logo
Iconic hotel planned for Wrexham Gateway project could be scrapped

Iconic hotel planned for Wrexham Gateway project could be scrapped

Wales Online06-05-2025

Iconic hotel planned for Wrexham Gateway project could be scrapped
The latest version of the plan includes the recommendation to relocate the hotel, which was supposed to be built next to the STōK Cae Ras
(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service )
A proposed landmark hotel, initially planned as part of the Wrexham Gateway project, may be relocated to allow Wrexham AFC's new kop to take centre stage in the development.
The updated masterplan for the Wrexham Gateway Project will be reviewed by councillors on the Employment, Business and Investment Scrutiny Committee next Wednesday.

The latest iteration of the plan suggests relocating the hotel, originally intended to be built adjacent to the STōK Cae Ras.

According to the revised masterplan, "The original intention was that the hotel, situated on the junction of MoldRoad and Crispin Lane, would be a landmark feature at this importantgateway to the city,".
However, with the football stand evolving into an iconic, internationally recognised structure, it seems counterintuitive to obscure it behind a new hotel.
Therefore, discussions are currently underway between the Wrexham Gateway Partnership, Wrexham County Borough Council and Wrexham AFC to determine whether a hotel is the most suitable use for the site or if it could be better utilised for another purpose.
Article continues below
The plan also discloses that a study is being conducted into the potential realignment of Crispin Lane and its possible impact on traffic and pedestrian movement.
(Image: Local Democracy Reporting Service )
When the plans were first approved by councillors in 2022, they demanded assurances that both the western and eastern sides of the development would be completed.

The revised plan remains dedicated to the development of the eastern side of the gateway, but due to land and funding constraints, it will now approach the east as a single development.
Preliminary discussions have been initiated with Wrexham Lager about relocating their brewery to the former Jewson warehouse in the eastern part of the development, although these talks are still in their infancy.
The car park for Wrexham General train station is also set to be relocated to the Jewson site.
Article continues below
Due to the commercial challenges faced by the office space sector as a result of hybrid working and remote work, the amount of office space planned for the scheme has been reduced to 600 desks.
Councillors are set to review these changes at a committee meeting on Wednesday, May 7.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Leeds City Council to write off thousands in unpaid council tax
Leeds City Council to write off thousands in unpaid council tax

BBC News

timean hour ago

  • BBC News

Leeds City Council to write off thousands in unpaid council tax

More than £650,000 in unpaid council tax is to be written off after Leeds City Council said there was "no realistic prospect of collection".The authority said it had taken the decision despite "concerted efforts" to obtain the to a report, the amount to be written off represented about 0.1% of the council's total Local Democracy Reporting Service said some of the money was owed by people who had been made bankrupt or the debtor had died, while some had been written off because the person who owed it had no means to pay or could not be traced. The report said "each individual debt has been individually reviewed and revenue management considered that there is no realistic prospect of collection"."For bankruptcies, these debts are only written off if the insolvency practitioners report that there are no assets out of which the creditors can be paid."In total £655,300 remains outstanding, including £311,300 from 2010-11 and £344,000 from the following tax in Leeds was increased by 4.99% for 2025/26 as the authority sought to make more than £100m in annual increase councils are allowed to make includes a "social care precept" to help cover the cost of looking after vulnerable people. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Woking flats approved despite affordable housing concerns
Woking flats approved despite affordable housing concerns

BBC News

time4 hours ago

  • BBC News

Woking flats approved despite affordable housing concerns

Plans for 27 town centre flats in a Woking Borough Council-owned building have been approved despite concerns over a lack of affordable new homes will replace the top two floors of the former office block in Church Street, Woking, off Goldsworth Road and will include 51 parking a planning committee meeting on 3 June, the plans were voted through with minimal fuss as the rules surrounding office-to-home conversions limited councillors' powers, according to the Local Democracy Reporting council did not push for affordable housing as officers told the meeting it was not required as part of the conversion from offices. Previous efforts to turn the former block into housing failed over light and noise issues, but council officers assured councillors these had since been Daryl Jordan said: "I'm fairly upset that there is no social housing, which gets dumped on other people."The [flats] are all small and there is nothing for families."The near 40-year-old building frontage will remain the same, according to the approved of the partitions between the flats will be through the external glazing, but the planning committee was told it was not within its powers to determine how the flats should be laid officers said in a report: "There are a fixed list of issues we can address – but the partitioning of apartments is not one."

Plan to demolish Leicester GP surgery for homes approved
Plan to demolish Leicester GP surgery for homes approved

BBC News

time7 hours ago

  • BBC News

Plan to demolish Leicester GP surgery for homes approved

A project to demolish a former GP surgery in Leicester and build homes in its place has been Saffron Lane scheme has been given the go ahead despite three applications being refused by the city council since approved plans are for two three-bed semi-detached houses at the front of the site and a two-storey block featuring four one-bed last application was rejected by Leicester City Council in December 2023, the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) said. Th reasons for refusal included the design of the building, living standards for future residents, a lack of storage space in one of the homes, poor outdoor communal space and issues of privacy for the future majority of the concerns related to flat block A, which would have been at the front of the APKA removed that building from its plans in the most recent submission in August last officers have now deemed the scheme to be acceptable, adding it is for "residential use in a residential part of the city", the LDRS added the GP surgery had been closed "for a long time" so there would be "no loss" to the community from its demolition.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store