Nocton Hub

Nocton Hub in Nocton, Lincolnshire, England was built in 2019-2020 as a community-owned and operated building to replace the previous village hall that stood on the same site.

Nocton Hub
Nocton Hub, exterior view from Main Street.
Nocton Hub
Location within Lincolnshire
Former namesNocton Village Hall (1946-2019)
AddressMain Street, Nocton, LN4 2BH
LocationNocton, Lincolnshire, UK
Coordinates53.1655°N 0.4195°W / 53.1655; -0.4195
Elevation15 m (49 ft)
Public transitNocton, Village Hall
OwnerNocton Parish Council
OperatorNocton Hub Trust
TypeVillage Hall
Genre(s)Community Building
Executive suites3
Capacity120
SurfaceVinyl-covered concrete
ScoreboardNo
Construction
Broke ground2019
Construction cost₤660,000
Tenants
Ripon Arms (2020–present)
Website
sites.google.com/view/nocton-hub/

History

1946 Village Hall

A village hall has existed in Nocton since September 1946 when Smith's Potato Estates, owners of most of the cottages in the village, moved an old corrugated iron community building from Sleaford Market Place and incorporated a licensed social club (Nocton Social Club). Following the demise of Smith's Crisps in the 1970s, ownership of the village hall was transferred to Nocton Parish Council. The building burned down in January 1979 but the insurance settlement was insufficient to completely meet the costs of a new brick-built building.[1].

1981 Village Hall

Faced with a funding gap from the 1979 insurance payout the local community engaged in fund-raising to make up the shortfall so that the replacement brick-built hall could be constructed. The restoration fund raised £10 000. The new hall was built on a new site which had been transferred to the Parish Council by British Field Products Limited, the then owners of the Nocton Farms Estate. It was officially opened on 1 November 1980. The building included a two-roomed social club bar and a separate event hall and was managed by a Village Hall Management Committee appointed by the Parish Council. However, by May 1992 a Lincolnshire Echo news article reported that no further bookings would be taken due to a lack of support for events. [2]. By 1994 the Village Hall was running at a loss.

In 2011 it was noted that cracks were appearing in the walls of the hall and that there were problems with leaking drains. Although initially attributed to subsidence a 2014 structural survey found the floor slab to be unstable and sinking. This major defect was not covered by the buildings insurance policy. A working group was charged in 2015 with remodelling a revised building appropriate to the needs of a community now twice the size it was in 1981; after exploring repair and redesign it was found to be more cost-effective to demolish and rebuild a modern, efficient building.[3] The building was demolished in Jun 2019.

2020 Nocton Hub

The new Hub building was constructed between August 2019 and March 2020. Its internal area is 417 sq m in contrast to the 299 sq m of the previous building. The modern design addresses accessibility and equality issues and presents a street frontage dominated by full-height windows. Its construction was part-financed by the FCC Communities Foundation that provided approximately 10% of the project funding (£61 463).[4]

gollark: kMarx is deprecated, Xenon is used now.
gollark: Which bit? I'm not sure about the user experience bit, but it's harder to get more CPU than it is more GPU.
gollark: Also, decimal points would likely break basically everything in existence.
gollark: *But* would also probably make the user experience worse than just using a bit of the GPU.
gollark: I'm not sure if that would be better or worse than people wasting GPU power; it would possibly even it out a little?

References

  1. "A village with no pub"; Lincoln CAMRA. Retrieved 29 March 2020
  2. "Report on Nocton Village Hall - No further bookings due to lack of support for events". Lincolnshire Echo Press. 5 May 1992.
  3. " Business Plan for Nocton Village Hall" Nocton Parish Council. Retrieved 29 March 2020
  4. Andy Hubbert (24 January 2020). "Major landfill tax grant is welcome boost to hub plan". Sleaford Standard.
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