Western Morning News

Church is aiming to take over closed shop

- WILLIAM TELFORD william.telford@reachplc.com

MOVES to transform an empty Plymouth city centre shop into a church could prove to be the salvation of the city centre.

With the decline of high street retail, city centres are seeing empty units filled with new uses – and in Plymouth one could become a place for community work and worship and draw people back to the area.

A planning applicatio­n has been submitted to change the use of a twostorey former homeware store in the heart of the city’s main retail area into a community space run by an independen­t church – and it would include Sunday services.

Plymouth Vineyard Church wants to take over the Cornwall Street store previously home to family-run chain Lawsons and use it for community outreach work, training, meetings, workshops, offices, and as “worship space”, hosting Sunday services and “worship events that might take place in evenings”.

The property, owned by Yelverton Properties, was home to Lawsons until it closed last summer, with Liz Lawson, great-granddaugh­ter of founder Tom Lawson, blaming the Covid pandemic for exacerbati­ng an already declining footfall in the city centre.

In March, Plymouth Vineyard Church launched a crowdfundi­ng appeal to finance a move from its existing premises in Kinterbury Street, also in the city centre but away from the main shopping area.

In the new building, the church wants to create a flexible space, the uses of which will vary from day to day, but it is likely that the building will be used to expand the Children’s Storehouse, a service which collects baby and children’s equipment, toys, books, clothing for all ages of children, bed linen and towels, which are given free to disadvanta­ged families.

It also wants to carry out mental health training and outreach through a new Mosaic project and other mental health-related programmes that are in developmen­t, and house Uniform Store Plymouth, which will provide free school uniforms and help to address child poverty.

The two-storey building would also provide office and meeting space, provide a venue for church events and conference­s, training and workshops, parent and toddler groups, and worship space.

A document lodged with Plymouth City Council said the organisati­on was forced to relocate from its existing premises in March and added: “We are a church that is passionate about our community and wanting to bring life and hope to the city of Plymouth.

“We want to play our part as a partner in promoting the social, economic, environmen­tal, and spiritual wellbeing of the city.

“We want to create a vibrant centre for community in the heart of Plymouth, full of activity throughout the week. It will be a flexible space able to host our existing community projects and create space for more and provide space for other groups with a heart for serving the city.

“Our proposal to create a new Vineyard Centre will not only bring an empty city centre shop into reuse but it will also provide for valuable uses which both draw people into the city centre and also serve the current and future city centre community.

“It will support physical social and economic regenerati­on objectives and contribute to the city’s Resurgam programme. It will also allow us to continue and expand our work for those in the city who are most in need.”

 ??  ?? > The former Lawsons store on Cornwall Street, Plymouth
> The former Lawsons store on Cornwall Street, Plymouth

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