Those behind plans for a £6 million sports complex at King William’s College say it’s for use by the entire Manx community.

Proposals (planning application 19/01137/A) include a 50-metre pool, indoor running track, gym, cafe and five retail units for the fields by the front entrance to the private school.

MHK Ralph Peake and Castletown commissioner David Parnell formed a charity called Southern Community Sports Facility to launch the project.

They’re seeking outline planning permission for the ’centre for excellence’ to attract charitable funding.

Both claim it would provide facilities needed by top level athletes in both swimming and athletics, but would be open for all sports clubs and schools to use.

Airport buses will stop at the site to provide a regular service to drivers and cyclists, in what Mr Peake hopes will become an ’active travel hub’.

Once in place, management of the site would be outsourced to a commercial operator, which would seek to make a profit.

It’s proposed the charity will lease the land from King William’s College, which supports the project, so it can offer ’swimming, triathlon and cycling programmes’.

The location of the proposed facilities is also said to ’ensure the college remains an attractive option for parents who wish to send their children to the school’.

Mr Peake and Mr Parnell say any deal between the private school and the operator will be commercial, and on the same basis as any other user.

Running costs for the facility are expected to met via gym memberships, and from the retail units at the site.

Mr Peake, who’s also a swimming coach, says this model means taxpayers wouldn’t be asked to foot the bill for complex, unlike pools elsewhere on the island.

He insists the facility is not intended to compete with other public sector pools.

Castletown Commissioners back the project according to Mr Parnell, who’s a member of the local authority.

He has dismissed concerns the five retail units would compete with shops at the heart of the town, insisting they’ll offer ’less traditional’ services.

Airport authorities are content the proposals won’t encroach on the public safety zone and approach surface for aircraft.

Residents of Janet’s Corner, which is next to the site, have been consulted, and it’s understood a public meeting will be scheduled to discuss the plans in detail.