Future Group Renewable Energy Hub Opens New Office and Training Academy

Future Group has opened a new head office and a first of its kind training academy in South Tyneside. The development marks a further step in the company’s expansion as a renewable heat and power business. The Future Group renewable energy hub brings together operations, customer engagement and skills development at two linked sites.

Future Group comprises five renewable energy businesses with a combined turnover of thirty million pounds. The organisation has now established a six thousand square foot head office and showroom on South Shields’ Western Approach. The site includes offices, meeting rooms and storage space for its twenty eight staff.

The showroom is designed to support domestic and commercial customers who want to explore heat pumps, battery storage services and solar panels. It gives visitors the opportunity to understand products before installation, with a focus on the practical aspects of renewable technology.

The Future Group renewable energy hub also includes a training academy on the Rekendyke Industrial Estate. This new facility is intended to upskill tradespeople in the installation and maintenance of solar power systems. Its role is to support wider adoption of renewable energy by building technical capacity in the workforce.

Anthony Rutherford, a director at Future Group, said: “We are thrilled to have finally moved into our new head office in South Shields.

“The office has provided us with a central hub where we can oversee all of the group’s operations, catch up with staff and show off our products and services to customers.

“It has been a significant investment from the group, but we are confident it will play a pivotal role in helping us achieve our ambitions of becoming one of the UK’s leading, end to end renewable heat and power specialists.”

By combining operational coordination with customer engagement and training, the Future Group renewable energy hub aims to support both business growth and broader skills development in the renewable sector.

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