2025 Traditional Farm Buildings Grant Scheme Opens

Jan 30, 2025 | Farm Viability, Uncategorized

The opening of the 2025 Traditional Farm Buildings Grant Scheme with a budget of €1.5million has been announced. The scheme is funded by the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (DAFM), and run in partnership with the Heritage Council.

This scheme received a prestigious Europa Nostra heritage award in 2024 for encouraging investment by farmers in the conservation of traditional farm buildings and structures of significant heritage value that contribute to our rural landscape, such as historic yard surfaces, buildings, gates and gate pillars that form part of the working farm. So far this scheme has transformed over 1,000 vulnerable farm buildings and farm structures since 2008 into functional assets that will remain in use for generations to come.

The scheme opens to applications on the 30th of January, and the Scheme will close on Monday 10th of March 2025. A grant award will cover up to 75% of the cost of the works, with a maximum available grant of €30,000.

Applications must be made online at www.heritagecouncil.ie.

An information webinar will be held on 12pm on Thursday 6th February, registration can be completed here.

DAFM confirmed that participants in the following Department schemes are eligible to apply for this grant scheme:

• Active Agri-environment scheme participants including ACRES. Note: Active ACRES and REAP participants only,
• Participants in EIP Calls 1, 2 and 3, Hen Harrier and Pearl Mussel projects and The Burren Project who were an active participant as of 31st December 2022 or had completed the full term of the contract for the relevant EIP or have completed a five-year project as appropriate; and
• Approved participants of the Organic Farming scheme.
Assessment Criteria

The overall evaluation approach is built on four main pillars:

Research: This included a literature review, development of a logical framework, review of programme mechanics, analysis of project commitments, and identification of international comparators.
Consultation: This entailed interviews with commissioning stakeholders, farm surveys and three expert focus groups.
Analysis: In-depth examination of the consultations to identify common themes and to help quantify the impact of the TFB scheme.
Evaluation: This included several elements including a ‘Systems Review and Process Analysis’, an ‘Impact Evaluation’ and an assessment of the ‘Value-for-Money’ of the scheme. An integrated Capital Approach was also employed, looking at the return in terms of Human, Intellectual, Financial, Social, Natural, and Manufactured capital.

Stay up to date with the latest funding news by visiting our News section here.

Image Source: Heritage Council

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