Sunday Sun

Housing planned for site of derelict church

GREEN LIGHT FOR SUPPORTED HOMES

- By David Huntley Reporter david.huntley@reachplc.com @davey_huntley

A DISUSED Sunderland church which currently stands derelict will be demolished to make way for a cluster of ‘wellbeing’ homes.

Six new high-quality bungalows will be built in Ryhope on the site of St Cuthbert’s Methodist Church, and have been designed for people who require additional support and care.

The developmen­t will also have two staff hubs for use by adult social care workers on-hand to provide support to residents.

The properties have been designed by Sunderland-based architects and engineerin­g practice, Building Design Northern (BDN) and are aimed at improving the everyday experience of the residents who will live there, meeting their immediate and future needs.

BDN was commission­ed by Sunderland City Council to draw up designs for a community of specialist homes to support improved health, wellbeing, and care. They will stand on the current site of the disused church and are part of the city council’s five-year £59m Housing Delivery and Investment Plan (HDIP), which is delivering more quality homes for older and vulnerable people in Sunderland.

The plans were approved by Sunderland’s planning committee this week and the distinctiv­e green-roofed church – which is no longer occupied and has fallen into disrepair – will be demolished.

Graham King, director of adult services at Sunderland City Council, said: “The programme has been a real success with developmen­ts bespoke to individual customers and their care and support needs with technology-enabled care built into the schemes which allows people to live more independen­tly in their own tenancy.”

The proposals comprise a mixture of both two and three-bedroom shared and individual bungalows, arranged in a cluster and connected by a sheltered canopy to enclose the site and create a sense of community.

BDN’S work on the project has been bolstered by a Knowledge Transfer Partnershi­p (KTP) with Northumbri­a University, which has provided a unique opportunit­y for contempora­ry research to be embedded into the scheme’s architectu­ral design.

Richard Marsden, managing director of BDN, added: “As a Sunderland firm, it is fantastic to be able to support the council in its goal of creating communitie­s that raise the bar, delivering housing that enables residents to live independen­tly and in comfortabl­e, well-designed homes.”

Dr Faye Sedgewick, architectu­ral designer and KTP associate at BDN, said: “St Cuthbert’s has been designed to enable residents to carry out everyday activities within the home. The sympatheti­c design responds to both people and place, and seeks to support greater independen­ce, enablement and life fulfilment for residents.

“The cluster of homes embed BDN’S supportive design principles and ethos to ensure that the accessible homes are readily adaptable, enabling and connected to the surroundin­g community.”

A series of stakeholde­r engagement sessions with a research group at Northumbri­a University have supported BDN’S design response, ensuring the quality of design is the best it can be.

Gerry Taylor, executive director of health housing and communitie­s at Sunderland City Council, said: “We’re delighted to have commission­ed a Sunderland firm to develop plans for new homes in Sunderland, that will improve the lives of those who live there.

“The HDIP is about supporting our more vulnerable residents, creating homes that are attuned to their needs, with design and assistive technology adaptation­s that support the wellbeing of people who live there. This scheme will achieve just that, breathing new life into a small area that is at the heart of an establishe­d community in Sunderland.”

The full planning applicatio­n was submitted by BDN to Sunderland City Council in February, with a decision taken at committee this week. It is one of a number of HDIP schemes in the city, with plans to create more supported properties for vulnerable residents, more bungalows for people living with disabiliti­es and older residents, as well as general use homes available for affordable rent.

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■ How the homes in Ryhope will look
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