Multi-million pound leisure centre to be approved

Paul MoseleyNorfolk political reporter
Saunders Boston/South Norfolk Council A computer generated version of how the new building might look. It is a two storey building large, high-windows. Out the front are tables and stools with some CGI people sitting on them.Saunders Boston/South Norfolk Council
South Norfolk Council said the new building would have a "vibrant plaza"

A multi-million pound plan for a new community centre with facilities including a cafe, gym and soft play area is expected to be approved.

South Norfolk councillors are being advised to back the redevelopment on the site of a former car dealership in Diss.

The council has said the centre – which would be next to the town's mere – is part of an £8.1m project that will also include improvements to the bus station.

The proposal is being backed by the town council but there have been some objections, with the Diss Heritage Trust describing the building's design as ugly.

Paul Moseley/BBC A mere.Paul Moseley/BBC
A local heritage group has raised concerns the building will have a negative impact on the town's mere

The plans have been on the cards since the district council bought the former John Grose car dealership in 2024.

It said there had been "a long-standing request from the local community for improved leisure facilities in the town".

According to the authority, the centre will feature "a welcoming cafe, a soft play area, a spacious modern gym, and a vibrant plaza with stunning views over the mere".

It is investing £7.1m into the project and other town centre improvements, with a further £1m of funding coming from the Greater Norwich Growth Board.

More than 400 people took part in a consultation on the plans, and the town council, which backs the idea, said the centre's design was "a modern two-storey building appropriate for contemporary leisure use".

However, the Diss Heritage Trust warned it would "undeniably degrade the quality of the mere", the six-acre (2.4 hectares) lake in the town centre.

Describing it as a "banal and ugly building", the trust suggested it should be on Park Road instead.

A report for South Norfolk Council's planning committee recommended members give their approval when they meet on Wednesday.

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