The Cotswold Leisure Centre in Cirencester is due to re-open its doors to the public on 1 March, following repairs to extensive flood damage.
The Centre’s plant room was damaged by an estimated 70,000 gallons of flood water on 20 July.
The Cotswold District Council estimates that more than £800,000 has been spent on the clean-up operation and the rebuilding work of the centre.
While the Centre has been closed, the Council has provided classes at local schools and offered members the use of its facilities at Tetbury, Fairford, Bourton and Chipping Campden at no charge.
The vast majority of the centre’s staff have been re-deployed by the council during the closure. Their new roles have included life guarding at the town’s open air pool and providing extra help to cover holidays across council teams, such as visitor information centres, housing and museums.
The Council’s Portfolio holder for Property & Benefits, Cllr Nick Parsons, said: “We fully appreciate that our members have now been without their leisure facilities in Cirencester for more than four months.
“We must not forget that this is a massive undertaking to rebuild the very heart of the centre requiring a great deal of complex work in a confined space.”
The Cotswold Leisure Centre in Cirencester is due to re-open its doors to the public on 1 March, following repairs to extensive flood damage.
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The Cotswold Leisure Centre in Cirencester is due to re-open its doors to the public on 1 March, following repairs to extensive flood damage.
The Centre’s plant room was damaged by an estimated 70,000 gallons of flood water on 20 July.
The Cotswold District Council estimates that more than £800,000 has been spent on the clean-up operation and the rebuilding work of the centre.
While the Centre has been closed, the Council has provided classes at local schools and offered members the use of its facilities at Tetbury, Fairford, Bourton and Chipping Campden at no charge.
The vast majority of the centre’s staff have been re-deployed by the council during the closure. Their new roles have included life guarding at the town’s open air pool and providing extra help to cover holidays across council teams, such as visitor information centres, housing and museums.
The Council’s Portfolio holder for Property & Benefits, Cllr Nick Parsons, said: “We fully appreciate that our members have now been without their leisure facilities in Cirencester for more than four months.
“We must not forget that this is a massive undertaking to rebuild the very heart of the centre requiring a great deal of complex work in a confined space.”
The Cotswold Leisure Centre in Cirencester is due to re-open its doors to the public on 1 March, following repairs to extensive flood damage.
Collaborations with the medical profession and greater aspirations around wellbeing are creating a need for more experts in our sector. It’s time to reboot our thinking around the workforce
If the health service is to
survive, we must recognise
that it is a disease service
– and that wellbeing rests with
us, says the activity advocate
and healthy ageing champion.
He talks to Kate Cracknell
For every member with a tripod and a big following, there are others irritated at the way equipment is being hogged or wary they’ll be in the background on someone’s Insta feed. Do influencers offer valuable, free marketing or are they just a nuisance? Kath Hudson finds out how operators are responding
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National Football Team ahead of the FIFA World Cup in the United States.