The Harrogate Inn has been named the best pub in the county at the Pub & Bar Magazine’s 2024 awards.
The inn opened after a multi-million-pound renovation in July 2023. One of the major changes from its previous incarnation as the St George Hotel was the new Barking George bar within the Ripon Road venue.
Owned by Newcastle-based pub company the Inn Collection Group, Barking George hosts live music on Friday nights and has an outdoor terrace overlooking the hustle and bustle of Crescent Gardens.
General manager Henry White said:
“We’re naturally delighted to have picked up the award for North Yorkshire. To be named best in a county where there is some serious competition is humbling. Since opening in July, it has been great to see the bar establish itself and the team settle into providing a welcoming place for people to come and we’re looking forward to our first full summer this year.”
The Inn Collection Group, which also owns the Ripon Inn and the Knaresborough Inn, won three accolades at the National Pub and Bar Awards.
The Bull’s Head Inn and The Swan Grasmere were named as the best pubs in Gwynedd and Cumbria respectively.
Tristan O’ Hana, editor of Pub & Bar magazine said award winners “represent all that is great about the modern on-trade”.
The winners will now go on to the National Pub & Bar Awards in London this June, where 15 regional winners and an overall champion will be revealed.
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Famous crime author announced for Harrogate writing festival
Harrogate International Festivals has announced its final special guest for the 2024 Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival.
Peter James is a globally bestselling author and the creator of the much-loved Detective Superintendent Roy Grace series, now an ITV drama starring John Simm.
He joins authors Chris Carter, Jane Casey, Elly Griffiths, Erin Kelly, Vaseem Khan, Dorothy Koomson, Shari Lapena, Abir Mukherjee, Liz Nugent and Richard Osman in an all-star lineup of special guest headliners.
Mr James will be celebrating his milestone twentieth Roy Grace book at the Festival with an exclusive preview of One Of Us Is Dead, published by Pan Macmillan in September 2024.
He will discuss his new standalone novel, They Thought I Was Dead, with a long-awaited reveal of what happened to Roy Grace’s missing wife Sandy in conversation with TV presenter Louise Minchin.
This will be his eighth appearance, having been a special guest twice before and programming chair in 2016.
Mr James said:
“This year I am celebrating my 20th Roy Grace novel and where better to do this than at Harrogate, the jewel in the crime festival crown. I had a wonderful time as Programming Chair in 2016 and I look forward to returning as a Special Guest this year, spending a delightful summer’s evening with my fans and fellow authors.
“I’ve no doubt a pint or two of Theakston Old Peculier might be involved.”
Returning to Harrogate for its 21st year it offers fans from around the world a unique opportunity to hear from the biggest stars of the genre, discover exciting new talent and enjoy a packed programme of panels, talks and inspiring creative workshops.
Simon Theakston, chairman of T&R Theakston Ltd, said:
“Peter James has been hugely popular with the Festival audience over the years, and we can’t wait to welcome him back to hear more about his twentieth Roy Grace book.
“Peter completes a stellar line up of Special Guests in a stunning programme that truly reflects the strength, breadth and diversity of the genre.”
The three day festival curated by 2024 Festival Chair Ruth Ware, is set to take place July 18-21. The full programme for this year’s Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival will be announced on May 14, 2024.
Tickets are on general release on 15th April. More information about tickets and packages can be found here.
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New software improving local gully maintenance, says council
North Yorkshire Council says a new software has helped to improve maintenance of the county’s gullies.
A council report, which was written by Nigel Smith, head of highway operations at North Yorkshire Council, will be presented to the transport, economy, environment and enterprise overview and scrutiny committee next Wednesday.
It says maintenance has reportedly improved since the roll-out of a pilot scheme using software from a company called Kaarbontech in 2021.
The Stray Ferret is often flooded with messages expressing concern about the infrastructure of local gullies. These only increased during the sodden winter.
But the council has said the new software helps to determine the number of gullies that need to be attended each year and where they are located based on the previous year’s figures.
Mr Smith said:
“The analysis of this data ensures that the gully crews only need to attend gullies that require attention, therefore saving time and costs associated with gully maintenance.”
The report says the previous system was “much less reliable”, adding when some locations were attended the crews would find the gully was “silt-free and water in the pipework running freely”.
But, since using the software, it adds the attendance-to-gullies figure increased to 85% in 2022 and 2023, which was a 10% increase from the year prior.
The report also says of those gullies attended in the same period, a total of 93.2% of gullies needed cleaning, which suggests the “data-led programme was working”. It adds:
“Our surveys show that there are 164,171 gullies on the highway network.
“Data collected and sense-checked indicates that as of March 11, 2024, the total number of gullies attended was 92,554 based on information to the end of the previous week. This represents 87.11% of the programme, meaning the 2022/23 figure (85%) has already been exceeded.”
Mr Smith also notes the data collected was taken “against a backdrop of ten named storms during the winter season”, adding more than 10,000 gullies were attended in addition to those included in the Kaarbontech programme.
The report forecasts the attendance figure to increase to 93% by the end of this year.
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Business Breakfast: Masham brewery partners with snooker pro
Masham’s Black Sheep Brewery has announced a partnership with professional snooker player, the ‘Tyneside Terror’ Gary Wilson.
Mr Wilson is world number 12 and the brewery will be his sponsor for the Tour Championship, which ended yesterday, and this month’s World Championship at the Crucible in Sheffield. Mr Wilson won the first Welsh Open in February, as well as back-to-back Scottish Opens in December.
He said:
“As a fan of northern beers, being sponsored by Black Sheep Brewery holds special significance for me. I can’t wait to see what the rest of the season holds with an iconic Northern brewery now supporting me, game after game.”
Jo Theakston, executive director at Black Sheep Brewery, added:
“We always seek to collaborate with individuals who resonate with our commitment to excellence, which is precisely why we are sponsoring Gary, as he looks to continue his remarkable run of form into the next major tournament.”
Black Sheep Brewery also sponsors local teams such as Harrogate Town AFC and Otley RUFC, as well as England’s inaugural Long Course Weekend, set to be hosted in Masham this summer.
Salon and academy opens in Harrogate
Northern Beauty has opened on Tower Street in Harrogate. Owner Sarah Verity has been self employed in the beauty industry for eight years after having an epiphany during pregnancy working as an events manager.
The salon employs multiple businesses under one roof and is set to begin training fully accredited beauty courses. Ms Verity said “big things happen when women support women and that’s what I am trying to do here”.
The business began as a chair in a lodge in Ms Verity’s back garden. She said:
“Lockdown is the best thing that ever happened to me. It gave me the push to create something amazing.”
The salon is set to get a halo head spa in the next few weeks. Ms Verity said:
“It is very exciting. I believe it is the first outside of Manchester and people love a new beauty treatment.”
Harrogate law firm plant a tree for every will created
LCF Law is set to plant a tree every time a client makes or updates a will. The initiative aims to encourage more people to make a will, whilst also having a positive environmental impact.
It is part of a partnership with Yorkshire Dales Millenium Trust, a charity that helps people, landscapes and wildlife of the Yorkshire Dales and surrounding urban areas.
The law firm has already planted 1,000 trees, which will capture an estimated 160 tonnes of carbon over the next 50 years. LCF plans to plant another 1,000 this year.
Neil Shaw from LCF Law said:
“New research from The Association of Lifetime Lawyers shows that almost half of UK adults don’t have a will in place, which is as an alarming figure. The only way to ensure a person’s wishes are carried out is by properly communicating them legally through a will.
“By working with YDMT to plant a tree in the name of every person making or updating a will with us throughout 2024, we will not only be protecting their assets, but creating a sustainable legacy for future generations.”
He added that once a client has made or updated a will they will receive details of the woodland’s location, so they can visit it and see it grow.
Richard Hore, a development officer for Yorkshire Dales Millenium Trust said:
“Our growing partnership with LCF Law will play a key role in our woodland creation efforts that help to tackle climate change and nature loss.”
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Harrogate woman to take on major sporting event in memory of late partner and mum
A Harrogate woman will take on a three-day sporting challenge in memory of her late partner and mum.
Julia Sharpley, whose partner Adam was in a fatal collision just a day before her mother’s funeral, is taking part in Masham’s inaugural Long Course Weekend.
The event involves three different disciples, including a 1.2-mile swim across Grimwith reservoir, a 56-mile bike ride through Nidderdale and a 10km run.
Ms Sharpley, who now lives near Pateley Bridge, said on social media she has “no prior swimming ability, talent or experience”, but told the Stray Ferret she has taken up swimming lessons at Nidderdale Leisure and Wellness Centre in preparation.
She added:
“I’m getting more confident but still have a lot to do. I’m trying to build up my distance. I could do with a spell of decent weather to tackle some local hills on the bike and also get out into open water.
“I feel daunted but determined. Adam would have been very excited about such a large international multi-sport festival of swim, bike and run coming to the area.
“I’m doing it to celebrate his legacy and love of sport and, also, for my Mum who dedicated her time to her local Nidderdale community. The amazing support I have had for Memory Makers will, I hope, help something really positive happen.”
Ms Sharpley also said she’s not only taking part in the event in memory of her mum and late partner, but also for those “who, in a heartbeat, found their lives changed for ever – who suddenly need help to live just a normal life”.
She is raising money to buy local charity Memory Makers – Care and Dreams an accessible vehicle and has already exceeded her £1,000 target.
Ms Sharpley will take part in the Long Course Weekend on September 6,7 and 8.
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Readers’ Letters: Harrogate ‘feels like Narnia’ compared to where I’m from
Readers’ Letters is a weekly column giving you the chance to have your say on issues affecting the Harrogate district. It is an opinion column and does not reflect the views of the Stray Ferret. Send your views to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk.
This letter is in response to two stories. The first being about recent vandalism on Harrogate’s Parliament Street, which prompted a letter from a reader feeling ashamed of the town’s appearance.
Vandalism anywhere is wrong. I can’t understand why the Parliament Street building was vandalised and it makes me annoyed.
I moved here from Bradford in December 2022. Where I used to live, there was constant noise from balaclava-wearing youths riding quad bikes or off road bikes with no lights or reg plates and boy racers driving their cars down my road like it was a racetrack.
Bradford and Harrogate are like chalk and cheese when compared. I felt like I was in Narnia. The trees on the Stray were lit at night and not just for Christmas. Everywhere I walked I was in awe, and still am, of the magnificent buildings, the history and the open green spaces.
In addition, the ever changing flower displays; the shopping and hospitality choices; Harry’s walking tours and the events organised by the Harrogate BID and Harrogate International – and so much more – are brilliant.
I take pride in Harrogate, and I wasn’t even born here. I wonder how many residents, whether born and bred here, or incomers like me, either take it all for granted or don’t even notice the great things that surround them. If only they were to take their eyes off their mobiles for a minute and look up.
I can appreciate that the roads are not paved in gold (I am not going to rant about the potholes) and not everything is wonderful, like anti-social behaviour, county line drug dealing, homeless and street beggars.
I know these issues can be seen in towns and cities throughout the UK, but I find it sad knowing and seeing how much wealth there is in some areas of Harrogate and yet so much poverty in other areas. More social affordable housing needs to be developed and not just another conversion of a former office building.
Richard Coulter, Harrogate
Harrogate’s overflowing bins give a ‘dire impression’ of the town
The following two letters are in response to a story published this week about overflowing bins in Valley Gardens. North Yorkshire Council denied the claims, but the images were pretty damning.
How indescribably irritating it is to hear that as far as the council are concerned “there are no reports of bins overflowing”.
Frankly, it’s a routine sight in Harrogate, despite the new bins being installed. People are trying their level best to dispose of waste appropriately, but the number of times I’ve seen bins crammed to the hilt is too often to count. It’s now the norm, not the exception.
At the risk of sounding vicious… your staff are clearly lying. Because the fact of the matter remains that we constantly see bins overflowing in and around the town. It creates a dire impression and clearly indicates whatever measures are in situ are wholly inadequate.
Don’t rely on staff to report their own efficacy – go out and see the mess for yourself!
Mark Fuller, Harrogate
I have just read the article concerning rubbish bins in Valley Gardens. We are currently in Japan where there are no litter bins and no litter.
Everyone takes their litter home for disposal. We are simply a dirty and uncaring people.
Yes, the bins should be larger and emptied more frequently but we need to take some responsibility for our lovely town and gardens.
Cheryl Johnston, Harrogate
Perhaps the Dean should focus on Ripon residents – rather than one-day tourists
This letter is in response to the ongoing Ripon Cathedral annexe saga. The Stray Ferret has covered the topic extensively.
What’s wrong with the present toilet facilities which are a few yards away from the cathedral that would benefit from a smartening-up? The Dean appears to be the only person who is embarrassed about the cathedrals facilities that appear to have been accepted by most Ripon people for many years.
And if there is a concern with the running costs of the cathedral, why don’t they make an entrance charge as does York Minster?
A previous knowledgeable correspondent asked how do they expect to cover the overheads of the new annexe – which are bound to be very large.
Why wasn’t the Old Deanery, which is right on the doorstep and stood empty for many years, considered for the cathedrals expansion? It is such a magnificent building inside and out, and now leased as a restaurant.
Maybe it should have been time to give up when Historic England refused to back the south-side proposal for the new annexe – rather than ruin Minster Gardens with a huge carbuncle. It is beautiful, restful area with mature trees.
Rather than gaining funding from extra tourism from people who will be here one day and gone the next, maybe the Dean should be more concerned about looking after Ripon‘s city and its people, and invest its £8 million into more rewarding projects.
Gordon Lund, Sawley
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
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Tree falls on Harrogate road as strong winds continue
A tree crashed down on Fulwith Mill Lane in Harrogate today as strong winds continued to affect the district.
Yesterday’s warmest day of the year so far was accompanied by Storm Kathleen.
Although the worst of the winds hit Scotland, there was widespread disruption in England as flights were cancelled at Heathrow, Manchester and Birmingham.
The Harrogate district has been relatively unscathed and winds are expected to abate this afternoon.
Besides the fallen tree, Little Bird Markets cancelled artisan markets in Knaresborough yesterday and Harrogate today because of the weather.
Further gusts of over 40mph are forecast on Tuesday afternoon.
Photo: The tree blocking Fulwith Mill Lane at about noon today (April 7).
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Harrogate physio to help England’s World Cup bid in Thailand
A physiotherapist from Harrogate will be heading to Thailand this summer, hoping to help England win the World Cup – again.
Liam Chapman, 40, will be taking a short break from his usual job as the physiotherapy lead at The Duchy Hospital in Harrogate to accompany the England Veterans football team to the 16th Seniors Football World Cup in Bangkok. He said:
“Before joining The Duchy Hospital, I worked at Middlesbrough FC as physio and supported the youth teams. The England Seniors team manager approached me and asked if I wanted to join them in Bangkok. I had worked with some of the players before. It was a wonderful feeling to be approached.”
The Seniors World Cup tournament was initially conceived by the Senior Football Association of Thailand as a way to promote the country in the wake of the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami, and has grown to become an annual event.
Each of the eight teams taking part must have players from different age-groups: three aged 40-44, four aged 45-49, three aged 50+, and a goalkeeper aged 40 or over. They will play a total of five games over six days.
The team includes former Premier League players who are still in good shape, such as Barry Hayles, Deon Burton and Sean Davis, as well as non-league players still playing in their 40s. Newcomers to the squad Jon Challoner and Matt Bodkin are still turning out at Stamford and Chatham, following long careers in both the EFL and the Conference. Another still playing at 45 as player-manager at FC Malpas is former Burnley striker Steve Jones, who along with Ian Cox and Dean West make up a trio of former Clarets favourites in the squad.
England has won the cup six times – in 2009, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2023 – and Liam, who used to play football professionally for Hull City FC, believes that 2024 could be added to the roll of honour. He said:
“The standard of football is high, and we’ll be out there for 10 days in total. We have a strong squad, and I am confident we can win.”
England first entered the invitational tournament in 2008 with a team of local players called Harrogate Veterans. It has been so successful that the management of the national team has been taken over by the Football Association, but Liam is keeping our district’s connection with the event alive. He said:
“My family are really excited about the tournament and I look forward to sharing updates with them while I am out there.
“In many ways the tournament is more than just football. Research shows remaining active as we get older is great for our physical and mental health. Hopefully, the tournament inspires more people to look into joining a local team sport!”
In addition to the tournament, the competing teams, which include Scotland, Thailand, Germany, Australia, Iran and the USA, will support the “Football for Kids” programme, where players work with schoolchildren, helping them with coaching and sporting activities. Liam said:
“I am really looking forward to experiencing the culture and having the opportunity to share my love of the game with others. Sport is so important for people’s health and wellbeing.”
The 16th Seniors World Cup will take place in Bangkok from June 3 to 8, 2024.
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7 unmissable independent bookshops in YorkshireLast week the Stray Ferret explored how many people are rediscovering the joy of physical books – and this reading renaissance goes hand-in-hand with an increase in the amount of independent bookshops on the UK’s high street.
In 2022, the Bookseller’s Association reported a record amount of indie stores opening their doors, a number then surpassed in 2023, with 51 shops starting to trade.
North Yorkshire has always been a hotspot for independent businesses, and bookshops are no exception to this rule – here are just some of the highlights to pop into for a browse.
Castlegate Books, Knaresborough
Tucked into a corner of Market Place, Castlegate Books has been a firm fixture on the Knaresborough high street since 2008.
Owned by Gary Cooper, the shop stocks new books online and in store, as well as selling a range of greeting cards and postcards of the local area. National book tokens are also redeemable in-store.
According to the Castlegate Books website, there’s over 100,000 titles available online, with free UK delivery offered.
Castlegate Books is located at 13 Market Place, Knaresborough, HG5 8AL.
Reading Roots, Wetherby
Reading Roots joined Wetherby’s collection of thriving independent businesses in 2022, when Kiera Andrews was visiting family and spotted an empty store in the town.
Located centrally, the shop sells a diverse selection of fiction and a non-fiction books, including travel, sport, history – and a section all about Yorkshire.
The shop even offers work experience placements, collaborating with local schools in the area to inspire the next generation.
Reading Roots is located at 29 Market Place, Wetherby, LS22 6LQ.
Little Ripon Bookshop, Ripon
It’s Little Ripon Bookshop’s 15th anniversary this year – a true testament to an enduring love of books. A family-run enterprise, it first opened their doors in 2009, and expanded into the shop next door in 2018.
Stocking a range of new releases and old classics, as well as children’s titles and a range of stationary, cards and gifts, the bookshop is a firm fixture of Ripon’s independent retail scene.
It also hosts book clubs for adults and children, plus evening talks by local authors.
Little Ripon Bookshop is located at 12-13 Westgate, Ripon, North Yorkshire. HG4 2AT.
Imagined Things, Harrogate
Imagined Things opened its doors on Montpellier Parade in 2017 to much fanfare and rightly so; it was Harrogate’s first independent bookshop stocking new books in nearly twenty years.
A lifelong bibliophile, owner Georgia worked as a radiographer at Harrogate District Hospital for six years before deciding to pursue her passion for all things literature.
The shop stocks an eclectic range of genres to suit different tastes, and can post books to anywhere in the UK.
Imagined Things is located at 21 Montpellier Parade, Harrogate HG1 2TG.
Criminally Good Books, York
Criminally Good Books is a relative newcomer to the York streets, but due to its unique twist of stocking all things crime-related, it has already built up quite the reputation.
The quirky window sticker depicting the classic chalk outline of a body – surrounded by books of course – sets the theme and is an eye-catching to the shopfronts along Colliergate.
Whether you’re a fan of a thriller, or prefer a non-fiction deep dive, there’s a diverse range of authors and subjects to choose from. The first floor boasts an events space, hosting book clubs, author meet and greets, and even a burlesque show.
Criminally Good Books is located at 14 Colliergate, York, YO1 8BP.
The Stripey Badger, Grassington
If you’re looking to browse the books and have a bite to eat, The Stripey Badger ticks both of those boxes.
An award-winning café and bookshop all rolled into one, it’s located in the beautiful Yorkshire Dales village of Grassington – or as All Creatures Great and Small reboot fans might know it, the fictious Darrowby.
The shop is filled with many different genres, including children’s books, and they regularly host open mic poetry nights, book clubs and more.
The Stripey Badger is located at 7 The Square, Grassington, BD23 5AQ.
Books For All, Harrogate
Looks are deceptive with Books For All in Harrogate – while the shopfront gives the impression of being small, there’s actually three floors crammed with a vast array of second hand books.
First opened in 1998, the shop reports to be the oldest, and only, second hand bookstore in the town centre.
It’s estimated they have over 20,000 to choose from – alongside a selection of vinyl and CDs – but they’re always looking for new titles to add to their collection.
Books for All is located at 23A Commercial St, Harrogate, HG1 1UB.
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Barely a month passes without a new planning application to create flats in Harrogate town centre.
This week we reported on plans to turn the offices on the first, second and third floors of 5 Cambridge Road into three flats.
Planning permission has been previously granted to create flats in buildings that used to host the Kings Club strip club and the main post office, among others. And, in a few weeks, the former River Island unit on Cambridge Street, will open as Trinity House, a 14-flat development incorporating retail units. It’s hard to think of a more central location.
Town centres are changing from places to shop to places to live — and Harrogate appears to be at the forefront of the trend. Is this good or bad, and what challenges does it present?
The Stray Ferret sat down this week with Tariq Shah, chief executive of Vigo Group, the property developer behind Trinity House, and Matthew Chapman, chief executive of Harrogate Business Improvement District, to discuss the trend and whether it posed a threat to retail.
Mr Shah, whose company is based in Doncaster, said Harrogate was particularly attractive to developers because it was seen as a desirable place to live and has good transport connections, which lessened the need for cars in town centres.
He said Harrogate had reasonable short-term accommodation for tourists and conference centre delegates but a shortage of town centre flats for living, adding:
“Harrogate is a town centre in transition. We are seeing more people from outside Harrogate wanting to come here.
“Trinity House has attracted more interest than any other scheme we have done. We would like to do more here.”
Trinity House flats will be marketed from £300,000 and although a nice town centre pad might suit some people, what impact will it have on retailers and on people who live here who regard the town centre predominantly as somewhere to shop?
The BID is funded by town centre businesses but Mr Chapman is not opposed to the change.
He said:
“A collaborative approach with landlords and developers is key. If people are willing to put something back into the community then we welcome it. Where I struggle is if buildings are owned by offshore investors, like Debenhams.
“Every town has probably had too much retail space for a long time. It’s an emerging trend but there needs to be a long-term vision for the town centre.”
Besides the 14 upper floor flats, Trinity House includes the existing Body Care shop and has additional room for a storage facility or small dance or yoga studio, as well as a kiosk space for a start-up business wanting a town centre presence.
Mr Shah said his company had agreed to improve lighting at the rear of the building, put up security cameras and create an internal bin storage area to improve safety and appearance and reduce the risk of vermin and fire. He said these were examples of the firm’s commitment to town centre improvement as well as profit.
He added having more people milling around at night added to the vibrancy and created “natural surveillance” at night in empty town centre streets where some people feel unsafe.
Mr Chapman said many of the units being converted to flats were first and second floor offices that had been unused for years, adding:
“If you have spaces that people live in and take pride in, it has to be better than having them crumble away.”
Despite his overall positivity, Mr Chapman said there was probably a ceiling on the trend and there were dangers. For example, he said converting ground floor retail units on the fully occupied James Street to flats “would be seen as a threat”.
Mr Chapman said the system of determining business rates needed reviewing to adapt to the trend, which he said would see an increasing shift towards “experiential activities” in town centres. He added:
“Whether it’s a cool independent retailer or axe throwing, people will want to experience something in town centres.
“Harrogate needs to be forward thinking and unique.”
So what will Harrogate town centre look like in 10 or 20 years?
Mr Shah said besides a more diverse mixture of retail and living, there would be more short-term leases, more leisure opportunities due to the higher population, more food halls and even community healthcare facilities. He cited Barnsley Council’s decision to work with partners to create a health and wellbeing hub in the Alhambra Shopping Centre as an example of how health managers will increasingly take services into towns.
He said:
“When it comes to long-term planning and thinking about these issues on a local level it’s important that a variety of partners are involved in these discussions and that is also a real strength of Harrogate, as a number of organisations are already open to having these conversations about how we can reimagine town centre usage.
“It’s not about drastically changing what is here but everyone working together with what we already have to bring clear economic and social benefits and secure our town centre for the next 30 years and beyond.”
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