£150m sport and health superhub breaks ground at Sketty Lane

Diggers rolled onto the site this week as construction started on the National Institute for Sport and Health (NISH), a four‑storey landmark rising beside the Wales National Pool and directly opposite Singleton Hospital. The university says the location is no accident — the aim is to bring researchers, clinicians, athletes and industry specialists together in one place, with the hospital and sports facilities just steps away.

The project is being delivered for Swansea University and funded through the Swansea Bay City Deal, with support from Swansea Council and local health boards. Pick Everard is managing the scheme, working with architects Powell Dobson and main contractor Willmott Dixon.

Night‑time view of the planned sport and health superhub at Sketty Lane, with the building illuminated in the final design concept.
(Image: Powell Dobson)

Gareth Taylor, Principal Project Manager at Pick Everard, said the team has been shaping the project from the earliest stages. “Being involved from the early stages has given us a real understanding of how the building needs to operate, both now and in the future,” he said. “With the potential to make a genuine impact on health, sport and technology, delivering a project of this scale requires close collaboration across the full project team.”

Swansea University describes the institute as the first facility of its kind in the UK — a place where new sports technology, medical devices and health innovations can be developed, tested and scaled without leaving the region.

Professor Keith Lloyd, NISH Director, said the development will help put Swansea “on the global map” for research and innovation. “It will serve as a catalyst for discovery, investment, and improved wellbeing,” he said.

Inside, the building will house teaching rooms, media studios, sports technology labs, collaborative workspaces and demonstration areas. The university says it will act as the anchor for a wider Science and Innovation Park planned for the Sketty Lane site, creating a real‑world environment where ideas can move quickly from concept to testing.

Project leaders say the development will create more than 1,000 jobs in the Swansea area and contribute over £150 million to the regional economy by 2033.

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