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Salford Lads and Girls Club to receive lifeline funding grant for ‘essential repairs’

It comes merely months after the historic venue faced closure.

Emily Sergeant Emily Sergeant - 7th August 2025

Salford Lads and Girls Club is set to receive a lifeline funding grant for essential repairs merely months after facing closure.

The £400,000 grant will be helping to secure a long-term future for the iconic youth club.

Established in 1903 as a purpose-built club for boys, but now open to girls too, Salford Lads and Girls Club nowadays works to provide new generations with access to sports, creative workshops, fitness, music, drama, and ultimately, life skills.

The building is, of course, forever linked with legendary Manchester band The Smiths, through Stephen Wright’s iconic photo of the band outside the front doorway.

For this reason, the venue has become a worldwide landmark and pilgrimage site for music fans, and it even has a dedicated Smiths room.

The venue’s funding grant is part of £2.4 million awarded to six historic places in the North West from Historic England’s Heritage at ‘Risk Capital Fund’.

Other sites in the region include the restoration of the upper seating areas at Morecambe Winter Gardens, and the conservation of the Grade II listed pumphouse at the National Waterways Museum in Ellesmere Port.

Some of the essential repairs set to be carried out with the funding include roof slate replacements, and brick and terracotta masonry repairs to ensure the long-term sustainability of this famous community building in Salford.

“Thanks to the extra funding from the Heritage at Risk Capital Fund, we are able to breathe new life into neglected historic buildings in the North West that we haven’t been able to help through our existing grant schemes,” commented Louise Brennan, who is the Director of Regions at Historic England, as the funding grant was announced.

“This initiative will not only boost economic growth but also create amazing opportunities for people in some of the region’s most disadvantaged areas.

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“We’re thrilled to support projects that harness the power of heritage to make a real difference where it’s needed most.”

Featured Image – Travel Mag (via Flickr)