Work has begun on a multi-million pound project that will eliminate onsite CO2 emissions generated by Salt Ayre Leisure Centre in an ambitious bid to be one of the first such facilities in the UK to be net carbon zero.
Lancaster City Council has received £6.8million in funding from the government’s Public Sector Decarbonisation Scheme (PSDS) to replace the leisure centre’s gas boilers with air source heat pumps, provide external LED lighting and upgrade glazing to reduce energy consumption.
A solar farm is also being built on the adjacent disused landfill site at Salt Ayre to generate electricity, which will then be provided to the leisure centre using a direct wire.
Due to funding requirements the project needs to be completed by the end of September 2021, meaning the centre will be a hive of activity over the coming months.
Construction work will be phased to minimise disruption, but there will be some short term changes to the facilities available to customers.
The contractors’ compound will be in place on the centre’s rear car park, reducing the number of spaces available. From July 5-7 the centre’s main boiler will need to be shut down, unfortunately meaning that there will be no showers for swimming pool customers. The spa facility remains unaffected.
There will be partial closures to the swimming pool although the council and contractors are working hard to minimise disruption. Customers will be provided with plenty of advanced notice at Lancaster.gov.uk/saltayre and Facebook.com/saltayre.
Councillor Kevin Frea, deputy leader and cabinet member with responsibility for climate action, said: “This is a hugely ambitious project that shows a real statement of intent by the council to drive down its emissions.
“Salt Ayre is the biggest emitter of CO2 of all the council’s buildings and this scheme alone will reduce its overall carbon footprint by as much as 12%, slashing emissions by as much as 439 tonnes a year. To put that into context, it’s the equivalent of heating 406 homes across the district, which is a massive overall saving.
“We know that we have a huge challenge ahead of us to achieve our ambition of becoming net-zero carbon by 2030 but this project, along with many others in the pipeline, will make a significant contribution.”


Praise for Lancaster and Morecambe youngsters who took part in 'tongue movement' project
Clinic where students offer free legal advice to reopen at Lancaster University
Lines reopen after train derailment on Scotland-London line
Police arrest two and seize illegal bike in Morecambe
ITV commissions sixth series of Morecambe crime drama The Bay
E-bike shop moves from Lancaster to new Carnforth showroom
Lancaster workshop to tackle the issue of drink and needle spiking
Morecambe raw feeds shop up for three 'Animal Star' awards
Two new festivals proposed for Morecambe entertainment venue the Platform
Second day of disruption as work continues after train derails in Cumbria
Morecambe lifeboat crew’s swift response rescues swimmer ‘being swept dangerously out to sea’
'Street Meets' announced to answer your questions amid new wheelie bin roll-out
Campaign group welcomes new "life changing" bus service to Morecambe
Lancaster prison worker jailed for drug offences
Major disruption as train derails on West Coast Main Line
Talks begin for events to mark Eric Morecambe's 100th birthday
Lancaster music venue due to shut will now stay open "well into 2026"
Halloween What's On Guide
LISTEN: Launch of new group in Morecambe to help with gambling addiction
LISTEN: New centre for people with disabilities to open in historic Lancaster location
