Mercury (Hobart)

New home for kids’ hub

Adventure complex reveals plans

- ALEX TREACY alex.treacy@news.com.au

A BELOVED Tasmanian adventure hub, featuring laser tag, trampoline­s, obstacles and sprawling playground­s, has revealed it will reopen to the public on Easter Monday at a new home.

Launceston Entertainm­ent Complex (LEX), formerly located at Racecourse Cres, Launceston, has spent the last three months, since vacating its premises, planning its new home at Glen Dhu’s Door of Hope, the former Coats Patons textile factory.

Owner Susan McGee, who

took over LEX in 2018 alongside Scott Doughty, revealed she had been in contact for several years with Door of Hope about the possibilit­y of a relocation, feeling that her capacity to grow LEX at Racecourse Cres was constraine­d.

The new LEX will be in a cavernous warehouse space formerly used for car storage.

“I’ve had 172 emails and 592 calls (since closing at Launceston),” Ms McGee said.

“We’ve had the best rest but I’m missing the whole thing.”

Ms McGee revealed that, all going to plan, LEX would host its annual CREATE Foundation charity day, where 300 children living in out-of-home arrangemen­ts have rule of the roost, on April 6, before a soft opening for long-time LEX fans later that afternoon.

LEX, which will rebrand to LEX Fun, will open for business on April 10, Easter Monday.

Ms McGee, a long-term educator with the Department of Education, Children and Young People, was coy when asked what additional attraction­s would be brought to the upgraded space.

“We want to keep it as a surprise,” she said. For Door of Hope, locking in LEX continues its 20-year journey towards reimaginin­g the historic factory.

“What we believe we’ve created here is a significan­t family-based community centre with a number of services to support families,” chief operations officer Troy Roberts said.

In addition to hosting the Launceston Conference Centre, Door of Hope also houses a gym, an outside school hours care program, a cafe (LEX will also build its own), Windsor Allied Health and the South Launceston Early Learning Centre.

“Having the entertainm­ent centre come in, it’s almost becoming a one-stop centre for a range of activities,” he said.

LEX’s relocation is not the only major works happening at Door of Hope.

They are currently in the process of constructi­ng a new 115-space carpark and have also secured Gourlay’s Famous Sweets as a new tenant. Gourlay’s will relocate its factory from Penny Royal World.

 ?? ?? LEX owner Susan McGee with builder Liam McCarroll.
LEX owner Susan McGee with builder Liam McCarroll.

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