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Fresh funding to kickstart £30m Black Country Living Museum project

New capital will enable the clean up of industrial land and allow building work to commence on scheme showcasing the area's history in the mid-1900s

CGI of Wolverhampton's Elephant and Castle pub which will be transported to the Black Country Living Museum and rebuilt brick by brick as part of the Forging Ahead project

A major new tourism project which stalled because of financial issues has been kickstarted by a fresh round of funding.

The £30 million ‘Forging Ahead' scheme will expand the Black Country Living Museum in Dudley to showcase the history of the area in the 1940s, 50s and 60s.

The project, said to be the largest at the museum since it opened in 1978, will comprise a visitor welcome centre, learning spaces, industrial quarter and an historic town.

It will expand the size of the museum by around a third and allow it to cater for around half a million visitors a year, creating 140 new jobs in the process.

The first phase of the project will feature 22 historic buildings and structures, including the recreation of Wolverhampton's iconic Elephant and Castle pub, while Dudley's Woodside Library will also be transported to the museum and be rebuilt brick-by-brick.

The project was halted due to a funding gap that had arisen because of the cost of cleaning up the derelict industrial site but the West Midlands Combined Authority has now committed capital to pay for the clean up and make the land ready for development.

Detailed negotiations are now taking place with the museum on the final terms of the investment.