Construction officially underway at Preston Youth Zone

A groundbreaking ceremony took place this afternoon

Author: Greg Farrimond, OnSidePublished 26th Jun 2024

Construction is underway on Preston Youth Zone, which also has a new name following a city-wide vote of over 2,000 young people.

The Youth Zone's development group, consisting of young people from across Preston, had created two brands for others to choose between. They revealed the winning name to be Vault, ahead of a special groundbreaking ceremony at the Youth Zone's town centre site on Wednesday.

The event, hosted by the charity's chair Guy Topping and CEO Tim Jacques, launched the exciting new phase for the Youth Zone. Contractors Triton Construction will now begin work building the multi-million-pound centre, which will open next autumn.

Using a giant spade, supplied by Barton Grange Garden Centre, young people cut the first hole in the ground.

Mr Topping said: "This is a momentous occasion – it's fantastic to break ground and build this special space for Preston's young people. It will give them somewhere safe and inspirational to go in their leisure time to try new activities, develop skills and make friends.

"We’ve waited a long time to get to this stage but in many ways this is just the beginning as we take a huge step closer to opening to thousands of young people from across the city. I am so grateful to everyone who has helped us on this journey, turning the dream of a Youth Zone in Preston into a reality.”

Mr Jacques added: “I feel very proud to be CEO of this brilliant charity, one which will change the lives of so many young people in Preston.

“The Youth Zone will be a place they deserve with incredible facilities and a team of dedicated youth workers offering vital support and guidance. It was great to see our development group unveil our fantastic new brand and I want to thank the 2,000 young people across Preston who took part in the vote.

“We’ve had so many brilliant people back this project but we are still actively fundraising for the remainder of our annual running costs, so we’d appeal to any local businesses who want to support Preston’s young people to get in contact.”

Adrian Phillips, Preston City Council’s chief executive added: “The Youth Zone will add to the City’s ongoing physical transformation but more importantly the social regeneration of Preston too.”

The Youth Zone also forms one of the six key programmes in Preston's £200 million Harris Quarter. First for all the latest news from across the UK every hour on Hits Radio on DAB, at hitsradio.co.uk and on the Hits Radio app.