JERICHO WHARF NEWS ITEM

Why a new Community Centre

The canalside site offers a wonderful opportunity to create a new and vibrant hub on the Wharf site

Save Jericho Wharf Campaign Newletter No. 2.

In January 2025, we launched our online petition in favour of a compulsory purchase of the Wharf site which in just a few weeks gathered 1,600+ signatures. We then entered into discussions with the City Council. In April, we launched this newsletter to keep supporters up to date. In this issue we emphasize the importance of a new community centre on the Wharf site.

Posted - Jun 17, 2025

Where we stand with the Council

The Trust has published the Hong Kong landowner’s latest ‘confidential’ marketingmaterial with plans to cover the site with up to 230 student flats. It offers no boatyard and a small ‘community space’ which can only be accessed through the student flats.

The landowner boasts that his latest plans will increase his land value two to three times and boost the value of his current planning permission from £32m to £50m, and his profit from £5m to something far more. The Trust is told that he is discussing
his plans with Council planners and Worcester College. And if successful he may extend the development by buying the neighbouring College Cruisers site, so ending Oxford’s last connection with its canal, which will become a ‘dead end’. The BBC, the Oxford Mail and Oxford Clarion are following this story.

 The Trust requested the Council for a compulsory purchase order (CPO) last December, six months ago, and continues to press to bring this saga to an end. After 20 years of dereliction, this site must now be developed responsibly for much needed housing, a new community centre and boatyard. We are told to expect a response from the Council on the next steps in July.

Why a new Community Centre

In 1980, the Vicar of St Barnabas Church, with support from the City Council, had the imagination to transform the old Church Institute into a new community centre – and brought together local community leaders to form a new Association to manage it. Now with a similar vision and determination we can create a modern space on the Wharf site to meet the needs of the 21st Century.

The Institute building has done great service, but the fabric is crumbling, there is no disabled access, and there are limited options for exercise on this small footprint. At one end of the age scale, older people can struggle even to get into the building, and at the other there is little space for young people to really stretch out and enjoy themselves whether for sport or dance or just entertainment.

For four decades, the Jericho Community Association (JCA) has run the building on a largely self-financing basis. The Association gains income from classes and from local and other Oxford residents who hire the centre for anything from ballet to Morris Dancing to birthday parties. Crucially, there are also rooms rented out on an annual basis, to artists, low-cost counsellors, wellness providers and fair-trade operations This provides steady and regular income which helps keep the building in a usable state of repair, pay the Church for occupying its building, and also subsidize free use for groups such as the Jericho Pantry and Alive and Kicking

The new centre will use a similar model. Dance and sports and activity spaces will be hired out for running classes, and studios and offices will be offered to local groups. There will also be a daily café opening onto the square. In this way we can run the building efficiently, while also setting aside funds for future repairs – making this a fully sustainable long-term operation. For this we need enough rooms and sufficient space, so the building thus needs to be a minimum size. And since the community centre is mounted on top of the boatyard, that also establishes a minimum height.

Oxford City Council is responsible for community and sport centres across the City, including the Ferry Centre in North Oxford. But not in the centre of the city in Jericho. We are not asking the City to build one here, but instead, through a compulsory purchase, just make it possible for local residents to create it themselves – creating essential community infrastructure that meets the City’s own declared planning requirements for the site.

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For a more detailed briefing on the Save Jericho Wharf Campaign, please check the extensive Q&A on the JWT website.

Recent news items

Why a public space and a bridge

Why a new Community Centre

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The canalside site offers a wonderful opportunity to create a new and vibrant hub on the Wharf site

Landowner’s bid to bypass community centre and boatyard requirements with a student flats development

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Banners protest about narrow developer objectives for the site

Why a community boatyard

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The CPO can be based on an approved planning designs, such as this one from 2015.

Residents angry at ‘shameful’ derelict Wharf site

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David Edwards, Maggie Black and David Feeny

Jericho Wharf Trust

The Jericho Wharf Trust is responsible for all aspects of the campaign to develop the Jericho Wharf canalside site in Oxford on behalf of the community

For a visual history of the Jericho Wharf project, please click HERE for our image gallery