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    08

    Nov 2021

    Last Updated: 08/11/2021
    Community
    Community

    Still no decision on future of Harrogate's Crescent Gardens

    by Connor Creaghan

    | 08 Nov, 2021
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    Harrogate property investment company Impala Estates, which bought the former council offices for £4 million in January 2020, submitted plans seven months ago to create offices, a gym and a rooftop restaurant.

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    A decision on the future of Harrogate Borough Council's former Crescent Gardens offices is still to be made, almost two years after the building was sold.

    Impala Estates, a property investment company in Harrogate, bought the building in January 2020 for £4 million.

    It submitted a planning application in March this year to transform the building into offices, a gym and a rooftop restaurant.

    Under the plans, the empty building, which was built in the 1890s, would be refurbished and extended by adding two floors.

    The Stray Ferret approached Impala Estates to ask how the plans were progressing. However, the developer did not reply by the time of publication. It has not provided an update on its Crescent Gardens website since April 1.




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    Harrogate Borough Council confirmed that its planning committee had not yet set a date to hear the plans.

    The council planning portal, which has 120 documents relating to the document, indicates that the developers are currently responding to concerns from consultees, such as Yorkshire Water and North Yorkshire County Council.


    The saga of Harrogate Borough Council's former offices


    The future of Crescent Gardens, which has been empty for four years since the council relocated to Knapping Mount in 2017, has become a long-running saga.

    Harrogate Borough Council announced when it moved into its new offices that local developer Adam Thorpe would buy the site for £6.31 million.

    Mr Thorpe said he would spend £75 million on a refurbishment, which would include an art gallery, underground car park, swimming pool, restaurant and luxury apartments.

    Two years later he said he had agreed the sale of 10 of the 12 properties but Mr Thorpe’s company, ATP Ltd, then collapsed with debts of almost £11million, including £24,394 to the council.

    The site then went back on the market and was eventually sold to Impala Estates.