13/06/2017 - Permalink

Draft Indoor Leisure Facilities Strategy to be considered by Cabinet

Related topics: Leisure, culture and heritage

A draft Indoor Leisure Facilities Strategy 2018 to 2023, which outlines how Shropshire Council intends to continue to encourage and support people’s well-being through physical activity, is to be considered by the council’s Cabinet on Wednesday 21 June 2017.

The two pools at the new Oswestry Leisure Centre

This new draft, of a strategy originally begun in 2009, has been written following further consultation with residents and the council’s key partners.

It sets out a hierarchy of leisure facility provision to meet the future recreational and sporting needs of Shropshire residents, whilst taking into consideration the financial challenges the council faces.

In order to meet these needs, the strategy has split the county’s leisure facilities into three tiers, based on the location  of the facility and the mix of activities it provides.

  • Tier 1 – ‘Leisure Hubs’. There are seven of these situated in the county’s larger market towns. They are destination facilities, which provide a wide range of activities and leisure opportunities.
  • Tier 2 – ‘Community Leisure Centres’. Four centres offer local facilities within the smaller market towns providing a more limited range of leisure opportunities.
  • Tier 3 – ‘Community Leisure Centres’. These are independently managed and operated centres. Six Community Leisure Centres in the smaller market towns are currently supported by Shropshire Council.

The council intends to work alongside partners to continue to invest in and support each facility; however, in different ways.

Leisure facilities Financial supportNumber of facilitiesFacility description
Tier 1 Leisure HubsOngoing revenue support, as required7Shrewsbury Sports Village

Quarry Swimming and Fitness Centre

Oswestry Leisure Centre

Market Drayton Swimming Centre

South Shropshire Leisure Centre

SpArC

Bridgnorth Leisure Centre

 

Tier 2 Community Leisure CentresCost neutral to the council by the end of 2022/234Church Stretton Leisure Centre

Whitchurch Swimming Centre

Whitchurch Sports Centre

Cleobury Mortimer Sports Centre

Tier 3 Community Leisure CentresCost neutral to the council by the end of 2018/196Much Wenlock Leisure Centre

Roman Road Sports Centre

Idsall Sports Centre

Wem Swimming and Lifestyle Centre

The Severn Centre

Craven Arms Community Centre

 

Lezley Picton, Shropshire Council’s Cabinet member for culture and leisure, said:

“This strategy underpins our vision to encourage and support people to be healthier and more active. It lays out our preferences, taking into account the valuable feedback we’ve had from residents and our partners, and of course our financial situation.

“We have no intentions to close any of our leisure centres, but we do need to prioritise how and where our limited resources are spent now and in the future. We think that, by creating a hierarchy of leisure facility provision, we can best provide reasonable access to Shropshire residents, notwithstanding the very rural nature of the county.

“There is lots of work to be done and we will be working closely with interested parties to explore commissioning arrangements, which have the potential to make many of these facilities sustainable and successful in the long term.”

The strategy doesn’t make any recommendations with respect to the location of future swimming provision in Shrewsbury.