Tuesday, 31 March 2026
Alliance apr2026

Building Cohesion – Turning Council Leisure Assets into Shared Community Space

31 Mar 2026

March 2026 saw an important report released by the LGA, titled “The role of sport, arts and culture in supporting community cohesion” which discussed the role sport, arts and culture can play in building stronger, more connected communities.

Tom Fairey Headshot
Tom Fairey – Development Director at Alliance Leisure

At Alliance Leisure, we support councils with practical solutions that bring the report’s recommendations to life, helping embed community cohesion in sustainable, long-term strategies. In this article we will run through some of our key considerations.

Firstly, consider the role of the building itself. Community venues can deliver far more than sport and fitness opportunities. When designed and managed with community use in mind, they can become inclusive shared spaces where people from different groups feel comfortable spending time together, for example with multi-use rooms. Take a look at our project at Mablethorpe where the Station Leisure and Learning Centre was built around flexible spaces.

Secondly, the physical environment is really important. A tired, confusing or inaccessible building can quietly push people away, even when the intention is inclusion. On the other hand, a welcoming entrance, accessible layouts and features, clear signage and spaces that feel safe and friendly can help more people feel that they belong.

Another key point is how early communities are involved. Cohesion is harder to build if local people feel decisions have been made without them. Where councils want to reach beyond the usual audiences, co-design can make a real difference. That means listening properly, involving under-represented groups from the start, and building something that reflects what a place actually needs.

It is also important to connect capital investment to long-term activity. A new or refurbished facility is a strong start, but the real impact comes from what happens week after week once the building opens. Regular, low-barrier sessions, intergenerational activities, and partnerships with local organisations, youth services and community groups can turn a venue into part of daily life.

Outdoor spaces matter too. Informal areas like skate parks, pump tracks and multi-use game spaces often become natural gathering points, especially for young people. When they are well designed, properly located and again, shaped by local input, they can be positive shared spaces.

Alliance apr2026

Finally, the article touches on the challenge of making the case for prevention when budgets are tight. That is something we recognise and actively work with our clients to make capital investments affordable, without making compromises. It helps when cohesion goals are linked to clear outcomes, whether that is wellbeing, skills creation, reduced isolation, youth engagement or community safety.  Being able to explain and evidence those benefits makes it easier for leaders to back long-term investment.

Find out more about how Alliance Leisure work here.

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