Work on Station Bridge in Harrogate looks set to continue indefinitely as a major office block is refurbished.
Construction work is being carried out by HACS to refurbish and redevelop Copthall Bridge House.
Businesses operating in the premises were told to vacate the building in November 2018.
A proposal to re-clad the ground floor and repaint the upper floors was approved by Harrogate Borough Council in November last year.
The application, which was submitted by a company called Rural Offices LLP, said the plans would help to “assist in attracting occupiers which will further enhance the area”.
It added:
“The building has been vacant for some time and the applicant in keen to see in brought back into active use as quickly as possible.”
As a result, one lane on Station Bridge has been closed and the footpath next to Copthall Bridge House has been closed.
According to North Yorkshire Council’s roadworks map, a notice of the works runs until April 2, 2024.
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Balaclava-clad burglars target homes in Harrogate
Police are seeking three men wearing balaclavas who attempted to break into a house in Harrogate.
According to North Yorkshire Police, the would-be burglars were disturbed when they entered a home on Azerley Grove in the Jennyfields area.
The incident happened between midnight and 3am last Saturday (October 7).
The force today appealed for witnesses and information. It said in a statement:
“On the same night, three men were seen on ring doorbell footage approaching a second property nearby.
“One of the men was described as wearing a striped body warmer over a long-sleeved top, he was wearing dark joggers and dark trainers.
“A second man was described as wearing a tracksuit with reflective stripes on the lower legs. All three men were wearing balaclavas.”
The statement urged anyone with information or doorbell footage to email ruby.rutter@northyorkshire.police.uk or call North Yorkshire Police on 101 and ask for Ruby Rutter.
If you wish to remain anonymous, you can pass information to Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.
Quote reference number 12230190164.
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Alley sex attack ‘would never have happened’ if gates had been allowed earlier, says Harrogate store manager
The manager of Clarks shoes in Harrogate has said a serious sexual assault in an alleyway behind the store would ‘never have happened’ if gates had gone up earlier to block it off.
The alleyway behind James Street and Market Place was the scene of a serious sexual assault last week.
Speaking to the Stray Ferret, Clarks manager Emily Woodcock said that for the past three years nearby businesses had been asking the former North Yorkshire County Council highways department to take action and give permission to put gates up but had got nowhere.
This week gates are being fitted at either end of the narrow alley where the stores have their waste bins. But the gates have not been installed as a result of the recent attack but because the area has long been a hotspot for serious anti-social behaviour and store managers have been calling for them for years.

The police cordon on Petergate last week.
Ms Woodcock said she told colleagues that one day they were going to find someone dead from an overdose in the alley:
“It ranged from minor crimes, people setting fire to bins or kids climbing on the back of buildings, to the more serious end of drug use with needles everywhere. There was rough sleeping and people going to the toilet in the back area.
“During the winter none of us would go and put the bins out in the dark, it wasn’t safe.”
Clarks, she said, offered to help pay for gates but the council wasn’t interested. The store had to relocate its fire exit to block up an alcove at the back of its unit that attracted drug users. Suggestions of putting up lighting didn’t get heard either.
Ms Woodcock then contacted Harrogate BID which managed to get approval for the gates and has paid for them.

The gate has been erected in an alley off Petergate (pictured here).
Ms Woodcock said the BID has done a good job but gates were too late to prevent this attack:
“All managers got involved and spoke to their head offices and got permission, the landlords were on board but there was a delay getting the gates up because of a shortage of materials. It was meant to go up back in May but the date kept moving.
“When I saw the Stray Ferret story I said to staff ‘that gate should have gone up years ago’. The fight has been going on for too long and then this poor woman gets attacked and the gate goes up a two days after. It’s just so unfortunate. It should have been the council paying for it.”
Nobody has been arrested in relation to last week’s incident, which North Yorkshire Police described as a “serious sexual assault”.
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Business Breakfast: Harrogate law firm recognised in 2024 Legal 500 Guide
The Stray Ferret Business Club’s next meeting is a breakfast event on Thursday, October 26 at Banyan in Harrogate from 8am to 10 am.
The Business Club provides monthly opportunities to network, make new connections and hear local success stories. Get your tickets by clicking or tapping here.
A Harrogate legal firm has been included in the 2024 Legal 500 UK Guide.
Raworths, which is based on Station Parade, has been recognised in the publication in eight legal specialisms.
Among the areas included are the firm’s trusts, wills and estates team being ranked high in the Yorkshire region.
Carmelita Ardren, head of family, and Rachel Tunnicliffe, head of trusts, wills and estates, are both listed in the elite “Leading Lawyers” group.
Simon Morris, managing partner at Raworths, said:
“We’re delighted to once again be recognised in the Legal 500 Guide. It’s particularly pleasing to see our inclusion across so many specialisms, recognising the quality of the services we provide for our clients, both businesses and individuals.”
Harrogate bloggers win industry awards
Three Harrogate-based bloggers were recognised at the Yorkshire Blogger Awards.
Held at the Queen’s Hotel in Leeds, the event sought to recognise digital talent across the region in 16 categories.

Winners at the Yorkshire Bloggers Awards.
Harrogate bloggers Luke Christian, Ella Davis and Lydia Chandler all picked awards in the disability, interiors and wedding categories.
Kim Smith, spokesperson for the Yorkshire Blogger Awards, said:
“The Yorkshire Blogger Awards recognise the powerful digital talent that the county has to offer.
“We’re proud to award some of the most inspiring and forward-thinking content creators, each based here in Yorkshire.”
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Harrogate Cat Rescue launches urgent funding appeal
Harrogate Cat Rescue has launched an urgent appeal for funding as it can no longer take in rescues until further notice.
In a post on its Facebook page, the centre said it was “bursting at the seams” with cats and kittens in rescue and no longer had space or funds to take more.
It added that it had 84 kittens which it had taken in 44 of which required neutering and vaccinating.
The rescue centre relies on adoption fees and financial donations to cover costs such as vet bills.
However, adoptions from the centre have been “extremely slow”.
It said in its post:
“The majority of our adoption requests are for young kittens, however, due to a lack of enquiries, a lot of the kittens (especially the black and white ones ) are growing up in care and becoming of an age that is not popular, taking up essential foster space needed to help those cats and kittens that desperately need it and using funds allocated for vets bills for their care.
“Your support over the last four years, has meant we have been able to give homes to over 800 cats and kittens.”
The centre, which was set up in 2020 by Celia Dakin, has appealed for donations as little as £1 a month.
It added:
“Small donations all add up and more of those will hopefully ensure we are never in this situation again.”
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Harrogate woman among 16 housemates on Big Brother
A 25-year-old Harrogate woman is among the 16 housemates on the new series of Big Brother.
The programme, which has returned after a five-year hiatus, sees strangers live together in a house for weeks on end. The last one to be voted out wins £100,000.
New hosts AJ Odudu and Will Best introduced the show, which is now on ITV, last night.
Among those entering the house was customer support agent, Yinrun, 25, who is originally from Shanghai, China but now lives in Harrogate.
She described herself as “a pretty adventurous person” whose boyfriend would describe her as “quirky but lovable”.
She told ITV:
“My friends in China think I am like the crazy mother because I always take care of them. I’m very playful.”
Yinrun added that since moving to the UK, she drinks a cup of Yorkshire tea with milk every day.
Asked what she would do with the prize money if she won, she said:
“I want to move to a farm. That’s my final dream, I will live on a farm and have some chickens, grow my organic vegetables and have a puppy to run around. And I’ll have eggs from the chicken, it will be so wholesome. This is my dream.”
She nominated Michael McIntyre as her dream celebrity to live with.

Yinrun and the other 15 housemates. Pic: ITV
The return of Big Brother
ITV describes Big Brother as “the ultimate social experiment”.
It added:
“Big Brother will see a new cast of carefully selected housemates, from all walks of life, become the first people to take up residence in the brand-new Big Brother house.
“Given its own contemporary new look ready for this reimagining of the show, the iconic Big Brother house will play host to all the action – clever tasks, nail-biting nominations and live evictions will be back.”
Big Brother first hit screens in the Netherlands in 1999. Since its debut, over 500 series of the show have aired around the world in over 64 countries and regions.
In the UK, it ran for 11 series on Channel 4 and also led to seven series of Celebrity Big Brother.
The show subsequently aired for eight series on Channel 5, with an additional 15 celebrity series, before ending in 2018.
Big Brother is now broadcast from Sunday to Friday on ITV2 and ITVX at 9pm.
Five-week road closure begins today at A59 Kex GillA five-week road closure has come into effect on the A59 at Kex Gill between Harrogate and Skipton today.
North Yorkshire Council has closed the road between Church Hill and Pace Gate, leading to lengthy diversions.
The council has said the closure will enable it to carry out resurfacing, essential stabilising work to the slope of the existing road as well as drainage repairs, gully-clearing, cat’s eyes replacement and maintenance of ground monitoring equipment.
A diversion will take drivers through Pool in Wharfedale and Otley before re-joining the A59. A full diversion route can be found on the North Yorkshire Council roadworks map.
The DalesBus 59 between Harrogate and Skipton will also run on an amended timetable from October 14 until November 11.
Buses will run twice a day in each direction on Saturdays only during the period of the closure and will operate from Harrogate through Otley and Ilkley before joining the A59 near Chelker Reservoir.
Work will take place on a section of the A59 which is next to the council’s £68.8 million Kex Gill re-route project.
Council officers will also be carrying out essential stabilising works to the slope of the existing road as well as drainage repairs, gully-clearing, refreshing lining, replacing cat’s eyes and maintenance of the ground monitoring equipment.
Cllr Keane Duncan, executive councillor for highways and transport at the council, said:
“Kex Gill has a history of landslips, and the route has had to be closed a total of 12 times in the past 22 years. We must stabilise the slope near the existing road to avoid any lengthy closures over the next two years whilst the new road is constructed.”
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Bilton’s iron bridge mural suffers worst graffiti attack yet
The mural on the iron bridge in Bilton has been covered with offensive graffiti.
Beverley artist Emma Garness was commissioned by Network Rail, which owns the bridge, to paint the mural in 2021.
Its uplifting nature-themed design, which incorporates local elements including cherry tree blossom from the Stray in Harrogate, has been well received.

Artist Emma Garniss finishing her design in 2021.
But the bridge, which links Claro Road and Woodfield Road, has been subject to several outbreaks of graffiti.
Ms Garness used special paint which enables it to be cleaned,
Bilton man Chris Knight has twice volunteered to help after a swastika and anti-Pakistani messages appeared.
The latest outbreak is perhaps the most extensive yet. It includes three slogans, two of which make offensive personal comments about national and local politicians.

The iron bridge
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New interior furnishings shop to open on Harrogate’s James Street
An interior furnishings brand based in Lincolnshire is to open a new shop in Harrogate town centre.
Sophie Allport has taken the lease on 43 James Street – where Phase Eight used to be – and a company spokesperson said the new shop would open at the “start of November”.
The shop is currently undergoing a refit but a sign in the window says the company is recruiting new staff – a shop manager, a supervisor and sales assistants.
Sophie Allport, who founded the firm that carries her name in 2007, told the Stray Ferret:
“Over the years we’ve returned to exhibit at places such as Ripley Castle, the Country Living Fair in Harrogate, and the fabulous Great Yorkshire Show. We also had a pop-up shop in Leeds around 10 years ago. We feel we have a real connection to the local area, and we know our customers have been keen to see us back in Yorkshire.”

Some of this season’s designs.
Sophie Allport sells a wide of range of home items in “British heritage” style, and currently has shops in Stamford and Bourne, both in Lincolnshire, as well as a well-developed ecommerce operation. The Harrogate branch will be its first outside its home county, but will it be the first of many?
Ms Allport said:
“Well, that would be telling! We’ve got lots of exciting things in the pipeline for 2024, so you’ll just have to wait and see.”
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Starbeck counselling charity Wellspring celebrates 20th birthday
Wellspring Therapy and Training, the Harrogate-based counselling and training centre, is about to celebrate its 20th birthday.
The charity provides affordable short and long-term counselling for people in the Harrogate district.
Founded in 2003, it now faces unprecedented demand for its help tackling issues such as mental health and depression.
The Rt Rev Nick Baines, Bishop of Leeds and a patron of Wellspring, is leasing a service at St Andrew’s Church in Starbeck on Sunday, October 15.
Wellspring is also holding a fundraising dinner at the Crown Hotel in Harrogate on Friday November 17.
Emily Fullarton, executive director of Wellspring, said:
“This is a very special year for us. These two exciting events are celebrating how a small local charity has survived and thrived during the past 20 years and how we have tackled the problem of increasing poor mental health, anxiety and depression, which has threatened to overwhelm the NHS.
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Founding director Elaine Wainaina set up Wellspring as a Christian-based organisation to help those struggling with anxiety and depression but it soon extended its services to everyone who needed them.
Wellspring moved from a terraced house in Prospect Road, Starbeck into nearby St Andrew’s Vicarage after it was bought for the charity by the Bramall Foundation.
This has enabled the organisation to expand its services in the Harrogate area since 2018 and to relieve the burden on the NHS.
Wellspring hopes to counsel 170 this year and 220 by the end of 2025. It helps children as young as eight.
Ms Fullarton said:
“In the UK, one in four people will experience a mental health issue at least once in their lifetime. According to local research, many people in Harrogate assume because it is a ‘nice town’ people don’t struggle with these issues. That simply isn’t true. There is a huge demand in Harrogate for our services and it’s increasing.
“What makes Wellspring’s work unique in is that we offer affordable long-term, open-ended counselling where needed. Unfortunately, this type of therapy is not currently widely available from the NHS. Most private counselling typically costs between £50 or more for each session, but many of our clients are unable to afford this.”