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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Work begins on new £5.5m Heta training site on South Humber Bank

Pioneer Park location as 55-year-old 'engineer builder' prepares to move from nearby Catch

Digging deep: A ceremonial groundbreaking at the new HETA site, featuring, from left, Hobson & Porter business development director Joe Booth; site manager Ian Brown and managing director Richard Hunter; then HETA deputy chief executive Joanne Lawson, Equans head of professional services Stephanie Ledgerwood and her colleague, architect Sarah Perry; then HETA chief executive Iain Elliott, leader of North East Lincolnshire Council, Cllr Philip Jackson, and HETA chair Malcolm Joslin.(Image: Ascough Associates Media and Public Relations)

The build of a new £5.5 million engineering training centre to aid the skills provision in the Humber has begun.

Humberside Engineering Training Association (Heta) is on course to open the new centre at Stallingborough in time to welcome an initial 70 learners in August next year. It is a key part of the drive to attract further investment into a transformational development site on the South Bank.

Capacity will increase as new services are offered to meet the requirements of businesses already operating in the area, as well as potential new arrivals, as it outgrows the Catch facility, where the site operator has also just launched its first apprenticeships.

Read more: Waterline Summit 'creates shared vision' for Humber's evolution to climate change challenge leader

Located on Pioneer Business Park, part of North East Lincolnshire Council’s £42 million South Humber Industrial Investment Programme, it will neighbour Myenergi - itself adding a huge manufacturing base alongside its headquarters, with steels now up.

Joanne Lawson, deputy chief executive of Heta, said: “Everything we do at Heta is led by employers – that’s always been our ethos. We develop new courses as and when they are requested and required. We are flexible, we can move quickly to put things in place and that’s what we are doing in Stallingborough.

“North East Lincolnshire Council knows that the new training facilities will help to attract new companies into the area and we are working together to raise awareness of the new centre among businesses.”

The SHIIP project is regenerating a total of 189 hectares of land and Heta has acquired nearly three acres to build a two-storey centre which will provide facilities, including workshops. to enable individual training in fabrication and welding, machining, electrical and mechanical engineering. In total there will be nine classrooms including two IT suites, informal learning and recreation spaces and a workshop viewing gallery. Other features will include recreation and dining space and the building will benefit from sustainable drainage, eco-friendly landscaping and lighting, and a low maintenance sustainable heating system with PV solar units on the roof.