FIRE chiefs have been given the green light to continue their £8.5 million station upgrade scheme – although the final cost could be closer to £12 million.

Cheshire Fire Authority agreed to renovate 21 of the county’s ageing fire stations back in September 2018.

The first two upgrades have already been completed, while work at Middlewich's station is set to be completed later this spring, with Holmes Chapel and Northwich stations are set to follow by the end of March 2021.

Barry Rose, Cheshire Fire Authority officer, told the authority’s estates and property committee on Friday: “It lifts the environment that the firefighters are working in completely.

“They are made up with it. They have been involved every step along the journey.

“The knock-on effect is that the next stations we are doing, the message is starting to get out.

“People are starting to see the finished articles now and it is generating more interest – we’re being asked ‘when is our station next?’ – so it is getting a good reception out there.”

The refurbished stations benefit from brighter workspaces, dedicated gym facilities and modern toilet and shower cubicles.

They are also being redecorated and provided with new furniture to provide workspaces that are fit-for-purpose, while accessible community rooms are also being provided.

But all that work has come at a cost, with the authority expecting to have spent more than £3.3 million on the first six stations – Bollington, Tarporley, Birchwood, Middlewich, Runcorn and Sandbach.

Fire authority members have previously allowed up to £8.5 million to be spent on the project, but Andrew Leadbetter, director of governance and commissioning, expects that figure to rise.

He said: “My guess is it will probably between £11.5 million and £12 million – but it is a guess, so let’s not pretend that is the suggestion at the moment.

“The fire stations need this investment – they definitely need this investment. Some of them a lot more than others.”

Members of the estates and property committee gave permission for the project to continue up to the maximum value of £8.5 million at Friday’s meeting.

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A further review on expected costs will follow at a later stage, when the full Cheshire Fire Authority board will consider whether to allow more cash to go towards the scheme.

If the full scheme is approved as expected, Knutsford station will be refurbished in 2021-22, while Winsford will follow in 2022-23 and Wilmslow will be one of the final stations to be upgraded in 2023-24.

Work is also taking place to consider whether one of the ageing stations could be refurbished to a zero-carbon standard.