UK's first national RSPCA hospital centre to open in Birmingham


Artist's impression of the new RSPCA hospital planned for Frankley
Artist's impression of the new RSPCA hospital planned for Frankley

Plans for a new flagship RSPCA hospital and rescue centre near Birmingham have been revealed.

The city has been chosen to be the home of the first national RSPCA centre in the history of the animal charity.

It will be built on a 42,000 sq ft of farmland in Frankley and become the only such centre in the country to have both a hospital and re-homing centre next to each other.

But the RSPCA needs to raise £3 million to ensure the premises can open and has appealed to everyone in the West Midlands to become involved in supporting the project through its new Leaps and Bounds Appeal.

The RSPCA spokesman is ex-Coronation Street star Adam Rickitt who has taken time out of his career to work on the appeal.

Adam Rickitt with his dog Rufus

The actor, who played Nick Tilsley in the soap, said: “This new development is going to be the beating heart of the RSPCA.

“It will be the only facility in the whole country to have both a hospital and re-homing centre.

“Rescue and hospital treatment and then rehabilitation and finally re-homing – that entire cycle the RSPCA stands for – it will be the only place that can do it in one setting. The people of Birmingham should be really excited about being chosen for the site of the first ever flagship RSPCA centre.”

Its current hospital and re-homing centre in Barnes Hill, Weoley Castle, was built on an old landfill site.

Opened in 1962, it is in such a poor state that some of the rundown buildings there have begun to subside.

Jackie Lines at the RSPCA centre in Barnes Hill, Birmingham

Manager Jackie Lines said some of the cracks in the walls are so big you can put your arm through them.

It has also been targeted by burglars

Grandmother Mrs Lines, said the new centre would mean staff could look after the animals without worrying about their surroundings.

“We’re actually going to have the room and the facilities to concentrate on the animals rather than holding the site together,” she said.

“We will have everything that we need up there to do the job. It’s very much make do and mend here.”

Of the break-ins, she said: “We don’t have anything big and expensive in what we do.

“The dogs had radios in their blocks to give them background sound.

“The radios have disappeared and just anything that was lying about. Anything that they would find they would take – even grooming equipment.”

Jackie joined the RSPCA in 1999 after retiring from teaching at an agricultural college. She came to Birmingham in 2006 to help find the new site which is due to open in September 2012.

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