Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement

 
 
Tuesday, 13th May 2008

Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the n/a site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

£1.5m hotel plan for ex-city nightclub



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date:
08 May 2008
PLANS to demolish the former Warehouse Night-club in North Road and build a £1.5million hotel and restaurant on the site are expected to be given the go-ahead.
Lancaster City Council's planning committee will review the plans for a 23-bedroomed hotel, restaurant and wine bar on the land at their meeting on Monday.

Entrepreneur Chris Tudor-Whelan, of Tudor-Whelan Property Holdings, wants to demolish the existing buildings of 49 and 51 North Road, and replace them with a three-storey hotel.

This would be connected by a two storey link to the Listed warehouse building at number 47, which would be converted into a restaurant and wine bar.

In 2000, planning permission was granted to Tudor-Whelan Property Holdings to convert the buildings into a restaurant and bar. However, the plans were never implemented. Two years later permission was again granted for alterations and extensions to the single-storey night club.
And in 2004, plans were approved to convert the building into a two-storey nightclub. Again no building work commenced.

Planning permission is now expected to be granted on Monday subject to conditions that the buildings and their frontages are in keeping with the surrounding area.

Chris Tudor-Whelan's company is currently refurbishing The Royal Hotel in Kirkby Lonsdale and was behind the Knights-bridge housing development on the Lancaster canal.

n Seattle company Starbucks wants to open a coffee shop in Lancaster.
Proposals to open a cafe at 19 Market Street – in the former Specsavers premises – were submitted to the city council this week.

The cafe would be just doors away from competitors Caffe Nero.

Meanwhile, rival coffee chain Costa Coffee will soon be opening in Morecambe at the former Crescent cafe in Marine Road.


The full article contains 299 words and appears in n/a newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 08 May 2008 10:54 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Lancaster
 
Prev
1
Next
1

Patrick,

Lancaster 11/05/2008 14:24:53
News of Starbucks confirmation (and planning application) to come to Lancaster makes very depressing news. What with that and the further blinkered approach to numerous other planning decisions in the city, I'm really wondering whether I want to live here any more! When I first arrived I was wide eyed with wonder at the individuality of the place - but the City Council seems intent on taking the city even further up the "Clone Town" Charts. It's very sad. How much better it would have been to celebrate the Independence of the place? To encourage small traders?? Use rents from large chain stores to subsidise rates for independent traders so that the indoor market can be full again! - On that thought - How about charging Caffé Nerd (deliberate spelling there) Costa(lot) Coffee and Starmucks a premium to support some of the existing independent coffee shops in the city - shops that serve a better tasting beverage than the brown overpriced gloop that these chainstores serve up.

There is a lesson to be learnt by the big property companies (and the council) that it took the Friends of the Winter Gardens just a few months to attract businesses to the front of their building - yet St Nicholas Arcade and Marketgate have had shops empty for years! They must be run by some of the most incompetent management going! Yet we desperately cling on to the idea that Big Retailers will be the saving grace? The Big Retailers who put nothing back into the community - and (Like Marks and Spencer in Morecambe - will drop a town just like that when it no longer becomes viable.
Prev
1
Next

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.