Work starts on transforming pub into NHS facility

Jaimeelee Rendall,in Ipswichand
George King,Suffolk
News imageGeorge King/BBC A photo of The Inkerman pub building taken from the opposite side of the road. The cream building is closed up with little sign of life.George King/BBC
The Inkerman pub has been abandoned since 2022, but will soon have a new lease of life

Work to turn an abandoned pub into a modern healthcare facility has started.

Ground was broken at the Inkerman Pub site on Norwich Road, Ipswich, on Tuesday, four years after it pulled its final pints for punters in 2022.

Over the next nine months, the venue will be extended and bolted to the neighbouring Cardinal Medical Practice, creating more clinical, group and ancillary rooms and waiting areas.

Led by the surgery, with support from the NHS Norfolk and Suffolk Integrated Care Board (ICB), it is hoped the development will improve waiting times.

News imageJaimielee Rendall/BBC A group of men and women all wearing hard hats and yellow high-vis jackets. They are standing in front of a former pub building. They are smiling. Two of them are holding up an artist's impression image of what the pub will look like after its conversion.Jaimielee Rendall/BBC
The project is a collaborative effort between the practice, the ICB, LSI Architects, CPM Consult, WSP Healthcare Advisory Service, MP Consultants and Ipswich Borough Council

Ed Garratt, chief executive of the ICB, said seeing the construction of the new space finally begin was a "very, very special" moment and "so exciting for the town".

"It's a historic site full of heritage and will be a site where we provide better care and better conditions for the staff, so it's a kind of win-win for everyone," he said.

"I think this is the way forward for Suffolk - renovating, restoring and repurposing existing buildings, it is more economical than building a new site."

News imageJaimielee Rendall/BBC An abandoned room inside a former pub building. Jaimielee Rendall/BBC

Cardinal Medical Practice is home to about 10 clinical rooms, but this is set to increase under the plans.

The extension would also create 12 new parking spaces and 327 sq m of additional floorspace for the practice, which currently has 27,307 patients on its books.

Emily Marsh, estate development manager at NHS Suffolk and North East Essex Integrated Care Board, said the expansion felt like "the right fit" for the practice.

"This is the start of a really exciting way forward," she said.

"Not just a new building, but a new way of working, and a new opportunity for the community to get involved – it's so exciting that we're finally here.

"Who would've thought that a pub would be a perfect place for clinical, but it is."

The work at the pub came after plans for a so-called "super surgery" at the former Tooks Bakery site, costing £7.75m, were axed.

News imageIpswich Borough Council An image showing what the £7.75m complex could have looked like if built, with black metal cladding and a big window on the first floor.
Ipswich Borough Council
The so-called "super surgery" was axed in October 2024, much to the disappointed of some residents

Do you have a story suggestion for Suffolk? Contact us below.

Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.