logo
Hotel site linked to Sunderland AFC to get upgrade

Hotel site linked to Sunderland AFC to get upgrade

Yahoo20-05-2025
A former hotel which played a central role in the formation of Sunderland AFC is to be upgraded.
The city council has given the go-ahead for improvements to the former Norfolk Hotel, in the Sunniside Conservation Area, which include structural repairs.
The red brick building is part of the local authority's plans to "regenerate" the city and is earmarked to be a cultural and community hub.
A blue plaque recognises it as the former home of the British Day School, where a meeting of local teachers in 1879 formed Sunderland and District Teachers' Association Football Club, which took on its more familiar name a year later.
Plans for the building include space for artists and craft workshops, as well as offices for voluntary and community sector organisations.
Sunderland-based developer Marengo Estates took over the 16,000 sq ft, 45-bed hotel in 2022.
It said it hoped the building - which is not listed - would be ready for occupants next year and that structural repair work would "ensure that the building will remain safe for use", the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.
Planners said the work would "considerably improve the existing poor state of the frontage" and enhance its appearance in keeping with a conservation area.
Plans will also see window shutters fitted to improve security.
Follow BBC Sunderland on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.
Plans approved to turn landmark building into flats
Sunderland City Council
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lucky NYC traveler finds $27K diamond in an Arkansas park — now she has a special use for it: ‘I got on my knees and cried'
Lucky NYC traveler finds $27K diamond in an Arkansas park — now she has a special use for it: ‘I got on my knees and cried'

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Lucky NYC traveler finds $27K diamond in an Arkansas park — now she has a special use for it: ‘I got on my knees and cried'

She's a local rock star. Bidding a temporary farewell to the Big Apple boded well for future bride Micherre Fox, 31, who stumbled upon a 2.30-carat white diamond — worth around $27,000 — during a three-week hunt at the Crater of Diamonds State Park in Arkansas. It's a finger-licking find that's saving her fiancé a handful of dough. 5 Fox spent several weeks scouring through an Arkansas park, looking for a diamond for her engagement ring. Arkansas State Parks 'Having never seen an actual diamond in my hands, I didn't know for sure, but it was the most diamond-y diamond I had seen,' the Manhattan-based millennial raved in a statement. 'I got on my knees and cried, then started laughing.' Fox, a recent graduate school grad, decided to celebrate her academic achievements with an excavating adventure through the park's diamond-search area, a 37.5-acre landmark, where over 75,000 stellar stones have been unearthed since the early 1900s. A staggering 366 diamonds have been registered at Crater of Diamonds in 2025 alone, including 11 weighing more than one carat each. Fox did not immediately respond to The Post's request for a comment. But now, she's laughing on easy street. 5 Fox experienced an array of emotions — including tearful shock and laughing excitement — upon finding her diamond on the last day of the hunt. Arkansas State Parks With the national average cost of an engagement ring totaling $5,500, per a recent study, Fox and her groom-to-be, who fully supported her decision to dig for her own diamond, are coming up roses ahead of their big day. Owing to the high price of weddings, which can cost couples across the country more than $26,000 — and the lovebirds near NYC over $58,000 — every penny counts. Rather than blowing their budget on a ritzy rock, Fox was more than eager to take engagement matters into her own hands — quite literally. 'I was willing to go anywhere in the world to make that happen,' she said. 'I researched, and it turned out that the only place in the world to do it was right in our backyard, in Arkansas!' 5 The largest diamond ever discovered in Crater of Diamonds State Park was a 40.23-carat rock, which is now part of the Smithsonian's mineral and gem collection. Shutterstock / VioletSkyAdventures Well, it's not so much 'our backyard' as it is 1,200 miles away from New York — but hey, who's counting? 'There's something symbolic about being able to solve problems with money, but sometimes money runs out in a marriage,' added Fox. 'You need to be willing and able to solve those problems with hard work.' And work, she did. The brunette kicked off her weeks-long search on July 8, spending hours combing through the grounds at Crater of Diamonds for bling. Daily, she'd hit the trail, desperately looking high and low for that glitzy glow, but would routinely come up empty-handed. Fox's luck, however, changed at 11 a.m. on July 29, her final day at the park, when she noticed something shiny by her feet. The nearly-wed initially assumed it was an iridescent, dew-covered spiderweb. 5 Fox initially mistook the stone for a spiderweb until she got a closer look and discovered it was, in fact, a diamond. Arkansas State Parks But after giving it a slight nudge and noticing its gleam, Fox realized she'd scored treasure. Experts at the park's Diamond Discovery Center confirmed that Fox had found a white, or colorless, diamond weighing more than two carats. It's approximately the size of a human canine tooth. The gem — which she's named the Fox-Ballou Diamond — in honor of her and her fiancé, reportedly boasts a smooth, rounded shape and beautiful metallic luster, typical of most Crater diamonds. It is the third-largest diamond found at the park, thus far, this year. Park officials are happy for the soon-to-be married gal. 5 Park authorities confirmed the weight and color of Fox's sweet fine, and congratulated her on the dazzling discovery. Shutterstock / VioletSkyAdventures 'Ms. Fox's story highlights the fact that, even when putting forth your best effort, being in the right place at the right time plays a part in finding diamonds,' said Waymon Cox, Crater of Diamonds State Park Assistant Superintendent, in a statement. 'After weeks of hard work, Ms. Fox found her diamond sitting right on top of the ground.' A satisfies Fox is grateful that her search was successful — and that it's now over. 'After all the research, there's luck and there's hard work,' said the belle, who plans to have the rock set in her engagement ring. 'When you are literally picking up the dirt in your hands, no amount of research can do that for you; no amount of education can take you all the way.' 'It was daunting!'

Girls in Fort Lauderdale watercraft tragedy are prominent New York rabbi's kids
Girls in Fort Lauderdale watercraft tragedy are prominent New York rabbi's kids

Miami Herald

time3 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Girls in Fort Lauderdale watercraft tragedy are prominent New York rabbi's kids

The teenage girl killed and the girl seriously injured in Tuesday's Fort Lauderdale personal watercraft crash are daughters of a rabbi and rebbitzin prominent in Queens, New York's Bukharian Jewish community, according to social media posts and online databases. Tuesday night posts from Instagram account bukhariancommunity identified the 14-year-old girl killed as Rachel Aliza Nisanov and her 16-year-old sister as Aviva Bracha Nisanov, daughters of Rabbi Shlomo Nisanov and Rebbitzin Ora Nisanov. Authorities have not released the names of the girls. Rabbi Shlomo Nisanov heads the Bukharian Jewish synagogue Kehliat Sephardim of Ahavat Achim, which runs a popular food pantry that distributes kosher food to all communities. Ora Nisanov's biography on the website for Bat Melech community center, where she works, , says Rachel and Aviva are two of the Nisanovs' eight children. Both girls attended Bnos Malka Academy, an all-girls yeshiva in Forest Hills about two and a half miles from the family's Kew Gardens Hill home and where their parents were honored in 2023 at the school's annual dinner. According to Fort Lauderdale Fire Rescue's Frank Guzman, Rachel and Aviva were riding tandem on a personal watercraft on the Intracoastal Waterway near the 2800 block of Northeast 24th Court in Fort Lauderdale when they smashed into a dock around 3:30 p.m. Paramedics rushed the sisters to Broward Medical Center, where Rachel died Tuesday evening, said Arielle Callender, spokesperson for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Her sister Aviva is in critical condition in the ICU, a spokesperson for Broward Medical said Wednesday. FWC is leading the crash investigation. The crash comes just two weeks and a day after a barge struck a sailboat with Miami Yacht Club summer campers. Two girls died within hours, and a third girl died two days later at Jackson Memorial Hospital. READ MORE: A third child in the Biscayne Bay barge-sailboat crash has died, yacht club says

Adopted dog was ‘dumped over a fence.' Now he needs someone ‘who won't give up'
Adopted dog was ‘dumped over a fence.' Now he needs someone ‘who won't give up'

Miami Herald

time5 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

Adopted dog was ‘dumped over a fence.' Now he needs someone ‘who won't give up'

An adopted dog was 'dumped over a fence' — and now, he needs a fresh start. 'He deserves someone who won't give up on him,' a Florida animal shelter wrote Aug. 7 on Facebook. 'Someone to love him, protect him, and committed to him.' Baby Bear waits for a new home after traveling nearly 1,000 miles. His journey started after he was adopted from the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) Florida in 2022, Randa Richter, humane programs and public media director, told McClatchy News via email. Then recently, the Lakeland-based shelter received a call from West Virginia. A facility found Baby Bear and checked his microchip, which stores the contact information of pet owners. 'How he traveled to West Virginia, nobody knows; but what we do know is that he was dumped over a fence at a West Virginia Animal Control,' SPCA Florida wrote in a news release. 'Scared, nervous, and unsure, Baby Bear found himself in a foreign environment, with loud barking dogs, strangers, and different smells.' Shelter workers reached out to Baby Bear's family but didn't hear back. After the 10-year-old mixed breed dog was left behind, SPCA Florida said it didn't want someone to fail him again. 'We knew we had to act fast — because unlike SPCA Florida, that shelter didn't have a no-kill policy,' the animal organization wrote. 'Time was running out.' So, SPCA Florida arranged for a volunteer to fly Baby Bear back to its shelter in Lakeland, a roughly 35-mile drive east from Tampa. He showed off his 'sweet' and well-behaved nature as he got 'first-class service' on the flight, according to the Facebook post and an online adoption profile. 'He stepped off the plane, tail wagging, ears perked, and eyes full of trust,' the shelter wrote. 'He looked as if he finally knew he was home.' As of Aug. 13, the shelter's website still listed the rescued senior pup among the animals available for adoption. Details about the shelter's adoption process can be found at 'Come meet Baby Bear and be the reason his journey ends in joy,' the shelter wrote. 'After all he's been through… this sweet boy deserves nothing less than the best.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store