Council could sell leisure centre site for £3.38m

Graffiti on hoardings around the old Clifton Hill leisure centre site with overgrown weeds in the foreground and the backs of terraced houses in the background.
Image caption,

The site of the old Clifton Hill leisure centre could be used as accommodation for older people

  • Published

A former leisure centre site could be sold off to an extra care housing developer for £3.38m.

The Clifton Hill leisure centre in Exeter closed in 2018 with Exeter City Council saying it would be turned into "family homes", external by its development company Exeter City Living.

When Exeter City Living folded in 2023 the city council leader promised residents the site would not be used for student accommodation.

A council report prepared ahead of a cabinet meeting on Tuesday estimates the decision to rule out student accommodation had decreased the value of the site by £425,000.

Plant machinery on the demolition site of the old Clifton Hill leisure centreImage source, Exeter City Council
Image caption,

The Clifton Hill leisure centre was demolished in 2022

Bids for the two-acre site on the edge of the city centre were received in October 2024.

The site already had planning permission for 41 homes but none of the bidders wanted to take those plans forward.

The highest bidder, Preferred Homes Ltd, wants to build a 72-apartment development for older people with an average age of 75.

There will be predominantly one-bedroom self-contained units with extra care services on site.

According to the report, external the apartments are classed as affordable and Preferred Homes said rent would be "no more than 80% of the open market rent and service charge for a similar open market product".

Exeter City Council officers have recommended approving the deal which will be discussed by the city council's cabinet on Tuesday.

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