Adam Nixon, coastal ranger at Essex Wildlife Trust (EWT),
However, it has been previously reported that the work could cost around £2m.Adrian Chapman, executive director for place and economy at Peterborough City Council, said: "We are fully aware that the Key Theatre is a popular and much-loved venue and that's why we have actively worked to find a permanent solution for the building's roof.
"This will mean that the theatre will have to close whilst the new roof is installed, but once completed, it will ensure that the venue can continue to provide a vibrant cultural offering for Peterborough residents."Over the decades, it has undergone various refurbishments.Notably, a major renovation in 2005 upgraded its facilities, including the auditorium, backstage areas, and front-of-house spaces.
Staff preparing to decommission a former nuclear power station over the coming decades say they feel "proud of the legacy" they are a part of.Hinkley Point B, which lies on the Somerset coast, ceased operations in August 2022 after it reached the end of its life, with Hinkley Point C
EDF Energy and the Office for Nuclear Regulation
of decommissioning the site, which could take about 95 years."Things got tough towards the end when there really was no food, the Germans were starving as well.
"My mother said she had great respect for the Red Cross, and she said without their food parcels we wouldn't have survived."Nothing seemed to grow, nothing thrived including our gardens."
The island was liberated in May 1945.Ms Pope added: "When the English soldiers arrived they put food on the kitchen table and we had never seen such things.