News / KNowle West

What will become of Knowle West’s former youth club?

By Alex Seabrook  Wednesday Nov 5, 2025

A former youth club in Knowle West could be demolished despite an election pledge to return the building to the community.

An evangelical church has rented Eagle House from Bristol City Council for the past decade and their lease expires in May.

In the run up to the local elections in 2024, Green candidates campaigned on ending the lease early and reopening the building as a youth centre.

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The building is located on Newquay Road, very close to where two teenagers, Max Dixon and Mason Rist, were fatally stabbed last year.

The murder of Max Dixon and Mason Rist in January 2024 left the close-knit community in Knowle West in shock – photo: Mia Vines Booth

The youth club closed just over a decade ago as part of wider cuts to youth services across Bristol. A lack of youth centres has often been linked to rising rates of knife crime.

However Bristol City Council will likely knock down the building after the church’s lease expires.

Green councillor for Southville Tony Dyer, leader of the council, faced questions about Eagle House during a member forum meeting on Tuesday.

In a written answer before the meeting, he said that vacant buildings attract anti-social behaviour, and “demolition would prevent this”.

Labour councillors Lisa Durston and Rob Logan are calling on the council to renovate Eagle House – photo: Bristol Labour

The council’s capital budget — spent on upgrading infrastructure like buildings, roads and bridges — has a lot of money left over this year, some of which could be used on the former youth club.

During the meeting, Labour councillor Lisa Durston, representing Filwood, said: “We’re happy to arrange any meetings with residents and officers about the future of the building.

“But these meetings would be pretty pointless if residents decide that they’d like it renovated, just for the council to come back and say ‘we’re not prepared to fund that’.

“We regularly engage with residents in community meetings and they have been pretty clear about what they want.

“As renovation costs would be less than half a per cent of the capital budget underspend for this year, would you be able to show some accountability for the previous promises made to the community?”

She urged the council leader to commit using some of this unspent money on renovating Eagle House.

Labour estimates this would cost £280,000, although this figure was disputed by Dyer who claimed the refurbishment might be much more expensive than that.

Tony Dyer is the leader of Bristol City Council- photo: Bristol Green Party

Dyer said: “What I am committed to is working with the councillors for Filwood and Knowle to look at bringing forward a solution that is both supportable by the local community but also is reasonable for the council to put funding into.

“We need to make sure what are the costs involved, and how much it would take.

“But beyond that, there is a commitment to make something there that’s available for the community to use.

“We need to make a decision that’s best long-term for the community, and that may not be simply leaving the building there until we can find the funds to bring it up to speed. We need to work out what the potential options could be going forward.”

Alex Seabrook is a local democracy reporter for Bristol

Main photo: Bristol24/7

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