Oxford City Council and Crisis, the national charity for single homeless people, have been working together for some time to plan the redevelopment and refurbishment of the Old Fire Station building in central Oxford.
Along with Cllr Stephen Brown, my ward colleague, and Cllr Mark Mills (Holywell ward) I was taken on a tour of the building as it currently is. It is looking very impressive – very clean and some ingenious use of space to create some very useful art rooms as well as accommodation and a café. I am particularly impressed with the way the hose tower has been preserved and made visible again.
By autumn 2011 the Old Fire Station will open and be home to a Crisis Skylight Centre and Café and Arts at the Old Fire Station, a brand new arts company. The two organisations are independent but will work alongside each other to achieve the mutual goal of encouraging integration and collaboration between the cultural and homeless communities in Oxford.
Arts at the Old Fire Station will develop partnership projects with Crisis clients, as well as offering professional development for artists, and creative activities for the general public. This “two organisations, one building” model has been developed to offer exciting opportunities for artistic collaborations between the homeless and cultural communities of the city.
The newly developed Old Fire Station will also accommodate a brand new Skylight Café, which will operate as a social enterprise, providing a route into employment for homeless and vulnerably housed adults.
I think the project is a really exciting one and think it will be a real asset to the Gloucester Green area of Oxford, hopefully encouraging some regeneration and re-use of some of the currently vacant retail units in the area.
Some of the text and one picture in this post are taken from a very useful Crisis newsletter.