The Social Education Centre
The Social Education Centre at Bourne became operational in January 1988 and was officially opened on 8th April of that year. The project was a joint venture between South Lincolnshire Health Authority and Lincolnshire County Council's social services department and cost £¾ million.
The aim of the centre was to provide an environment in which people with a mental handicap could be given the opportunity to participate in specially planned activities in order to learn the skills required to take their place in the community.
Thirteen years later, the centre had closed down. The authorities decided that the building had been a mistake from the outset, sited in the wrong place on the edge of an industrial estate at the corner of Pinfold Road and the busy main A151, badly designed and needing major alterations within a short time of its opening. Local councillors said that they were disappointed that such a well-meaning project had failed so soon and that £750,000 of public money should be wasted after such a short time. Town council member and former mayor Mrs Marjorie Clark made the understatement of the year when she described the situation as "a terrible shame".
By the autumn of 2001, the building had become an eyesore, the windows boarded up, the grounds overgrown with weeds and littered with rubbish. A tattered official notice on the broken down perimeter fence announced that planning permission had been granted for the premises to be used for general industrial purposes, storage and distribution, once a buyer could be found.
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