Home Group
Vicky Brown, delivery manager at Home Group (centre), Sean Egan, MD with Galliford Try Partnerships North (left), and Cllr John Adams, Gateshead Council (right).

£14m community development in Gateshead will create over 80 homes and 40 local jobs

Work is underway for a new £14m community care project in the region.

Ravensdene, in Gateshead’s Lobley Hill, is being built on the site of a former hotel and will create 83 homes for local residents who require various forms of support.

Once completed, the project is expected to bring around 40 new jobs to the area, primarily within care and support roles.

The service will include a mixture of one and two-bedroomed apartments, specialist assisting technology and many homes designed specifically for people with dementia.

Created and managed by housing association Home Group, the community wellbeing service will be built in partnership with Gateshead Council and Galliford Try Partnerships North, and is set to be completed in 2021.

Lindsay Courtney, strategic lead for service design and practice at Home Group, said: “With an increasingly aging population, we need to do something different in order to take pressure away from an already stretched system.

“Our unique approach is designed around people and looks to help develop skills and support physical and mental wellbeing.

“Specialist care workers will focus on reablement, meaning people can stay active and independent for much longer, delaying the need for residential care.”

She added: “An additional benefit of improving the integration of health and social care is that a scheme like this can reduce the number of unnecessary hospital admissions, easing the pressure on frontline NHS care services.”

Over the next six years, the number of people living in the North East aged over 65 will increase by more than 18 per cent. Across England, current forecasts predict we will need over 71,000 new elderly care beds by 2025.

The community wellbeing scheme is also set to include services which will be open to both residents and the wider community. These facilities form part of the wider care offer as they encourage residents to leave their homes and connect with different individuals and generations, lowering the risk of social isolation.

Steph Downey, service director for adult social care at Gateshead Council, added: “This is a very positive and exciting scheme, which the council has been delighted to work in partnership with Home Group and Galliford Try to deliver.

“Developments such as Ravensdene are key to the council’s strategic plans and will support people over the age of 55 to live independent and vibrant lives in the community, in ‘future-proof’ accommodation, with excellent wrap around support, as and when they need it.”

She concluded: “We know most older people want to live in their own home, with their own front door, which is evidenced by the fact that there are reducing numbers of people moving into residential and nursing homes.

“Having options such as Ravensdene, where care workers will support people to be independent, but where more support can be provided as their needs increase, means we’re able to achieve the goal of living in the community, for many more of residents.”

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