
refurbish its base, which was stripped, sandblasted and
painted with vandal-proof materials.
Just as the timepiece was finally restored, the clocks were set to go forward for British
Summer Time. John Smith and Sons
has restored it to its original design, although the only
original pieces are the hands. Eric Fairbrother, an
engineer who worked on the clock, said, "We restored
it and re-fitted it - it went like clockwork. It is just
coincidence that the clock was returned as the clocks go
forward, but the clock will do that automatically."
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