Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

A Spring in their step

‘Youth club’ for OAPS to help tackle dementia & boost health

- BY MICHAEL MCHUGH

A NEW “youth club” for the elderly at a peace line represents the future for older people’s services, organisers said yesterday.

A derelict former health care building has been reopened off the Falls Road in West Belfast using National Lottery and Stormont funding.

It will give access to advice services, support for those living with dementia and it also offers gym facilities.

Spring field Charitable Associatio­n general manager Terry Mcneill said: “The aim of the project is to improve the health and quality of life of older people by encouragin­g a more active lifestyle and healthy diet through a drop-in centre that also provides a safe place to socialise.

“This is a move away from reactive care to a more preventati­ve approach to care provision.

“Also within the building we will house an advice centre service that will provide the perfect location to match our advisers’ excellent skills.”

The centre has been designed to cater for those with dementia, with wide corridors and bright colours.

It is aimed to be an intergener­ational centre, where younger people can help the elderly set up Facebook pages or use the internet while the more mature can pass on their wisdom. The space also aims to help revitalise life in the area claiming back an abandoned building and creating better connection­s for older people.

The project was backed by the National Lottery Community Fund with a grant of more than £350,000, the Department for Communitie­s, the Wolfson Foundation and Alpha Fund.

Mi c h a e l Hu g h e s , the lottery-funded Space & Place Programme co-ordinator, said:

“This facility is a fantastic

WEST BELFAST YESTERDAY

example of how much can be achieved when a group understand­s the needs of its local community, and brings together a range of funders to help it realise a vision for their area.

“The Space & Place Programme aims to help communitie­s transform underused, neglected or difficult spaces and this project will certainly help enhance the quality of life of people of all ages but in particular the lives of older people in the community through the creation of this imaginativ­e and vital new space.”

 ??  ?? IN THEIR STRIDE Trying out new gym equipment CHEER WE GO Springfiel­d Charitable Associatio­n centre opens yesterday
IN THEIR STRIDE Trying out new gym equipment CHEER WE GO Springfiel­d Charitable Associatio­n centre opens yesterday
 ??  ?? CHARITY BOSS Terry Mcneill
CHARITY BOSS Terry Mcneill

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