The house is owned by a Christian charity, Harvest Vision, and the Moggerhanger House Preservation Trust, and has recently undergone a £7m refurbishment project with help from organisations such as the Heritage Lottery Fund, English Heritage, World Monuments Fund and the East of England Development Agency.
Soane remodelled Moggerhanger entirely, enlarging it to the west, relocating the entrance to the north and reproofing the house completely.
This was their educational ministry providing in-service training for clergy and church leaders based at that time at Bawtry Hall in Yorkshire.
They ran the house as a community project with a large number of volunteers beginning the work of restoration with a further grant from English Heritage to replace the roof.
Harvest Vision were then advised to bid for a grant from the Landfill Tax provision of £1.2 million to acquire the land on which the proposed houses were to be built upon.
The chairman of MHPT, Andrew Ingrey Senn, a local businessman, was succeeded by Sir Sam Whitbread in 2007 and then by Lady Isabelle Errol in 2008.
Soane's lengthy relationship with the house provided a backdrop for him to experiment, said Peter Inskip, the architect who oversaw the historic restoration.
By 2003, MHPT needed to show ownership in order to regain VAT on the restoration, and to be responsible for major grants.
Moggerhanger Park Ltd became the trading arm of MHPT with Harvest Vision remaining in ultimate control, and Simon Cooper became the first Managing Director.
All this work was subsequently carried out in 2005 and paid for in grants obtained by the Ministries and MP Ltd. Soane's lengthy relationship with the house provided a backdrop for him to experiment, said Peter Inskip, the architect who oversaw the historic restoration.
Some of Soane’s experimental work at Moggerhanger House he subsequently used in the Cabinet Room at number 10 Downing Street.
This initial restoration project took 10 years to complete, and Harvest Vision formed a small residential community with members of the Ministries and from local village and local churches, volunteering help and support to complete the work and maintain the site whilst building contractors were working.
Recognising the historic value of the House and its inappropriateness for many of the ministry activities, CCM obtained an educational grant for the Trust to move and restore the Garden Room, (the one ward they had retained for their use from the hospital era) and move to a new site alongside the Walled Gardens as a community asset so that the Repton restoration of the surrounding parkland around the House could be brought back to its original splendour.
CCM then adapted them to operate youth and community work there until 2016, when the Park and Farmland were transferred to the main estate in 2020.
The house is now used as a conference and training centre for most of the year, but opens as a tourist attraction from mid-June to mid-September, during which time public tours are conducted twice daily.