Delivering quality homes and honouring a local Leeds swimming champion

The Leeds City Council development – which comprises 25 one-bedroom apartments and eight two and three-bedroom houses – has been built at Brooklands Avenue in Seacroft.
As part of the project’s commitment to community engagement, pupils from Beechwood Primary School worked with our social value team to name the apartment building. The chosen name, Doris Storey House, honours the remarkable east Leeds swimmer who won double gold at the 1938 Empire Games.
Two of Doris’s grandchildren, brothers Darren and Damian Quarmby, were joined at Brooklands Avenue by representatives from Wates, senior councillors and other stakeholders for an event celebrating the imminent completion of the scheme.
The event also saw the official unveiling of an eye-catching mural created by artist Alexandra Elstone in the foyer of Doris Storey House, featuring a depiction of a female swimmer in action.
Guests at the event were given a sneak preview of a new Leeds Civic Trust blue plaque honouring Doris’s achievements.
The plaque’s permanent home will be the old York Road baths in Richmond Hill, where Doris fitted in training sessions around her job as a machinist.
Councillor Jess Lennox
Leeds City Council’s Executive Member for housing
Councillor Salma Arif
Leeds City Council’s Executive Member for adult social care, active lifestyles and culture
David Wingfield
David Wingfield, Managing Director of Construction East at Wates
Martin Hamilton
Director of Leeds Civic Trust
The scheme has been delivered by our Construction business, with the handover of the homes to the council scheduled for next week ahead of the first residents moving in.
We have carried out a wide-ranging community engagement programme in Seacroft since work began on the development in late 2023. The programme’s positive results include:
Tracy Brabin
Mayor of West Yorkshire, said: