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The Restoration Project
Restoration of the Alexandra Palace Organ continues. This page describes our current restoration
objectives, and those planned for the future.
Objective 1 - Restore Contra Viola |
Completed |
Funds raised |  |
Order placed |  | February 2005 |
Work in progress |  |
Palace installation |  | September 2005 |
The Contra Viola, playable from the Choir (1st manual), is a very important stop for music-making on the
Alexandra Palace Organ, since no other flue stops of 16' pitch on the manuals have yet been restored. The
Choir Organ is the only division on the instrument that is almost complete, and is housed in the
expression box at the rear of the installation, at the lower level.
The remainder of the original 1875 Contra Viola has been in store with the Organbuilder since the 1970s.
A substantial portion of the 61 pipes exist in restorable condition. For pipes that are restorable, the
Organbuilder will carry out a painstaking repair process. For pipes that are absent or in such bad condition as to be unrestorable, the Organbuilder will make new based on the existing pipes.
When all 61 separate pipes are produced,
the Choir soundboards are ready to house and supply wind and thus no work to the existing
installation is required, other than simply slotting the pipes into their holes.
Objective 2 - Repair and relocate Solo Soundboard |
Completed |
Funds raised |  |
Order placed |  | February 2005 |
Work in progress |  |
Palace installation |  | March 2007 |
The Solo soundboard seats and supplies wind to the entire Solo organ (4th manual) as the instrument
currently stands. The final Solo organ will be substantially larger, including a separate
expression box with thirteen imitative and orchestral voices. Presently the Solo consists only of the
unenclosed portion, the four Trombas and Tuba, the loudest stops on the instrument, and sits
immediately behind the front case pipes above the Great arch.
During recent years severe climatic conditions at the upper level of the Great Hall have taken a severe toll on the soundboard and two of the four stops are inoperative due to stuck sliders. The repair work consists of dismantling the
soundboard and rebuilding it at a lower position, so that in future it will be less exposed to these
severe conditions.
Objective 3 - Restore Cor Anglais |
Completed |
Funds raised |  | |
Order placed |  |
Work in progress |  |
Palace installation |  | July 2009 |
Like the Contra Viola, the remainder of the 1929 Cor Anglais has been in store with the Organbuilder since the 1970s. Unfortunately in this case only a very small portion of the 61 pipes exist in restorable condition. The Organbuilder will be able, therefore, to use these as a template to produce a new
rank in as close a style as possible to the original. As with the Contra Viola, the Choir soundboards
are ready for the pipes which will simply be slotted into their holes.
As the final stop to complete the Choir Organ, the Cor Anglais is a fine imitative voice with a similar timbre to an Orchestral Oboe. The old Cor
Anglais, generously loaned by the builder until it had to return to its rightful home, was of too
small a scale and the new will naturally be much more suited to the vast space of the Great Hall.
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