The Scotsman

Well-designed buildings have the power to transform lives

Our hub programme is providing improved places for local people to learn, visit or work, says David Macdonald

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In November 2017, Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Library & Galleries, designed by Edinburgh-based Richard Murphy Architects and delivered through a unique joint venture partnershi­p between the public and private sector called ‘hub’, was crowned Best Building in Scotland by the Royal Incorporat­ion of Architects in Scotland.

What should also be celebrated is, the company set up to build and deliver the new library (hub East Central) only started business little over five years ago.

hub East Central is one of a network of five Scottish hub companies establishe­d to deliver new community facilities, such as schools and health centres more effectivel­y. It, along with the four other hub companies – hub North, hub West, hub South East and hub South West – are managed by the Scottish Futures Trust (SFT), a government-owned infrastruc­ture delivery company.

The hub programme is an innovative approach to develop and deliver best-value community facilities which provides public bodies with a quick and efficient way of getting their projects into constructi­on which allows for improved services to be delivered to their communitie­s.

The hub initiative follows a partnershi­p approach where all Scotland’s councils, health boards and blue light services have come together across five geographic­al territorie­s and appointed private sector infrastruc­ture firms on a long-term basis to build and manage community projects on their behalf.

Since becoming fully operationa­l in 2012, the five hub companies have completed over 142 community buildings (valued at over £1.3bn), with many of them receiving highly coveted design, community benefit and healthcare awards.

And with a further 67 buildings, valued at £1.3bn in constructi­on or in developmen­t, this is providing an economic stimulus across Scotland with most of the work being undertaken by SMES which is supporting over 6,000 local jobs.

The importance of good design, such as that of the Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Library & Galleries, cannot be underestim­ated as it leaves a lasting legacy within communitie­s as the functional design helps support the delivery of improved public services, which is a core function of SFT’S work and the hub programme.

This ethos is also reflected in the recently opened “Reference Design” Health and Care Centre in Eastwood, Renfrewshi­re, which during 2017 received an award at the Scottish Design Awards, a RIAS award and a prestigiou­s design award at the European Healthcare Awards.

The Eastwood Health and Care Centre has brought together the services ofeastrenf­rewshireco­uncilandnh­s Greater Glasgow & Clyde into one, unique,community-focusedbui­lding.

This joint occupancy allows the community to access multiple services in one location in a central setting with easy access to GP practices, integrated health and social care services, a community hub facility and a cafe that serves as a focal point for both the community and profession­als alike. The Reference Design was developed and promoted by SFT as a new approach to improve future health centres across Scotland.

In relation to education projects, most of the 116 schools in the Scotland’s Schools for the Future programme, again managed by SFT, are being delivered by hub companies.

Schools built within this programme aren’t schools in the traditiona­l sense. They are schools for the future, driven by advances in new teaching methods, technology and a focus to make these large, multi-million infrastruc­ture projects achieve great value.

And in achieving great value it’s not just pupils and teachers who are reaping the benefits of these first- class facilities. So too are communitie­s. Following in the steps of the SFT Schools Pilot which was set up to help councils achieve more for their money, the number of councils opening up the doors of their new schools for local communitie­s to use and enjoy has increased greatly. Librareast

ies, swimming pools, sports halls, fitness areas, meeting spaces and IT suites are just a selection of the new facilities the public now has access to far beyond the traditiona­l school day.

Well-designed buildings, built for community use, have the power to transform lives. Through our hub programme, new schools and community buildings are doing just that – creating employment, helping the environmen­t while providing locals with much-improved places for them to learn, visit or work. David Macdonald, hub programme director at the Scottish Futures Trust

 ??  ?? 0 The hub programme is an innovative approach to develop and deliver best-value community facilities, like Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Library & Galleries, crowned Best Building in Scotland last year
0 The hub programme is an innovative approach to develop and deliver best-value community facilities, like Dunfermlin­e Carnegie Library & Galleries, crowned Best Building in Scotland last year
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