Harrogate Borough Council has appointed a contractor to draw up designs and “cost certainty” for its £49 million Harrogate Convention Centre revamp.
The authority has commissioned Hertfordshire company BAM Construction Limited to provide it with technical designs for the project at a cost of £3.3 million.
The convention centre is currently owned by Harrogate Borough Council, which will hand over ownership of the venue on April 1 to North Yorkshire Council.
Senior borough council officials have previously warned the venue could lose up to £250 million over the next 40 years unless the redevelopment is carried out.
However, there is no guarantee the upgrade will go ahead.
Following the appointment of a contractor, a spokesperson for the council said:
“Under the YORbuild3 Major Works framework, we have appointed BAM – a leading construction, facilities management and property developer with offices in Leeds – to provide the design and delivery for the refurbishment and redevelopment of Harrogate Convention Centre (Phase 1) to RIBA Stage 4.
“The value of this early contractor involvement contract is £3.3million and will provide us with the technical design information and cost certainty required to take us to the next stage of the proposed multi-million investment project.”
Amid the transition to the new council on April 1, the borough council required consent from North Yorkshire County Council to appoint BAM Construction.
The county council told the Stray Ferret it had consented to the award of the contract for technical designs, but any approval for construction would be made at a later date.
Gary Fielding, director for strategic resources at the council, said:
“We have given consent for the first stage of the contract to carry out extensive improvements to the Harrogate Convention Centre.
“This initial stage of the contract is intended to lead to detailed designs for the project.
“However, a further decision will need to be taken as to whether the scheme progresses to the other stages of the contract.”
Funding struggles
The move comes shortly after the borough council was dealt a blow in its efforts to fund the project.
Last month, the government rejected the authority’s bid of £20 million from the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities’ flagship levelling up fund.
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Cllr Richard Cooper, leader of the council, said he was “disappointed” and “slightly surprised” at the decision.
Meanwhile, Richard Flinton, who will be chief executive of North Yorkshire Council, has refused to commit to the £49 million redevelopment.
Speaking at a Harrogate District Chamber of Commerce meeting in January, he said the conference and events venue needed to be vibrant and relevant in the face of competition from a new venue in Leeds rather than “an enormous drain on public finances”.
New name and coat of arms for Knaresborough hotelA long-standing Knaresborough hotel is set to be renamed as part of a revamp by its new owners.
The Dower House on Bond End will become The Knaresborough Inn, in line with other premises in The Inn Collection Group‘s portfolio.
The chain is currently carrying out a refurbishment to turn the building into a “pub with rooms”, and has even been given its own coat of arms to fit in with its stablemates.
A spokesperson for ICG said:
“Following the brand style being adopted for all sites belonging to The Inn Collection Group, a new coat of arms has been created for the inn with iconography relevant to the history of both the town and the building itself.
“Made up of a shield flanked by two griffins, acknowledging the links of the building to the Slingsby family, the design sees the left-hand side contain a recurring pattern that combines a historical emblem related to St. Robert of Knaresborough and the white rose of Yorkshire.
“The right-hand side of the shield features further reference to the builders of the original Dower House with a white chevron, and a leopard’s head taken from the Slingsby family crest.”
ICG acquired the Dower House in December 2021 and announced it would close its gym and spa last summer.
A planning application was submitted last year to extend the building and replace its leisure facilities and increase the total number of bedrooms to 57.
The hotel is currently closed while refurbishment work is carried out, with a planned completion and reopening date around the end of the summer this year.
ICG’s marketing manager Zoe Cooper said:
“We’re excited to confirm the new identity of The Knaresborough Inn as its reopening draws closer.
“We have embraced the history of the building and the site, as well as the wider area and we hope the new look will create a talking point that serves as a link to the past while the site embarks on an exciting future.”
The Inn Collection Group has also acquired Ripon Spa Hotel and the St George Hotel in Harrogate in the last two years.
The latter closed for refurbishment this week, with the loss of all of its 76 staff. The company said the work is expected to take 16 weeks.
Ripon Spa Hotel is due to reopen this spring.
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- Dower House renovation set to start — but still no opening date
Refurbished church aims to meet needs of growing Killinghall community
A community building is set to reopen in Killinghall next weekend after a £248,000 refurbishment.
Killinghall Methodist Church has made the investment to help it meet the needs of the village’s growing community.
As well as providing a more modern space, it has reduced the building’s carbon footprint, as part of the Methodist aim to achieve net zero status.
Rev Ron Hicks from the church said:
“It’s becoming an eco-friendly church building. There’s air source heat pumps, and solar panels on the roof.
“Internally we have reconfigured the worship area, taken bits of the partitioning out and opened it up to be one big place for the community to use.”
The first chapel on the Ripon Road site was built in 1793, and its foundation stone still remains in the present building, which was built as a school in 1937. In 1973 the original chapel was demolished and the school room was refurbished, with an extension built around the same time.
The latest work has seen a new kitchen installed along with new windows, carpets, heating, insulation and a cycle rack. The building has also been redecorated.
Before and after photos inside Killinghall Methodist Church
It has been funded by Methodist Church sources, along with a grant of almost £100,000 from the FCC Communities Foundation, a not-for-profit business that awards grants through the Landfill Communities Fund.
Additional money was provided by the Benefact Trust and the Congregational and General Charitable Trust.
Rev Hicks said:
“Now, we’re into the next phase of the building’s life.
“It’s a really good congregation of all ages, from youngsters through to people in their 30s and 40s, right through to much older.
“Upgrading the facilities now is important because there are people coming in who are new to the village. We want a modern building that suits their needs.”
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The church is also set to become home to a new community cafe run by Resurrected Bites.
The food waste organisation will open its third pay-as-you-feel cafe this spring, using food that would otherwise go to landfill to deliver a menu of breakfasts, lunches, cakes and drinks.
Founder Michelle Hayes said:
“We hope it will be the perfect opportunity for people to congregate and get to know other people from Killinghall.
“We are hoping to find someone to run a great toddler group on Thursday mornings as we are particularly concerned about loneliness for stay-at-home parents or carers. The café will also be a nice venue for people working from home to have their lunch and a chat with people.”
Resurrected Bites is seeking a cafe manager for the new venue. The paid role of eight hours a week involves an hour of prep on a Wednesday and seven hours leading the team on Thursdays.
Volunteers are also being recruited to help prepare, serve and clear away in the cafe each week.
For more information, email Heather Memmott at Resurrected Bites.
An official reopening of the church will be held on Saturday, February 4, from 1pm to 3pm, when the community will have the chance to look at the new facilities.
Harrogate school to be refurbished after winning government fundingA Harrogate school is celebrating being selected for refurbishment after winning a place on a government scheme.
St Peter’s C of E Primary School, in the town centre, is one of 239 schools in the country to be chosen to be part of the School Rebuild or Refurbishment Programme.
St Peter’s is the only school in the Harrogate district to have been chosen under the scheme. Wetherby High School, which is in the City of Leeds district, will also receive funding.
School business manager Amanda Foster said:
“This is a beautiful Victorian building, but it’s never really had enough money to keep it in good condition. There’s water ingress, single-glazed windows, the roof has never been looked at, and the boiler is 51 years old.
“If they can make us watertight, replace our windows and get us a new boiler, we’ll be delighted, but we’ll have to wait and see.”
No figure has yet been put on the amount of funding that will be allocated to the school. The Department for Education will assess later this year what works need to be done and how much money will be awarded.
Headteacher Mr Paul Griffiths said:
‘We are delighted with this news. A huge amount of time and work goes into preparing these applications and we are delighted to have been successful.
“Since joining the school in September 2021, a number of improvements including new outdoor play facilities, a new nurture room and a new classroom have been successfully completed. We are thrilled that we will be able to continue to invest significantly in the building for the benefit of staff, children their families and the wider community.
“We look forward to keeping everyone updated with news of the scope and timing of the works as the year progresses.”
Built in 1883, St Peter’s was Harrogate’s first purpose-built hospital. The hospital was closed in 1932 and then bought a few years later and turned into a school.
Last year, the school, which has 267 pupils and is part of the Yorkshire Causeway Schools Trust, spent £280,000 on a major refurbishment project, which included removing external fire escapes, creating additional classrooms and a new outside play area.
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Harewood House to close bird garden in face of ‘£4m bill’
A popular tourist attraction on the edge of the Harrogate district is set to close one of its main features.
Harewood House has announced its bird garden will close this year, in the face of growing costs and a £4 million refurbishment bill.
The Harewood House Trust said it could not justify spending the money in order to bring the 50-year-old site up to scratch.
Trust chairman Emily Shard said:
“It is with huge sadness that the trustees have reached the conclusion that the bird garden must close.
“Harewood and the Lascelles family have long been committed to the care and conservation of wildlife and nature, but the wellbeing of the birds is paramount. The investment needed to create a modern zoo and maintain this each year is too much for the trust to afford.
“We therefore realise that we must make this change and focus on the long-term ambition of this wonderful place, and on the opportunities that Harewood has to support our environment, represent the people and the communities that live in this area today, and to continue to develop Harewood, to serve its best purpose into the future.”
The trust said its latest zoo inspection had found the birds were well cared for, but that their environments were not up to modern standards.
Its birds will be rehomed over the next six months to more suitable environments and the final closure date of the bird garden will be confirmed later in the year.
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Harewood plans to retain its farm experience and said it will look at ways to improve the area around its courtyard for visitors, opening up new views of the estate. The bird garden will be replaced with a new woodland garden encouraging native wildlife, including red kites, otters and water birds.
A spokesperson added:
“We realise that many of Harewood’s visitors love the bird garden and have children who love it too.
“It has been an incredibly difficult conclusion to reach but it is the most responsible and ethical decision to make, to ensure the health and care of these beautiful creatures, but also to ensure Harewood can stand the test of time and be here for as long as it has stood already.”
Harewood is reliant on income from grants, including from organisations like Arts Council England, as well as membership and visitor entry money, to continue operating.
The estate is owned by the Lascelles family and is run by a charitable trust.
76 jobs at risk at Harrogate’s St George HotelA total of 76 staff at Harrogate’s St George Hotel face uncertain futures amid plans to close the building for refurbishment.
The Inn Collection Group, which bought the historic hotel a year ago, informed staff last week they were at risk of redundancy on January 30.
It plans to carry out a multi-million pound refurbishment that will transform the interior and increase the number of bedrooms from 90 to 96.
A spokesman for the Inn Collection Group, which also owns the Dower House in Knaresborough and Ripon Spa Hotel, said today:
“We currently have 76 colleagues at risk of redundancy as a result of a proposed closure on January 30, however we have started a consultation process to discuss this, to support our colleagues and seek ways in which to mitigate the need for redundancy.”
The spokesman said the refurbishment would include remedial work to some of the building’s systems and “bring it into the look and feel of The Inn Collection Group”, adding:
“The main focus on refurbishment though is centred around the transformation of the ground floor space, which will be brought into our model of hospitality.
“We are a pub with rooms operator rather than a hotel operator and the refurbishment will evolve the offering at Hotel St George into a space where they are made to feel welcome and are encouraged to join us for coffees, drinks and meals.
“There will also be significant improvements carried out to areas that support this such as the kitchens, allowing us to develop what we offer to our guests and residents of Harrogate and beyond.”
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The spokesman said the refurbishment was anticipated to take 16 weeks and was “intended to begin shortly following a consultation period with our teams at the site who will be impacted whilst the refurbishment takes place”.
Asked what will happen to customers who have booked accommodation or weddings, he said:
“Our teams are currently contacting these customers directly to discuss their bookings. These discussions will centre around if they wish to retain their stay or event with us or if they wish to find an alternative venue, which we will work with them to accommodate.”
Dower House and Ripon Spa Hotel set for summer re-openings
The Inn Collection Group has properties across northern England, including Dower House and Ripon Spa Hotel, which are both closed for refurbishment.

The Dower House
Work at Dower House began in September last year. The spokesman said:
“Once complete, the Dower House will have grown from a 38-room establishment to a 57-room venue and as with Hotel St George will have enjoyed a significant renovation of its ground floor spaces to provide a space to be enjoyed by guests both staying with us and those visiting from the local area.
“The fabric of the building is requiring a great deal of care and attention as part of the refurbishment, and we are hopeful that works will be complete later this summer.”
The company has started advertising for a general manager at Ripon Spa Hotel but it is not expected to reopen for several months. The building is still surrounded by scaffolding.

Ripon Spa Hotel
The spokesman said:
“Works have been underway at Ripon Spa since summer last year and again have seen us undertake an extensive programme to maintain and enhance the fabric of the building.
“As at the Dower House, there will be an increase in the number of bedrooms for guest. Up from 43 to 59.
“We are again hopeful of launching the newly renovated venue later this summer.”
Harrogate council approves £650,000 refurbishment of ‘eyesore’ Ripon flats
Harrogate Borough Council will spend £650,000 on long-awaited plans to bring 11 one-bedroom flats in Ripon back into use.
Plans to refurbish the council homes at Allhallowgate date back seven years but have been delayed due to sinkhole concerns in the area.
In 2015, planning permission was granted to demolish a block of flats at 4-14a Allhallowgate and replace them with nine townhouses. The plan also included a major refurbishment of an existing block of flats.
The flats were demolished but the rest of the scheme was halted in 2019 after an engineering firm found ground instability “could be foreseen” on or near the site. They warned that measures to reduce the risk of the townhouses collapsing were not cost-effective.
Ripon sits above a layer of gypsum, which is a water-soluble rock that leads to the formation of large underground caves that can collapse.
The council pledged to continue with the refurbishment of the existing flats that weren’t demolished. However, its plans were paused again during covid as they were used as temporary accommodation for homeless people.
In May, the council was quoted £1.1m for the project by a contractor — almost double its budget of £650,000. It has since removed plans to build an extension to the building to reduce costs.
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The council’s cabinet met on Wednesday night to approve spending money on the refurbishment.
Conservative cabinet member for housing and safer communities, Mike Chambers, who is also councillor for Ripon Spa, said he was happy the project was finally moving forward.
He said:
Hampsthwaite school completes £270,000 upgrade“This is a project that for a number of years has hit the buffers for various reasons. It is now appropriate we start moving it forward again. It is somewhat of an eyesore so I’m delighted we’re moving forward.
“It will improve the streetscene and a number of residents are concerned about the state of the block following the demolition. It’s high time we moved on.”
Subject to planning permission, HBC hopes to complete the refurbishment by May 2023.
A village school near Harrogate has completed a £270,000 upgrade.
Hampsthwaite Church of England Primary School was built by public subscription in 1861 and now has 142 pupils and a nursery. It is part of the multi-academy Yorkshire Causeway Schools Trust, which includes St Aidan’s Church of England High School and a number of other Church of England and community schools in the district.
Since Amy Ross became headteacher in September 2019 the elegant stone building, which originally comprised a schoolroom with classroom, and master’s house, has been further extended and modernised.
It now has an early years foundation stage outdoor area, a perimeter fence, a main school entrance and school office, a link lobby which prevents classrooms being a thoroughfare that disrupted learning and a staff room.

The new staffroom and link lobby.
The £270,000 refurbishment was paid for by a combination of section 106 infrastructure funding from housing developers along with school and trust funds
Ms Ross said:
“We are delighted to have completed this next stage of our journey at Hampsthwaite which has further enhanced our facilities for the benefit of children, families and our passionate, dedicated and exceptionally talented staff team.”
“With fantastic support from Yorkshire Causeway Schools Trust we have been able to achieve such a huge amount in a short space of time, and all of this despite covid.
“Completing the build also highlighted what a wonderful school community we have. Parents donated furniture, including a sofa and coffee tables for the staffroom and Graham Sanderson Interiors (Harrogate) made us some beautiful new blinds for the main office and for the staff room, which will be treasured for decades to come. I feel privileged and proud to be a part of this community.”
Jo Stott, the school business manager, said:
Staff remember former manager as M&S Food in Harrogate relaunches“Following the addition of a further classroom in recent years, the school had been lacking in facilities to support this extra provision, in particular to ensure a suitable entrance into school and also in providing staff room facilities.
“The improvements made to school make a huge difference in the day-to-day operations and will without doubt help Hampsthwaite School continue to thrive.”
The reopening of the expanded M&S Food in Harrogate was carried out today in memory of a former colleague.
Team support manager Catherine Deakin was chosen to cut the ribbon after a three-month refurbishment and extension of the Leeds Road store.
She and colleagues wore t-shirts in memory of former store manager Dan Tonks, who took his own life last year. She said:
“I was Dan’s best friend. He’d moved on and was working at a different store, but we always kept in touch.
“Our current store manager wanted to do the opening today for Dan.”
Store manager David Anderson added:
“It was really important for everyone at the store to use the moment to remember our dearly missed colleague, Dan, who was such a big part of the team.”
While there was some sadness as staff remembered a former colleague, there was also an air of celebration in the shop.
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Its floorspace has been extended by 60%, taking in the former sofa shop next door, and the layout has been altered to give a market hall feel to the fruit and vegetables, bakery and cheese sections.
The café, which was at one point under threat of closure as part of the plans, has been retained, though is now smaller than it was previously. A petition had been set up by locals to keep it open.
With 17,000sq ft to cover, a further 30 staff have been hired in recent weeks ready for the run-up to Christmas, bringing the total number of staff to 125.
Shoppers queued outside this morning ready for the official opening at 9am. The first 200 customers were given golden tickets, each containing a prize – and Dawn King scooped £200 in M&S vouchers.
Inside, the Harrogate Band provided festive music as people explored the shop.
Mr Anderson said:
Harrogate’s Windsor House gets new co-working space and cafe“The last few weeks have been spent putting the finishing touches to our new store and I’d like to say a big thank you to everyone who has worked so hard to make sure everything is ready for our big opening day.
“We’re really proud of this amazing new M&S Foodhall. It’s an exciting investment in Harrogate and I can’t wait for our customers to explore all of the new in-store features and fantastic M&S Food products that we have to offer.”
A new co-working space, meeting area and café have opened in Harrogate’s Windsor House.
The facilities were created during the second phase of a refurbishment of the imposing building, which overlooks Valley Gardens.
Owned by property firm Boultbee Brooks, Windsor House is home to more than 115 businesses, and includes 75,000 sq ft of flexible workspace.
Harrogate borough mayor, Cllr Victoria Oldham, officially opened the new facilities at an event attended by more than 100 dignitaries.

Mayor Victoria Oldham cuts the ribbon.
The refurbishment, which included repairing the leaky roof and installing new furniture, has been overseen by interior design firm and Windsor House tenant RU Creative, which sourced and installed the main focal point — an olive tree.
The new space seats 110 people, who can visit the renovated café, which has been renamed The Pantry at Windsor House. The pantry is run by husband-and-wife Antonio and Jo Nobile.
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The building, formerly the Grand Hotel, is a short walk from the town centre.
Karen Winspear, Boultbee Brooks’ building manager for Windsor House, said:
“After four months of intense work and much anticipation, we are delighted to have opened this beautiful new space for our tenants.
“The grand foyer, which has been returned to its former glory, is a luxurious space for workers to meet clients, to work together, or just relax over a coffee or lunch.
“There is more to come at Windsor House, with plans to open a new yoga studio in the new year.”