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Vale Royal Methodist Church, also historically Vale Royal Wesleyan Methodist Church, was a Methodist Church of Great Britain parish church in Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England. It was opened in 1873 and stopped being used as a church on Easter 2015. It was later renovated to become a gym.

History
The founder of Methodism, John Wesley once preached in Tunbridge Wells and gained a small congregation there. The congregation of the Wesleyan Methodist Church purchased land for a small chapel in 1812 and worshiped in an inclusive way by also using Church of England liturgy during Sunday morning services by 1863. Due to the growth of the congregation, they expanded twice but eventually built Vale Royal as a larger church on the site which was completed on 3 June 1872 at a cost of £5,000. It was built to designs by the architect Charles Bell. The church's organ was installed in 1883 and was opened by William Thomas Best. In the 1930s, the majority of Vale Royal's stained glass windows were installed.

Closure
Due to the cost of maintenance of the church building, the Vale Royal congregation had proposed demolition and rebuilding of the church with 14 flats on the site in 2010. However this proposal was rejected the following year by Tunbridge Wells Borough Council as "out of character" with the local area. Eventually the congregation put the church up for sale, but the council noted that though the church was not a listed building, it was a local heritage asset. The church held its last service on Easter Day in 2015 before closing and the Methodist congregation moved to worship at a nearby United Reformed Church. The church eventually sold at auction for £900,000, however the money went to the Methodist Church's headquarters and not the local congregation. The church was later adapted into a gym with the building kept standing.