45 Great Horton Road Bradford, BD7 1AZ

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

45 Great Horton Road Bradford, BD7 1AZ [email protected] www.markbrearley.co.uk 45 Great Horton Road Bradford, BD7 1AZ Excellent Mixed Use Investment Opportunity FOR SALE Total Gross Income of £41,900 Per Annum, With £25,400 Per Annum Secured on the Ground Floor Letting to Greggs Plc and DC Payments (Cash Machine) Property Includes 5 Residential Units PRICE: £475,000 – Subject to Contract CHARTERED SURVEYORS & COMMERCIAL PROPERTY CONSULTANTS 45 Great Horton Road, Bradford, BD7 1AZ LOCATION The cash machine is let to DC Payments, for a term of 5 years from 20 February 2017 at a rental of £8,400 per annum. The property occupies an excellent prominent corner location with good main frontage to Great Horton Road at the junction of Great Horton Road and The residential properties are let on a variety of Assured Shorthold Tenancy Manville Terrace, directly opposite the main entrance to the University of Agreements, producing a total gross rental income of £16,500 per annum. Bradford. The property is on the periphery of the City Centre, in the established student area, but also a popular location for restaurants and The current total gross rental income is £41,900 per annum. many other commercial occupiers drawing on the substantial number of students not only attending the University of Bradford but also Bradford A more detailed Tenancy Schedule is available upon request. College. Nearby occupiers include McColls Convenience Store, Subway, Priestley’s PRICE Estate Agents, Pepe’s Piri Piri, Burger Time, Just Coffee etc. Great Horton Road also includes a number of other occupiers including Fortune Cookie, £475,000 subject to contract plus VAT – if appropriate. Subject to contract. Nitro Gelato, Premier Convenience Store, Dunkers Delight, Flirt Gelato and My Lahore Café Bar. VAT DESCRIPTION VAT will be charged at the prevailing rate – if applicable. The property comprises ground floor retail premises, let and occupied by Greggs Plc, together with an ATM operated by DC Payments. At upper floor LEGAL COSTS levels, are 5 self-contained individual residential units, all let and occupied. Each party to be responsible for their own legal costs incurred in the transaction. ACCOMMODATION The property currently provides the following approximate floor areas:- ENERGY PERFORMANCE CERTIFICATE Retail Element The Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating for the premises are as follows:- Ground Floor (Greggs Plc) 105.02 sqm (1,130 sqft) Commercial Section - D – 83 ATM 5.83 sqm (63 sqft) Flat 1 - Commissioned Flat 2 - D – 67 Lower Ground Floor (Greggs Plc) 30.03 sqm (323 sqft) Flat 3 - C - 70 Flat 4 - C - 77 First Floor (Residential) Flat 5 - C - 76 3 Self-contained studio units VIEWING Second Floor (Residential) Strictly by prior appointment with the sole selling agents:- 2 Self-contained studio units Mark Brearley & Company – Tel: 01274 595999 External Email: [email protected] Web Site: www.markbrearley.co.uk Forecourt, access areas etc. (May 2019 – 4299 / MAJB) RATING ASSESSMENTS The property is currently assessed for Uniform Business Rates as follows:- Description: Shop and Premises Rateable Value: £13,000 The Uniform Business Rate for 2019/2020 is 50.4 pence in the £. Due to transitional relief provisions, the rates payable may have no relation to the rateable value. Interested parties are advised to check with the Local Rating Authority as to the current rates liability. The 5 residential units have a Council Tax Band of A. LEASES The ground floor and basement areas are let to Greggs Plc under the terms of a 10 year lease from 19 December 2016, expiring on 18 December 2026, at a current passing rental of £17,000 per annum. The lease is subject to a rent review with effect from 19 December 2021. The lease also incorporates a break clause in 2021. MISREPRESENTATION ACT 1967: These particulars shall not form any part of any contract and no guarantee is given to the condition of the property or the accuracy of its description. An intending purchaser or tenant is not to rely on any representation made in the particulars and must satisfy himself (or herself) as to their accuracy by his (or her) own investigation before entering into any contract. No liability is accepted by Mark Brearley & Company for any losses howsoever arising directly or indirectly where reliance is placed on the contents of these particulars by intending purchaser or tenant. 13 Park View Court, Shipley BD18 3DZ Prospect House, 32 Sovereign Street, Leeds LS1 4BJ Tel: 01274 595999 XXXX Printed by RavensworthTel: 0113 Digital 3891049 0191 2303553 M377 Printed by Ravensworth 01670 713330 .
Recommended publications
  • Unit 4 – 49-57 Great Horton Road Bradford, Bd7 1Az
    [email protected] www.markbrearley.co.uk UNIT 4 – 49-57 GREAT HORTON ROAD BRADFORD, BD7 1AZ TO LET Retail Premises Situated in a Small Development Anchored by Sainsbury’s Directly Opposite Bradford University & Bradford College Extending to a Total of Approximately 55.74 sq. m. (600 sq. ft.) RENT – £16,000 Per Annum Exclusive CHARTERED SURVEYORS & COMMERCIAL PROPERTY CONSULTANTS UNIT 4, 49-57 GREAT HORTON ROAD, BRADFORD, BD7 1AZ LOCATION ENERGY PERFORMANCE CERTIFICATE The property occupies an excellent location, fronting onto Great The Energy Performance Rating for the property is:- Horton Road, in a small established development anchored by Sainsbury’s Convenience Store, together with an adjoining Subway D - 91 and a number of other local retailers. The unit is directly opposite The University of Bradford and near to the new Bradford College VIEWING Hockney building where an investment in excess of £40 Million has recently been completed. The unit is in an established location Strictly by prior appointment with the joint sole letting agents:- fronting onto Great Horton Road, situated near to a large number of other similar restaurant, take-away and convenience food retailers Mark Brearley & Company – Tel: 01274 595999 and, is in an established student area, near to a number of major Email: [email protected] student halls including Malik Halls, Foster Halls, “The Green – Web Site: www.markbrearley.co.uk Sustainable Student Village” etc. Starkeys Commercial – 01274 307910 Email: [email protected] ACCOMMODATION Website: www.starkeys.co.uk The property comprises a single storey retail unit, forming part of an (August 2015 – 5265C / MAJB) established development and extending in total to approximately 55.74 sq.
    [Show full text]
  • Bradford Moor
    Understanding City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council Bradford 13 April 2021 District Intelligence Bulletin Ward Profile – Bradford Moor At a glance: Bradford Moor has a total population of 21,310 people 2.6% of homes in Bradford Moor are empty on a long-term basis and 17.3% are overcrowded, both are higher than the District average Bradford Moor has the highest percentage of terraced homes (60.4%) in the District Life expectancy for people living in Bradford Moor is lower than the District average Bradford Moor is ranked overall 4th of 30 wards in the District for the 2019 Index of Multiple Deprivation where 1 is the most deprived (Manningham ward) and 30 is the least deprived (Wharfedale) Introduction Bradford Moor ward is one of six wards in the Bradford East area. It is the smallest geographical ward in the District and shares a border with Leeds. The ward covers the area to the east of Bradford City Centre and comprises both residential and commercial development. Population The latest population estimates for mid-2019 show that 21,310 people live in Bradford Moor. 31.7% of the population is aged under-16. Worth Valley has the lowest percentage of young people with 16.6% and Little Horton has the highest percentage with 32.7%. Page 1 of 4 61.5% of the ward’s population is aged between 16 and 64. Ilkley has the lowest percentage of the working age population with 54% and City has the highest percentage with 72.2% - this probably reflects the high numbers of students and young people living in the areas close to Bradford College and Bradford University.
    [Show full text]
  • Bradford) Held on Wednesday, 15 May 2019
    Decisions of the Area Planning Panel (Bradford) held on Wednesday, 15 May 2019 These decisions are published for information in advance of the publication of the Minutes Decisions 1. APPLICATIONS RECOMMENDED FOR APPROVAL OR REFUSAL (a) 38 Manningham Lane Bradford BD1 3EA - City 19/00934/FUL A retrospective change of use from restaurant/café (A3) to banqueting facilities (sui generis) at 38 Manningham Lane, Bradford, BD1 3EA - 19/00934/FUL Resolved – That the application be refused for the following reasons: (i) The proposed development fails to provide sufficient and suitable provision within the site for the accommodation of motor vehicles. As such the proposed development would result in greater on-street car parking to the detriment of the safe and free flow of traffic on the highway. For this reason the proposed development is unacceptable when measured against Policies TR2 and DS4 of the Core Strategy Development Plan Document and the National Planning Policy Framework. (ii) It is not considered the proposed development would be able to provide adequate parking for events within the car park as such this would lead to additional vehicles parking on nearby residential streets including Brearton Street and Hallfield Place which are the closest streets on which vehicles associated with the proposed use could park. This level of comings and goings combined with vehicles picking up and dropping off visitors close to the site, particularly during unsociable hours would lead to noise and general disturbance for neighbouring residential properties contrary to policies DS5 and EN8 of the Core Strategy Development Plan Document and the National Planning Policy Framework.
    [Show full text]
  • Appendix D Bradford South Summary of Smart Street Lighting Project
    Appendix D Bradford South Summary of Smart Street Lighting Project works All surveys for the Bradford South Area are now complete with some addition audits continuing. A total of 33,000 assets have been surveyed and tested. (as at 4th March 2021) Installation phase commencement dates Area Committee Ward Duration Start Finish South Great Horton 30 days Tue 11/01/2022 Mon 21/02/2022 South Queensbury 30 days Tue 19/10/2021 Mon 29/11/2021 South Royds 30 days Tue 14/09/2021 Mon 25/10/2021 South Tong 30 days Tue 23/03/2021 Mon 03/05/2021 South Wibsey 30 days Tue 06/07/2021 Mon 16/08/2021 South Wyke 30 days Tue 10/08/2021 Mon 20/092021 Summary information by ward Ward No No. of cut No of emergency emergency downs to replacement cut-downs complete assets completed & scheduled 13 8 0 Great Horton 15 5 4 Queensbury 10 2 0 Royds 9 4 2 Tong 16 2 5 Wibsey 32 2 11 Wyke In the tables below, are ward specific details of street lighting columns which have or will be cut down in response findings from their recent surveys. Orange highlight shows cut-downs which have been replaced already or scheduled for replacement works in advance of the scheduled programme of works detailed above. Some examples of the process of prioritisation have been provided along with maps and column locations. 1 Great Horton Table of emergency cut-downs completed Column Bradford Ref Street name Ward No. 5 MT000080 Aberdeen Place Great Horton 8 MT000083 Aberdeen Place Great Horton 5 MT004848 Bakes Street Great Horton 4 MT005735 Beckside Lane Great Horton 3 MT005917 Beldon Park
    [Show full text]
  • Craven Kitching Brook Gough Manship Kirkham Durden Murray
    The Ancestry of Frank T. Craven and Nancy Manship Craven From Craven, Brook, Kitching, Gough, Manship, Kirkham, Durden, Murray, Diven, Linn, Junkin, Gettys, and Ramsey Surname Lines The Brooks and Goughs This is only one chapter of the author’s family history. Please see also http://www.melissacravenfowler.com (choose Melissa’s Ancestry tab) where you can link into chapters about other lines in this family, access descendant outlines and genealogy reports, as well as the Forward, which explains the premises and format of all of these “chapters”. --- Melissa Craven Fowler Hand-drawn tree of the Craven side of the family, as understood in 1977, long before this research was begun. (calligraphy by Melissa Craven, 1977) Our father, Frank Tempest Craven (1914-1962), was born in Greystone (North Providence), Rhode Island, where his British-immigrant parents were working in the Greystone woolen mill. His father, Alfred Craven (1873-1929), and mother, Jane Brook Craven (1878-1955), were both raised near Bradford, Yorkshire, England and harkened from multiple generations of farmers, miners, and textile workers in increasingly industrialized Yorkshire. In this Brook and Gough chapter, we will discuss some of our ancestor families living mostly in Clayton and Horton, southwest of Bradford, Yorkshire, in what was known as Page 1 -- 12/19/2017 “Yorkshire West Riding” 1. In order to understand how those place-names relate to the Yorkshire of today, we will provide some background on the wool industry and on the area itself, the same as that in the Craven chapter, plus a map. The manufacture of woollen cloth has for centuries been an important occupation of Yorkshire men and women.
    [Show full text]
  • Ethnic Mixing in Bradford
    LOCAL DYNAMICS OF DIVERSITY: EVIDENCE FROM THE 2011 CENSUS JANUARY 2015 Prepared by ESRC Centre on Dynamics of Ethnicity (CoDE) Ethnic mixing in Bradford Summary Figure 1. Change in ethnic group segregation in • Ethnic minority groups in Bradford (those other Bradford, 1991 - 2011 than White British) have grown in population, and predominantly live in more evenly mixed wards in Segregaon in Segregaon in Segregaon in 2011 compared to 1991. 1991 2001 2011 • Every ethnic group measured in the census, 100 except Black Africans, is more evenly spread across Bradford wards in 2011 compared to 1991. 90 • The decreased segregation of most groups, 80 particularly Bangladeshi, Indian, Black Caribbean, Chinese and Pakistani groups is a result of 70 dispersal away from wards where they have been traditionally clustered. 60 • Ethnic minority groups have increased in both 50 the most and least clustered wards in Bradford between 2001 and 2011. During this time 40 Bangladeshi and Pakistani groups have grown 30 more in less clustered wards. • Five out of ten of the most diverse wards in West 20 Yorkshire are in Bradford. 10 • The most diverse wards in Bradford are City, Bowling and Barkerend, Little Horton, 0 Great Horton, Heaton, Keighley Central and Manningham. Caribbean African Indian Pakistani White Bangladeshi • In addition to becoming more mixed residentially Chinese the population of Bradford is becoming more mixed within households. One in nine households Notes: Index of Dissimilarity across 30 wards in Bradford. 100 in Bradford include people of more than one indicates complete segregation, with all members of an ethnic group in a single ward, 0 indicates a completely even spread of an ethnic group, higher than most other districts in ethnic group across wards.
    [Show full text]
  • Collections Guide 2 Nonconformist Registers
    COLLECTIONS GUIDE 2 NONCONFORMIST REGISTERS Contacting Us What does ‘nonconformist’ mean? Please contact us to book a place A nonconformist is a member of a religious organisation that does not ‘conform’ to the Church of England. People who disagreed with the before visiting our searchrooms. beliefs and practices of the Church of England were also sometimes called ‘dissenters’. The terms incorporates both Protestants (Baptists, WYAS Bradford Methodists, Presbyterians, Independents, Congregationalists, Quakers Margaret McMillan Tower etc.) and Roman Catholics. By 1851, a quarter of the English Prince’s Way population were nonconformists. Bradford BD1 1NN How will I know if my ancestors were nonconformists? Telephone +44 (0)113 535 0152 e. [email protected] It is not always easy to know whether a family was Nonconformist. The 1754 Marriage Act ordered that only marriages which took place in the WYAS Calderdale Church of England were legal. The two exceptions were the marriages Central Library & Archives of Jews and Quakers. Most people, including nonconformists, were Square Road therefore married in their parish church. However, nonconformists often Halifax kept their own records of births or baptisms, and burials. HX1 1QG Telephone +44 (0)113 535 0151 Some people were only members of a nonconformist congregation for e. [email protected] a short time, in which case only a few entries would be ‘missing’ from the Anglican parish registers. Others switched allegiance between WYAS Kirklees different nonconformist denominations. In both cases this can make it Central Library more difficult to recognise them as nonconformists. Princess Alexandra Walk Huddersfield Where can I find nonconformist registers? HD1 2SU Telephone +44 (0)113 535 0150 West Yorkshire Archive Service holds registers from more than a e.
    [Show full text]
  • Hate Crime Reporting Centres in Bradford and Keighley
    Hate Crime Reporting Centres in Bradford and Keighley Accent Housing Charlestown House, Acorn Park Industrial Estate, Charlestown, Shipley BD17 7SW Al Mahdi Mosque Rees Way, Bradford BD3 0DZ Bradford Hate Crime Alliance 52 Cornwall Road, Bradford BD8 7JN Bradford City Football Club (Match Day reporting Only) Valley Parade, Bradford BD8 7DY Bradford College Social Care & Community Practice, 4th Floor, Room 16 (4F16), David Hockney Building, Great Horton Road, Bradford BD7 1AY Bradford People First F07- F13 Mayfield Centre, Broadway Avenue, Bradford BD5 9NP BTM (Bradford Talking Media) 11-12 Eldon Place, Bradford BD1 3AZ Bradford University Students Union Student Central, Longside Lane, Bradford BD7 1DP Central Hall, Keighley Alice Street, Keighley BD21 3JD Equity Partnership Equity Centre, 1 Longlands Street, Bradford BD1 2TP Girlington Advice Centre Girlington Road, Bradford BD8 3NN Good Shepherd Centre West Lane, The Guardhouse, Keighley BD22 6ES Incommunities Tenancy Enforcement - Shipley The Quays, Victoria Street, Shipley BD17 7BN KAWACC (Keighley Association Women and Children's Centre) Marlborough Street, Keighley BD21 3HU Keighley and Craven People First Springfield Mills, Oakworth Road, Keighley BD21 1SL Keighley Council Customer Service Centre The Town Hall, Bow Street, Keighley BD21 3PA Khidmat Centre 36 Spencer Street, Bradford BD7 2EU Manningham Housing Association Bank House, 30 Manor Row, Bradford BD1 4QE M.I.N.D Bradford Trade Point Building, Cornwall Place, Bradford BD8 7JT Morley Street Resource Centre 124 Morley Street, Bradford BD7 1BB Prospects Bradford Auburn House, Upper Piccadilly, Bradford BD1 Ravenscliffe Community Association 45 Thackery Road, Bradford BD10 0JR Rockwell Community Centre 6 Summerfield Road, Thorpe Edge, Bradford BD10 8DP Shine Project St Stephens Church, 48 Newton Street, West Bowling, Bradford BD5 7BH Shipley College Student Services, Salt Building, Victoria Road BD18 3JW Victim Support 3 Parkview Court, St Paul's Road, Shipley BD18 3DZ Yorkshire MESMAC 28 Chapel Street, Little Germany, Bradford BD1 5XT .
    [Show full text]
  • Our Ref: 0483/19 Could You Please Provide Me with the Total Number of Islamophobic Hate Crimes for Each Year Over the Last Five
    Our ref: 0483/19 Could you please provide me with the total number of Islamophobic hate crimes for each year over the last five years? ( from 1st January 2013 to 31st December 2018). If it is possible, i would like the data to be broken down by the day they were reported. Please see the attached table which provides Islamophobic Hate Crimes recorded, broken down by date recorded, and Ward area. Please note recent increases in hate crime are predominantly associated with administrative change in relation to Force crime recording processes which have resulted in an increased likelihood of a crime being recorded following an incident report to the Police. Crime increases have been reported across a number of crime types this year and the increases in hate crime follow a similar pattern to related offences such as public order and low level violence without injury. The force has made improvements to how information about hate incidents is recorded. A number of sub-categories for the recording of faith and disability hate crimes are being introduced to get a better understanding of the impact of national and international events on local communities and improve and target services for victims. Recent publicity may also have encouraged victims of hate incidents and crimes to come forward and report their experience to the police. West Yorkshire Police support the annual Hate Crime Awareness Week in partnership with the Police and Crime Commissioner in order to highlight the issue of hate crime. The campaign aims to give people a better understanding of what hate crime is and encourage victims of hate incidents to report them.
    [Show full text]
  • Local (Bradford and Airedale)
    The following lists a range of local and national services, including confidential advice or support. Local (Bradford and Airedale) Contact Centre - 01274 200024 (sexual health information and appointments) Information Shop for Young People (under 25s) 01274 432431 Culture Fusion 125 Thornton Road, Bradford. BD1 2EP www.bradford.gov.uk/young/infoshop The Information Shop provides the following sexual health services: CASH – Mon-Wed 3.30-5.30, Sat 10-12 Friend’s Service - free condoms for under 25’s Mon-Fri 11-5.30, Sat 10-12 CASHPOINT - Mon and Wed 3.30-5.30, Sat 10-12 (No appointment needed). Free confidential advice and information on contraception, sexual health and emergency contraception and pregnancy testing. Friend’s Plus Service – Mon & Thurs 1.30-4, Tues 2-3.45, Providing advice on and testing for sexually transmitted infections for men and women. The Lads’ Room - Tues 12.30-4.30 and Thurs 3-4.30 Confidential information on drugs, alcohol, sexual health, safe sex, relationships, bullying, feeling different, provided for males by male workers, free condoms available. Keighley Connexions Centre 01535 618100 79 Low Street (near Royal Arcade) Mon-Fri 11-4.30 Trinity Centre (Sexual Health Clinic) Advice - 01274 365035 Testing/appointments - 08450020021 Trinity Road, Off Little Horton Lane, Bradford, BD5 OJD Opening Times: Mon-Fri 8.30-12 noon. No appointment necessary. Offers treatment, advice, information and counseling on all sexually transmitted infections. If symptomatic, call one of the Health Advisors (365065) for advice or to make an urgent appointment. Lilac Clinic (termination of pregnancies) 01274 364623 Bradford Royal Infirmary, Duckworth Lane, West Yorkshire, BD9 6RJ Referral for termination can be from a General Practitioner and CASH services Our Project 01274 740548 [email protected] Bradford based HIV organization offering a range support services for people affected by HIV (includes extended families and friends), social support and advice, including benefits and asylum.
    [Show full text]
  • Proceedings Wesley Historical Society
    Proceedings OF THE Wesley Historical Society Editor: E. ALAN ROSE, B.A. Volume 51 May 1998 SIGNIFICANT INROADS INTO 'SATAN'S SEAT' Early Methodism in Bradford: 1740-1760 Introduction radford by the mid-eighteenth century was beginning to emerge as an important industrial centre. Woollen manufacture, a trade Bwhich had begun in the Aire Valley in the medieval period, had become, by 1750, the economic basis of the town.! The improvement of roads such as that from Leeds to Halifax via Great Horton, which was turnpiked in 1734, and Bowling Lane, providing a route to Huddersfield in 1740, and the extension of the Leeds -Liverpool Canal to Thackley in 1744, provided cheap and convenient transport links necessary for economic growth. With the building of the Bowling and Low Moor Iron Works in the reign of George Ill, and the erection of the textile mills at Whetley and Manningham in the Victorian period, Bradford became 'Worstedopolis', the undisputed wool capital of the world. This rapid industrialisation brought about a significant rise in the town's population as labourers began to drift in from the surrounding rural districts, and from Ireland, in search of employment. By 1750 Bradford had grown from being nothing more than a village to a town of about 8,000 people. This industrial expansion provided the socio-economic context for the development of local religious dissent. Several ministers in the vicinity of Bradford, had been ejected from their livings in 1662 due to their refusal to give their 'unfeigned assent and consent to all and everything contained and prescribed in and by the book intituled "The Book of Common Prayer"'.
    [Show full text]
  • Leeds 29 Bradford 4 Bradford 3 Bradford 1 Bradford 2
    Sun 25th Dec Mon 26th Tues 27th Mon 2nd 2016 Dec 2016 Dec 2016 Jan 2016 LEEDS 29 Boots UK Ltd, Boots of Ilkley, 37-39 Brook Street, Ilkley, Leeds, LS29 8AG, (Tel) 01943 CLOSED 10:00 - 16:00 10:00 - 16:00 10:00 - 16:00 608476. Pharm-Assist (Healthcare) Ltd, Ilkley Moor Pharmacy, 10 Cowpasture Road, Ilkley, 12:30 - 14:30 CLOSED CLOSED CLOSED LS29 8SR. (Tel) 01943 604206 BRADFORD 1 Boots UK Ltd, Unit 3 Forster Square Retail Park, Bradford, BD1 4AU. (Tel) 01274 CLOSED 08:00 - 18:00 11:00 - 17:00 11:00 - 17:00 733817 Boots Pharmacy, 25 Charles Street, The Broadway Centre, Bradford, BD1 1US CLOSED 09:00 - 18:00 09:00 - 18:00 09:00 - 18:00 Tel.01274 739499 Tesco Stores Ltd, Tesco In-Store Pharmacy, Tesco Superstore, Peel Centre, CLOSED CLOSED 09:00 -18:00 09:00 - 18:00 Valley Road, Bradford, BD1 4RB, Tel: (01274) 901443 (100 hour pharmacy) BRADFORD 2 Moorside Pharma Ltd, T/A Moorside Pharmacy, 372 Dudley Hill Road, Bradford, 10:00 - 12:00 CLOSED CLOSED CLOSED BD2 3AA, Tel: (01274) 626012 BRADFORD 3 Lloyds Pharmacy Ltd, T/A Lloyds Pharmacy, 2 Butler Street West, Bradford, CLOSED 08:00 - 22:00 08:00 - 22:00 08:00 - 22:00 BD3 0BS, Tel: (01274) 729170 Rumi Health Ltd, T/A Day Night Pharmacy, 101 Killinghall Road, Bradford, BD3 8AB, 12:00 - 23:00 12:00 - 23:00 12:00 - 23:00 12:00 - 23:00 Tel: (01274) 667866 (100 hour pharmacy) W M Morrisons Supermarkets Plc, T/A Morrisons Pharmacy, W M Morrisons CLOSED 10:00 - 16:00 10:00 - 16:00 10:00 - 16:00 Store, Rushton Avenue, Thornbury, BD3 7HZ, Tel: (01274) 669466 BRADFORD 4 Asda Stores Ltd, T/A Asda Pharmacy,
    [Show full text]