Veterans bring together 'community-minded people'
A once "thriving" ex-services club has been saved after the Covid pandemic led to a decline in memberships and put the building at risk of closure.
The Joint Ex-Services Club in Barnwell, Cambridge, was struggling to remain open until its committee agreed to make the venue available to the wider community and rename the site as the Joint Service and Veterans Club.
Carl Higgs, 51, the chairman of the club, said since the space was opened up to the community in July 2024 about £70,000 worth of work had been pledged or carried out.
Local groups have made use of the renovated space and the club has plans for the site to eventually provide services for people experiencing homelessness.
The club, which was established in 1983, aimed to be a welfare hub for veterans, but the wider community can now also gain access to its range of support.
After refurbishing the interior, exterior, the group agreed to open the building during non-club hours as a community space.
Veterans have also agreed to run the club on a voluntary basis to reduce expenditure, and they said they looked forward to hosting "many more" events in the future.
Sean Howlett, 54, one of the founders of the club said the financial support the club had received "pulls at heartstrings" and the venue's main event hall had already hosted discos, quiz nights and Christmas dinners.
"We can bring the community together," he said.
"You tend to find ex-military and local people don't mingle too much, but the idea of this is that we get everybody together.
"That's what we want to do, create a community of community minded people... doing something to help others."
Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.