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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Work starts on huge new play and exercise centre for disabled children near Bristol

The facility will be fully accessible and will be the first of its kind in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Gympanzees new centre group photo(Image: Helen Sampson)

A Bristol charity has started work to build the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's first fully accessible exercise and play facility for disabled children.

The Gympanzees Centre, on the site of a former service station at Aust near the M48 Severn Bridge, will host 200,000 visits from disabled children, young people and their families every year when it opens.

The initial phase of work will involve demolishing the existing internal walls and ceilings on the ground floor, creating an empty space that will prepare for the construction of 11 inclusive spaces. The development is due to be completed by June 2026.

When finished, the centre will have an array of rooms including a horizontal climbing wall that will be accessible for all children and two-storey soft play with a wheelchair lift.

The charity has raised £4.5m of its £8m target for the new centre so far.

Chief executive and founder Stephanie Wheen started the construction by smashing through the wall with a sledgehammer. She said: “This has been a long journey from when I initially had the idea for Gympanzees way back in 2016, but I’m so proud of how far we have come. The pop-up events were a brilliant way to show the concept was a good one, but we needed to do more for these amazing families.

“It is incredibly exciting that work has now started, after feeling like a pipe dream at times, it now feels incredibly real. We are doing something never done before and we now have a site and work has begun, our permanent home is closer than ever."

The charity was previously reliant on pop-up events, taking place in temporary homes around Bristol. The sessions have been incredibly popular with more 28,000 visitors enjoying the access to fun and fitness, alongside lending specialist equipment to over 2,800 families and schools.