º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Empty Plymouth city centre shop set to become a church

Plymouth Vineyard Church has submitted plans to transform two-storey building once home to Lawsons homeware chain

The Lawsons store in Plymouth city centre before it closed in 2020

Moves to transform an empty Plymouth city centre shop into a church could prove to be the salvation of the high street.

With the decline of bricks-and-mortar retail city centres are seeing empty units filled with new uses – and in Plymouth one could become a place for community work and worship and draw people back to the area.

A planning application has been submitted to change the use of a two-storey former homeware store in the heart of the main retail drag into a community space run by an independent church – and it would include Sunday services.

Plymouth Vineyard Church wants to take over the Cornwall Street store previously home to family-run chain Lawsons and use it for community outreach work, training, meetings, workshops, offices, and as “worship space”, hosting Sunday services and “worship events that might take place in evenings”.

What the inside of the empty Lawsons store in Plymouth city centre looks like now(Image: Vickery Holman)

The property, owned by Yelverton Properties, was home to Lawsons until it closed in summer 2020, with Liz Lawson, great-granddaughter of founder Tom Lawson, blaming the Covid pandemic for exacerbating an already declining footfall in the city centre.

In March 2021to finance a move from its existing premises in Kinterbury Street, also in the city centre but away from the main shopping area.

In the new building the church wants to create a flexible space, the uses of which will vary from day to day, but it is likely that the building will be used to expand The Children’s Storehouse, a service which collects baby and children’s equipment, toys, books, clothing for all ages of children, bed linen and towels, which are given free to disadvantaged families.

It also wants to carry out mental health training and outreach through a new Mosaic project and other mental health-related programmes that are in development, and house Uniform Store Plymouth, which will provide free school uniforms and help to address child poverty.