Delayed fire centre approved as costs rise to £3m

Warwickshire Fire & Rescue’s headquarters in Leamington SpaImage source, PA Media
Image caption,

The money came from a fund to spruce up Warwickshire Fire & Rescue’s headquarters in Leamington Spa

  • Published

Tweaked plans for a new fire training centre have been approved after the project was delayed and costs doubled.

The site, on a vacant plot of council-owned land in Rugby, Warwickshire, will see fire and rescue situations simulated and will cost about £3m.

Permission was originally granted in 2023 but the county council was asked to refresh its permission to allow changes to the site layout.

The site was most recently used as a highways depot but has lay dormant since 2021.

Alongside a fire house, there will be a welfare building containing changing rooms, showers, toilets, storage, offices, meeting rooms and a kitchenette.

The approval means work that started in February towards the council’s target completion date of “mid-2024” can continue.

In September 2023, a council report said the unit was due to be “sited and fully operational by February 2024” at a cost of just shy of £2.5m.

By December, that date had moved out to April 2024 with costs jumping to £3m.

The £3m figure represented a doubling of the original budget, which required about £1.5m to be transferred from money allocated to sprucing up Warwickshire Fire & Rescue’s headquarters in Leamington Spa.

Neither of those estimates accounted for the £750k fire training unit itself, something that was separately budgeted for.

This news was gathered by the Local Democracy Reporting Service which covers councils and other public service organisations.

Follow BBC West Midlands on Facebook, external, X,, external and Instagram, external, Send your story ideas to: newsonline.westmidlands@bbc.co.uk, external