The Bermuda Government then used Admiralty House as a barracks for the
Bermuda Police Service (the first constables housed there were originally caretakers). After the
Bermuda Militia Artillery and the
Bermuda Rifles amalgamated in 1965 to form the Bermuda Regiment (now the
Royal Bermuda Regiment), it housed one of the regiment's rifle companies until the early-1970s, when all sub-units of the regiment were collected at
Warwick Camp. In 1973, the property was adapted for the rehabilitation of drug addicts by
The Group, a charity with wide backing. Although the grounds are still generally referred to as
Admiralty House, the Admiralty House itself was deemed unsafe, and uneconomical to repair, and was deliberately burnt down on 24 January 1974. Later that year, the Government of Bermuda's Department of Education began planning to redevelop the Admiralty House grounds as a unified campus for the Bermuda College. This was to include the college Department of Hotel Technology's
hotel training school, a working hotel where students could gain practical experience. Although the foreshore and the eastern slope of Clarence Hill were to be designated a botanical and biological preserve, the campus plan was protested by the
Admiralty House Park Association, which included local residents, and by the organisations already based on the property. The protests were ultimately successful as the hotel training school, originally titled
Stonington Beach, was instead placed on the South Shore in
Paget (the main campus of the college was situated separately at the former Prospect Camp, until moving to the same site in Paget in the 1990s). ==Current use==