Whitwick councillor puts forward sheltered housing plan for Hermitage Leisure Centre site - ahead of Coalville meeting next week
Whitwick councillor Stuart Gillard has proposed that the site of the former Hermitage Leisure Centre is used to build sheltered housing for elderly people.
The building has now been boarded up following the opening of the new £22.5million Whitwick & Coalville Leisure Centre on the A511.
Community group, Coalville CAN has put forward plans to restore the current building and stage recreational activities for the area's young people - such as parkour - along with a communal cafe.
But North West Leicestershire District Council issued a statement last week saying the building is 'very likely' to be demolished.
However, a communal meeting has been arranged for next Thursday when the future of the site will be discussed.
But Cllr Gillard, District Councillor for the Hermitage Ward, writing in a blog on the North West Leicestershire Conservatives website , echoed the council's view that it would cost too much to reinvent the current building - and said the best option would be to demolish it as soon as possible due to the expense of having it lying empty.
He also suggests the idea of housing elderly people so that they do not have to leave the area.
Cllr Gillard writes: "As district councillor for the ward that includes the old Hermitage Leisure Centre, I've been thinking a lot about what should happen now that it has been closed down.
"It's costing the district council a lot of money for the building to stand empty so we need to move quickly to decide its future – we've been considering the options for long enough.
"I know that the guys at Coalville CAN have worked very hard to think of alternative uses for the building such as a parkour centre, a community café or converting parts of the building to flats.
"But, after a great deal of thought, I don't think it's the right option for Whitwick, let me explain why.
"I worry that a parkour centre will attract anti-social behaviour, when the centre closes it won't prevent people from congregating outside.
"The building is an old leisure centre, I'm not at all convinced converting bits of it into flats will deliver decent homes.
"If the district council were to allow the building back into public use it would be their responsibility to ensure it is safe, energy efficient, and that necessary plant is decommissioned; that could easily cost a couple of million pounds (and that is on top of the £24 million spent building our brand-new leisure centre up the road)."
Cllr Gillard added that plans to re-open the building as a leisure centre would cost the public.
He continued: "Sadly, a project like the one Coalville CAN is proposing could only realistically be provided if it was underwritten with taxpayer money.
"Whilst the potential benefits are significant so are financially the potential risks of failure, and I don't think it's a good idea to burden local taxpayers with them.
"But the truth is simpler than that. You can't make a silk purse out of a sow's ear and you can't beautify an old leisure centre that is no longer fit for purpose.
"I've come to the conclusion that we need to demolish the old Hermitage Leisure Centre, and do it sooner rather than later.
"So what do we do with the site once it has been cleared?
"I want to make sure that we keep the playing fields, astroturf and lake for local people.
"I also want to make sure we keep car parking for the residents who have relied upon it for so long. We could perhaps even improve them?
"Obviously that means the council would need to generate some funds and we could do that by using the footprint – and only the footprint – of the old leisure centre for a small amount of housing.
"Now I know some will say 'we knew it, more housing' but hear me out!
"We know there's a real shortage of smaller homes for older people and the footprint of the old leisure centre is in the perfect spot for access to the businesses in Whitwick Market Place and Silver Street. We could build a court of sheltered housing to ensure local people can stay local as they grow older.
"And the beauty is we could kill two birds with one stone. If we're building much needed socially rented homes for older people on the footprint of the old leisure centre that could be paid for through the council's housing revenue account which in turn would generate a capital receipt for improvements to the public areas elsewhere on the site.
"It's a big win! We keep and improve our much-valued public assets and build much needed homes for older people (which more often than not means freeing up the larger homes that they vacate for families).
"I'm sure not everyone will agree with me, but this is the case I'm going to be making at council in the coming weeks and months."
New coalville Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: coalville jobs
Share: