Skip to main contentEnter
Join 7,550+ people who care about this town
Ipswich.co.uk logoSupport our work
News

University of Suffolk puts Grade II listed church up for sale

The University of Suffolk is selling the former St Clements Congregational Church on Back Hamlet after purchasing the Gothic-style building in 2021, with plans to develop new student facilities elsewhere on campus.

The former St Clements Congregational Church on Back Hamlet
The former St Clements Congregational Church on Back Hamlet
(Penn Commercial)

Why it matters: The Victorian church, designed by architect William Eade in 1887, has been vacant for over two years and will now be offered to another organisation to restore the landmark building.

The details: Penn Commercial is marketing the property with a guide price of around £300,000. The building was granted Grade II listed status in 2023, requiring the original interior, including wooden pews, to remain in situ.

The university originally purchased the church adjoining its Ipswich campus with the aim of providing student facilities and services on the site. However, the university is now developing new student facilities, including a gym, fitness studios, social and events spaces in its former library building. A modern new library is due to open in March in the Waterfront Building.

What they're saying: Chief operating and transformation officer at the University, Rosanne Wijnberg, explained: "We have reviewed a number of options for using the former church and it no longer falls within our future estate plans.

"We believe the best option is to offer another organisation in Ipswich the opportunity to restore the building to its former glory."

For context: The red brick Victorian building sits at the bottom of Back Hamlet on the edge of Ipswich's docklands regeneration programme, beside the university's main campus buildings.

The church features an elegant interior with a traditional Suffolk hammerbeam-style roof, balcony, and towering organ.

According to Simon Knott of Suffolk Churches, the church was built in 1887 by the Grimwades, as a memorial to Edward Grimwade who died the previous year.

The bottom line: After around five years of ownership, the university has decided the Grade II listed church does not fit its future plans and is offering the landmark building to buyers who can benefit from its location close to the campus.

It cost us ~£27 to cover this story

You can read it for free thanks to the generous support of GBS and PLMR Genesis

Despite a lack of promotion, the big reveal drew a good crowd of passersby

We're regenerating Ipswich – but we can't do it without you!

People tell us every day that our work matters – that it's making Ipswich better; that it's needed. But our work costs money, and unlike the Ipswich Star, we're not funded by national advertisers or owned by corporate US overlords. For just £4.75 a month, you can help fund our mission to restore pride of place and accelerate the much-needed regeneration of the town we call home.
Become a member →

In other news...

News

Christchurch Mansion to host major John Constable exhibition

Over 100 works by John Constable will go on display at Christchurch Mansion from 28 March, revealing the people and places that shaped the legendary artist's career in a major exhibition marking 250 years since his birth.
by
Continue reading →
News

Novelist appointed new writing fellow at University of Suffolk

Francesca Armour-Chélu, a novelist and children's author, has been appointed as the new Royal Literary Fund Writing Fellow at the University of Suffolk, offering free one-to-one support to students looking to improve their writing skills.
by
Continue reading →
News

Civil engineer crowned Suffolk New College Apprentice of the Year

Two former primary school classmates who hadn't seen each other for a decade were reunited at Suffolk New College's annual awards ceremony in Ipswich, where Gemma Moss, a 24-year-old civil engineer from Beccles, was crowned Apprentice of the Year.
by
Continue reading →
Load more content
Our journalism is free thanks to
Our journalism is free thanks to
Want our best content delivered to your inbox every Friday?

Have you subscribed to our free weekly newsletter?

If you haven’t, you really should. You’ll get our best content delivered to your inbox every Friday afternoon, just in time for the weekend. You can unsubscribe at any time, although 99.7% of people don’t.

  • Lee Walker
  • Joe Bailey of Brighten the Corners
  • Mark Hubert
7,550+ people are already loving it