Snape Maltings
Snape Maltings on the River Alde in Suffolk is one of the most remarkable cultural and commercial transformations of an industrial heritage site in Britain, a complex of Victorian malthouses on the tidal estuary south of Aldeburgh that was converted from industrial use beginning in the 1960s by the composer Benjamin Britten and his partner Peter Pears into the Aldeburgh Festival concert hall and complex, creating a world-class music venue in a landscape of extraordinary beauty. The combination of the festival concert hall, the river setting, the quality of the artisan shops and restaurants in the restored malthouse buildings and the surrounding Suffolk coast and heathland makes Snape one of the most distinctive cultural destinations in the east of England. Benjamin Britten and the Aldeburgh Festival that he co-founded in 1948 brought Snape Maltings to international attention as the home of one of the most important summer music festivals in Britain. The main concert hall, converted from the largest of the malthouse buildings in 1967 and rebuilt after a fire in 1969, is renowned for its exceptional acoustic quality and intimate atmosphere, the industrial brick architecture creating a concert hall of great character quite unlike the conventional purpose-built concert halls of the period. The retail and craft complex in the surrounding malthouses includes an exceptional gallery, bookshop and antique dealers alongside food outlets of high quality whose produce reflects the Suffolk provenance and the quality expected by the culturally engaged visitors who form the principal audience. The walk along the riverbank from Snape Maltings to Iken Cliff and the tidal marsh provides excellent birding and the Suffolk landscape typical of the area.