Bridge Business Park, Colne Bridge Road, Huddersfield, HD5 0RH UNITS NOW AVAILABLE to LET

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bridge Business Park, Colne Bridge Road, Huddersfield, HD5 0RH UNITS NOW AVAILABLE to LET Bridge A selection of units ranging in size from 2,500 to 10,750ft2 Business Park TO LET Bridge Business Park, Colne Bridge Road, Huddersfield, HD5 0RH UNITS NOW AVAILABLE TO LET UNIT SIZES Unit 1 650.32 m2 7,000 ft2 Unit 2 998.70 m2 10,750 ft2 A brand new industrial park in a prime location ...with exceptional Unit 3 696.77 m2 7,500 ft2 road connections just 1.5 miles south of Junction 25 of the M62. Unit 4 557.41 m2 6,000 ft2 Unit 5 232.26 m2 2,500 ft2 Bridge Business Park development comprises of brand new light industrial units, ranging in size from 2,500 to 10,750 ft2, built in three blocks, arranged around a central Unit 6 348.38 m2 3,750 ft2 service courtyard, providing vehicle circulation and over 55 parking spaces. The units benefit from eaves heights of up to 7 metres (to haunch), approximate office content of 10%, as well as connection to all mains services. The scheme benefits from B1, B2 and B8 uses in relation to the Town and Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987. to M62 J 25 WHITE CROSS INN LAND ROVER LEEDS ROAD BRADLEY ROAD BRADLEY COLNE BRIDGE METHODIST CHURCH A62 MARSDENS CHICKEN SHOP to HUDDERSFIELD MAMAS & PAPAS MAMAS & PAPAS Bridge Business Park to MIRFIELD & KIRKHEATON SITE AND LOCATION Unit 1 7,000ft2 The site is situated with prominent frontage to Colne Bridge Road Unit 6 2 Unit 5 3,750ft (B6118), just off the main A62 Leeds Road in an established industrial and 2 2,500ft warehousing location, with nearby occupiers including Mamas & Papas, VTL and C & J Antich. Leeds Road is the principal arterial highway leading between Huddersfield and the M62 at Junction 25. Bridge Business Park therefore has superb road communications, with Junction 25 being just 1.5 miles to the north. Unit 4 Unit 3 Unit 2 6,000ft2 7,500ft2 10,750ft2 ADDITIONAL INFORMATION The completed units are to be offered to let by way of new tenant’s full repairing and insuring leases. Rent upon application. A site service charge will be levied for the maintenance and upkeep of any common parts of the completed development. All figures are quoted exclusive of VAT. We understand VAT will be chargeable. Viewing is strictly by appointment. CONTACT US For more information on Bridge Business Park or to arrange a viewing, please contact either of the joint agents below: Jonathan O’Connor: [email protected] Josh Holmes: [email protected] Reference: 2686 / Subject to Contract MISREPRESENTATION ACT 1967 - CONDITIONS UNDER WHICH PARTICULARS ARE ISSUED Carter Towler and Walker Singleton for themselves and for the vendor(s) or lessor(s) of the property whose agents they are gives notice that these particulars do not constitute , nor constitute any part of, an offer or contract. None of the statements contained in these particulars as to the property are to be relied upon as statements or representations of fact. Any intending purchaser(s) must satisfy themselves by inspection or otherwise as to the correctness of each of the statements contained in these particulars. The vendor(s) or lessor(s) do not make or give, and neither Carter Towler, Walker Singleton nor any person in their employment has any authority to make or give any representation or warranty whatsoever in relation to the property. None of the building’s services or service installations have been tested and are not warranted to be in working order. PROPERTY MISDESCRIPTIONS ACT 1991 Whilst every reasonable effort has been made by Carter Towler and Walker Singleton to ensure accuracy, interested parties are strongly advised to take appropriate steps to verify, by independent inspection or enquiry, all information for themselves and to take appropriate professional advice. FINANCE ACT 1989 All offers received will be deemed to be exclusive of VAT, unless expressly stated to be otherwise..
Recommended publications
  • Huddersfield Area
    48 (Section 52) ADVERTISEMENTS. ~ Telt>phone• lti!JT ~ Telephone /liff" H U D DE ltS FIELD 971 HUDDERSFIELD 971 482 482 WM. ARNOLD & SON, e1\RTER & eo .• CENTRAL SALT DEPu'J'","' BIRKHOUSE BOILFR WORKS, 39, Market Street, and Water Street, Haddersfield, ~addoeR, Jiuddersfield. Manufacturers and Merchants of firewood and Firelighters. Cement Plaster Whiting, Granite, Lime-stone, Slag, Spar, 8and, French Chalk, La'ths, Naiis, Hair, Colors, Oils, Paints, Putty, Varnishes, Brushes, MAKERS OF ALL KINDS OF BOILERS. Blachlng Brass Polishes, Turpentine, Glue, Salt, Saltpetre. Soap, Soda. Charcoai. Chloride of Lime, Ammonia, Liquid Annatto, Vinegar, Corks, REPAIRS PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO. Fibrous Plaster, Centre Flowers, and Trusses, &.c. "& Telephone /liiiT Tel. : Huddersfield 131. Telegrams : Station Tel. : Huddersfield 131a. "TROHAB DARWIN, HUDDEB&FIKLD.' 41y HUDDERSFIELD 41y -L. CONTRACTOR FOR CABS DAY OR NIGHT. lB' HIS MAJESTY'S MAILS ~ ~ { <tonfecttoner Wedding & Funeral Carriages, Olass·Sided & Plain Hearses. JQ t~a V er, ant~ <taterer. Also tbe latest designs in New Silent= Tyred Funeral Cars. ti4, New .Street, Huddersfield. funerals turntsbeb <tomplete. WEDDING CAKES of artistic design and highest THOMAS DARWIN, quality, from 10f6. LIVERY STABLES, DECORATIVE CAKES in great variety. Fartown, HUDDERSFIELD ~ Telephone w 17X Machine and Metal Bl'oke,.!l .C. • 17x BRIG HOUSE and Commission Agent. :\.1) V * LISTER BROOK & CO., Boiler and Pipe Coverer ~ $ Telephone: with Non-eonclueting ~· J.._ HUDDERSFIELD 792. Builders & Contractors, Composition. ~ :El B. :I: G-~ 0 U S E, V ~ And at l'i•:I.R\'. Estimates r'. Sectional Covering a Speciality. Dealers InSanitary Pipes, Chimney Pots, Fire Brlclis. Fire Clay. Lime, Cement, &c. Free. ""-V Same..price as " Plastic." IIRDUitO MORTAR FOR SALE.
    [Show full text]
  • Huddersfield Chronicle 1881 to 1900
    HUDDERSFIELD CHRONICLE 1881 TO 1900 1 January 28 1881 BASE COIN IN THE BLACK COUNTRY At the Stafford Assizes yesterday morning, Mr Commissioner Wills QC had before him for sentence a number of prisoners charged with passing base coin in the neighbourhoods of Wolverhampton. Walsall and West Bromwich, who had been convicted on the previous day. In all the cases, the “smashers”, who are believed to have got the spurious coin from Birmingham, went to small shopkeepers and, purchasing a trifling item, tendered a counterfeit coin in payment, frequently getting change without suspicion. After remarking on the enormity of the offence, the learned commissioner sentenced George Brown, locksmith, to five years penal servitude; Harry Hanson, horse dealer, to 12 months; Thomas Goodfrey, labourer, to six months; George Fuel, slater, to 12 months; John Farley, boatman, six months; and Ann Davies, a bad character, to six months. 2 February 24 1881 Borough Police Court THROWING A BOY INTO THE CANAL George Goodier, boatman, Wakefield, was charged with doing grievous bodily harm to Tom Fletcher, a lad of 16 years of age, on the 23 rd October last. The allegation of Fletcher was that on the day in question, between half past four and five in the afternoon, he, his mother, and three boys were coming to Huddersfield from Colne-bridge, along the canal bank. When they got near the lockhouse, they passed prisoner, who was in charge of a boat. Without anything being said, prisoner, who was the worse for liquor, exclaimed, “I'll drown you young -----”, and caught hold of Fletcher by the neck and breeches and dropped him into the canal, letting go of his clothes.
    [Show full text]
  • (Public Pack)Agenda Document for West Yorkshire and York
    WEST YORKSHIRE AND YORK INVESTMENT COMMITTEE MEETING TO BE HELD AT 11.00 AM ON WEDNESDAY, 3 JANUARY 2018 IN COMMITTEE ROOM A, WELLINGTON HOUSE, 40-50 WELLINGTON STREET, LEEDS A G E N D A 1. APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE 2. DECLARATIONS OF DISCLOSABLE PECUNIARY INTERESTS 3.3. EXEMPT INFORMATION - POSSIBLE EXCLUSION OF THE PRESS AND PUBLIC 1. To highlight Appendix 11 of Agenda Item 8 which officers have identified as containing exempt information within the meaning of Schedule 12A to the Local Government Act 1972, and where officers consider that the public interest in maintaining the exemption outweighs the public interest in disclosing the information, for the reasons outlined in the report. 2. To consider whether or not to accept the officers’ recommendation in respect of the above information as set out on paragraph 5.2 of Agenda Item 8. 3. If the recommendation is accepted, to formally pass the following resolution:- RESOLVED – That in accordance with paragraph 3 of Part 1 of Schedule 12A to the Local Government Act 1972, the public be excluded from the meeting during consideration of Appendix 11 of Agenda Item 8 on the grounds that it is likely, in view of the nature of the business to be transacted or the nature of the proceedings, that if members of the press and public were present there would be disclosure to them of exempt information and for the reasons set out in the report that in all the circumstances of the case, the public interest in maintaining the exemption outweighs the public interest in disclosing the information.
    [Show full text]
  • INVEST in KIRKLEES the Place to Make It in West Yorkshire
    INVEST IN KIRKLEES The Place to Make It in West Yorkshire Investor, developer and occupier opportunities in Huddersfield and Dewsbury CRAVEN HARROGATE YORK BRADFORD LEEDS Kirklees within the SELBY Leeds City Region CALDERDALE WAKEFIELD KIRKLEES BARNSLEY 2 This document is interactive. Click on the contents to go straight to the desired page. Invest in Kirklees 4 Our commitment 5 KIRKLEES... Key facts 5 Kirklees major development sites 6 Summary of opportunities 7 the Place to Make It Sites: In the heart of the Northern Powerhouse, Kirklees Globe Centre 8 sits at the centre of the Leeds, Manchester and Black Cat 9 Sheffield City Regions triangle, where businesses St Luke’s 10 and residents enjoy big-city benefits, without big- The Waterfront 11 city drawbacks. Trinity West 12 With an annual economy worth more than St George’s Quarter 13 £7 billion, access to a market of over 7 million Crown House 14 people within a 1 hour drive, and 300,000+ highly- The HD One 15 skilled graduates right on our doorstep, Kirklees Kingsgate Leisure 16 really is the Place to Make It. Lindley Moor East 17 Bradley Park 18 Bridge Business Park 19 Colne Bridge Road 20 Dewsbury Riverside 21 Chidswell 22 Soothill 23 Moor Park 25 24 Whitechapel Road 25 Bierley (Jct26, M62) 26 Contact our team Back Click on the document title to return to this page Invest in Kirklees | The Place to Make It in West Yorkshire 3 Unbeatable location - 2 hours from London by rail and 20 – 35 minutes commute to Leeds and Invest in Kirklees Manchester.
    [Show full text]
  • Actionable Plan
    Aire and Calder Catchment Partnership Actionable Plan A healthy and wildlife-rich water environment within the Aire and Calder that is valued and enjoyed, bringing increasing social and economic benefits to all1 Contents Executive summary .............................................................................................3 Upper Aire .....................................................................................................46 Introduction .............................................................................................................4 Lower Calder ................................................................................................47 A Catchment Based Approach ......................................................................4 Middle Calder ..............................................................................................47 The Aire and Calder Catchment ...................................................................4 Upper Calder ................................................................................................48 The Aire and Calder Operational Catchments ....................................4 Colne and Holme .......................................................................................49 Upper Aire Operational Catchment ...................................................6 Strategic zone ......................................................................................................50 Middle Aire Operational Catchment .................................................8
    [Show full text]
  • T. Baines: Yorkshire, Past and Present (1871), 2 Vols., Passim; W
    NOTES CHAPTER ONE I. H. Heaton: Yorkshire Woollen and Worsted Industries (Oxford, 1920), 366 seq.; T. Baines: Yorkshire, Past and Present (1871), 2 vols., passim; W. B. Crump and G. Ghorbal: History of the Hudders­ field Woollen Industry (Huddersfield, 1935), ch. 10; E. M. Sigsworth: 'Leeds Cloth Halls' (Leeds Jour., Nov. 1954); J. W. Turner: 'Bradford Piece Halls' (Bradford Antiquary, I, 1888). 2. D. Defoe: A Tour through the whole Island of Great Britain (1727), III, 101. 3. D. Defoe: The Compleat English Tradesman (1738), 1841 ed., II, 188. 4. F. Engels: The Condition of the Working Class in England, tr. W. O. Henderson, W. H. Chaloner (Oxford, 1958), 10-11; cf. Henderson, Chaloner, 'Engels and the England of the 1840'S' (HT, VI, 7: July 1956). 5. Crump and Ghorbal, 67; E. Hargrove: History of • •• Knaresborough (York, 1789), 27; J. Holden: A Short History of Todmorden (Manchester, 1912), 159. 6. P. Gaskell: The Manufacturing Population of England (1833), 36; G. J. French: Life and Times of S. Crompton (1859), 91; W. C. Taylor: Notes of a Tour in the Manufacturing Districts (1842), 141, Hand Book of Silk, Cotton and Woollen Manufactures (1843), 105. 7. See E. Baines, jr.: History of the Cotton Manufacture (1835); G. W. Daniels: The Early English Cotton Industry (Manchester, 1920) ; L. C. A. Knowles: Industrial and Commercial Revolutions . .• (1922); J. L. and B. Hammond: Rise of Modern Industry (1926), The Skilled Labourer (1919); P. Mantoux: The Industrial Revolution (1947 ed.); A. P. Wadsworth, J. Mann: The Cotton Trade and Industrial Lancashire (Manchester, 1931); T. S.
    [Show full text]
  • HUDDERSFIELD LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY JOURNAL an Index of Articles from Issue 1 Autumn 1990 to Date, and from Its' Predecessor Th
    HUDDERSFIELD LOCAL HISTORY SOCIETY JOURNAL An index of articles from Issue 1 Autumn 1990 to date, and from its’ predecessor The Newsletter from 1983-1990. ALMONDBURY In mercy of the Lord: Almondbury Court Rolls. Part 1 1627-1641.Edited by Peter Hirst [Reviewed in 22, May 2011] OLD CLERGY HOUSE, ALMONDBURY Its role as a refuge for Basque children during the Spanish Civil War is describe in Aid for Spain. By Alan Brooke 24, May 2013. ARCHITECTS From miserable village to town of great character: from builder to architect. Ben Stocks and the growth of the architectural profession in Huddersfield. By Brian Haigh 21, Winter 2009-2010 ARDEN-BROWN, SYLVIA [Obituary of long-standing Society member] 24, May 2013. ARMITAGE, GEORGE FAULKNER George Faulkner Armitage: an [other] Arts and Crafts designer in Huddersfield By David Griffiths 29. 2018/2019 ARMY RECRUITMENT Recruits for the haver cake lads By J H Rumsby Newsletter 2, 1984 ARTS AND CRAFTS MOVEMENT George Faulkner Armitage: an [other] Arts and Crafts designer in Huddersfield By David Griffiths 29, 2018/2019 ASIAN IMMIGRANTS Asian voices. By Nafhesa Ali 22, May 2011 Three job offers in one day! Part one: the story of a Heckmondwike Community By Waseem Riaz 27, 2016/2017 Part two: Here to stay – at the crossroads By Waseem Riaz 28, 2017/2018 South Asian food and song: yesterday’s practices repeated in Lockwood today. By Razia Parveen 28, 2017/2018 Dispersal bussing in Huddersfield during the 1960s and 1970s: solving ‘the problem’ of immigrant children. By Joe Hopkinson 29, 2018/2019 ATKINSON, THOMAS Saint Valentine’s day catastrophe: the Colne Bridge cotton mill fire and the story of a brave little girl who survived.
    [Show full text]
  • Court for Relief of Insolvent Debtors. Court for Relief
    2686 COURT FOR RELIEF OF INSOLVENT Joseph Tyrrell, late of Rye-cottage, Peckhara Rye, Peck- ham, Surrey, Jobbing Gardener.—In the Gaol of Surrey. DEBTORS. John Fenner, late of the Saracen's Head, No. 5, Aldgate, London, Master Mariner on board the Laurel.—In the Saturday the 7th day of July, 1855. Debtors' Prison for London and Middlesex. William Caslake the younger, late of No. 28. Canterbury- ASSIGNEES have been appointed in the place, Old Kent-road, Surrey, Coach Builder.—In the following Cases. Further particulars may be Gaol of Surrey. learned at the Office, in Portugal-Street, Lin- George Eade, late of No. 2, Channell-road, Bermondsey,. Surrey, Marine Store Dealer.—In the Gaol of Surrey. coln's-Inn-Fields, on giving the number of Charles Funnel], late of No. 38, Kensington-gardens, the Case. Brighton, Sussex, Blind Maker.—In the Gaol of Lewes. Charles Hughes, late of Wolverhampton, Staffordshire, out Edward Allport, late of No. 6, Clapton-square, Hackney, of business.—In the Gaol of Stafford. Middlesex, out of business, Insolvent, No. 65,226 T.; John Jagger, late of Northowram, near Halifax, Yorkshire, William Aston. Assignee. Innkeeper.—In the Gaol of York. Thomas Cooper, late of the Eagle Inn-street, Sid well-street, James Atherton, late of Stanley-street, Liverpool, Lanca- Exeter, Licensed Victualler, Insolvent, No. 79,474 C.; shire, Pilot.—In the Gaol of Lancaster. "William Joseph Richards, Assignee. George Irving Brown, late of Hill-street, Blackburn, Lanca- Samuel Law, late of Millwood, near Todmorden, York, out shire, Travelling Draper.—In the Gaol of Lancaster. of business, Insolvent, No.
    [Show full text]
  • The Buildings of Huddersfield Keith Gibson & Albert Booth Tempus Publishing, 2005
    The Buildings of Huddersfield Keith Gibson & Albert Booth Tempus Publishing, 2005. Reprinted with revisions to text, The History Press, 2009. Notes on Sources of Information. 1. Descriptions of Buildings are based on our own physical impressions of the buildings & on information provided in the descriptions of buildings contained in the List of Buildings of Architectural or Historic Interest. 2. This note provides details of the other sources of information that we found most useful. 3. Other sources include: The List of Buildings of Architectural &/or Historic Interest. Archer, John, Partnership in Style, (Catalogue to an exhibition of the works of Edgar Wood & J. Henry Sellers), Manchester City Art Gallery, Oct/Nov 1975. Banney Royd Study Group, Banney Royd: an Agreeable House, Kirklees MC 1991 Bentley, Phyllis, Colne Valley Cloth, Huddersfield Chamber of Commerce, 1947. Bielby, A. Ronald, Churches and Chapels of Kirklees, Kirklees MC 1978 Binney, Marcus; Fitzgerald, Ron; Langenbach, Randolph; and Powell, Ken, Satanic Mills; Industrial Architecture in the Pennines, Save Britain‘s Heritage. (n.d) Brook, Roy, The Story of Huddersfield, MacGibbon & Kee, 1968 Browning, L & Senior R.K, The Old Yards of Huddersfield, Huddersfield Civic Society, 1986 ISBN 0 9511749 08 (and reprint of 2004) Caffyn, Lucy, Workers‟ Housing in West Yorkshire, 1750 – 1920, Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England, and West Yorkshire Metropolitan County Council, 1986. ISBN 0 11 30000 2 Crump, W.B & Ghorbal, Gertrude, History of the Huddersfield Woollen Industry, Tolson Memorial Museum, 1935 (reprinted, 1988), Kirklees MC, ISBN 0900746 26 2 Gibson. Keith Pennine Dreams: the story of the Huddersfield Narrow Canal, Tempus Publishing, 2002 (reprinted 2004) ISBN 0 7524 2751 2 Giles, Colum, Rural Houses of West Yorkshire, 1400 – 1830, Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England and West Yorkshire Metropolitan County Council, 1986.
    [Show full text]
  • Calder & Hebble Navigation
    PDF download Boaters' Guides - beta version Welcome Thank you Key to facilities Welcome to the beta version of This is the first time this information has been Winding hole (length specified) Waterscape.com's Boaters' Guides. collected nationally, and the technology we are These new guides list facilities across the using to ensure up-to-date information breaks Winding hole (full length) waterway network. This first release of the a lot of new ground. We do expect there will be some omissions, and would very much like to guides covers the facilities provided by British Visitor mooring Waterways on its navigations in England and hear from you. Wales. Information and office The guides are completely computer-generated. All the information is held Dock and/or slipway in a central database. Whenever you download a guide from Waterscape.com, it will Slipway only take the very latest information and compile a 'fresh' PDF for you. Services and facilities The same information is used in the maps on Waterscape.com itself, to ensure consistency. Water point only It will be regularly updated by local staff whenever details change. We would like to hear your comments and corrections on the information contained within. Please send your feedback to [email protected]. About the maps The maps are automatically generated by computer. The only human involvement is to set the bounds of each map. We are continuing to teach the computer how best to draw the maps, and will be making further improvements in the months ahead. If you would like to comment on the maps or any other aspect of the presentation, please contact [email protected].
    [Show full text]
  • Cath Pinn Report To
    Director: Melanie Corcoran, Director of Delivery Author: Cath Pinn Report to: West Yorkshire and York Investment Committee Date: 3 January 2018 Subject: Capital Spending and Project Approvals 1. Purpose 1.1. To put forward proposals for the progression of, and funding for, a number of WYCA supported projects, including West Yorkshire plus Transport Fund (WY+TF) and Growth Deal, for consideration by the Investment Committee at Stages 1, 2 and 3 of WYCA’s Assurance process. 1.2. This report presents proposals for the progression of six schemes through WYCA’s Assurance Process in line with the Leeds City Region Assurance Framework. These schemes have a total combined funding value of £20.731m1 when fully approved, £17.062m of which will be funded by WYCA. A total expenditure recommendation to the value of £0.657m is sought as part of this report for the development and delivery of these schemes. Further detail on the schemes summarised below can be found as part of this report. Bradford Interchange Decision Point 2 (Case Paper) A scheme to carry out short to medium term works Phase 1 Total Value - £5.650m to improve both the looks and usability of Bradford Total Value of WYCA Funding - £5.650m Interchange (a combined rail, bus and coach Bradford Scheme Funding Recommendation sought – £0.100m station in central Bradford). A proposal to carry out pre-feasibility works for Decision Point 2 (Case Paper) Bradford Interchange Phase 2 of the Bradford Interchange Scheme. This Total Value - £0.512m Phase 2 will inform, identify and assess the options Total Value of WYCA Funding - £0.512m Bradford Scheme available in order to develop the Interchange into a Funding Recommendation sought – £0.512m high quality gateway to the city.
    [Show full text]
  • The Colne Bridge Mill Fire and the Devastating Impact on a Village Community
    The Colne Bridge Mill Fire and the devastating impact on a village community. By Richard Heath. It was probably the most sorrowful day in the history of Kirkheaton. As eleven coffins were lowered into communal grave near the Kirkstile gate of Kirkheaton Parish Church, “the shrieks and lamentations of parents, brothers, sisters who attended the ashes of their lost relatives to the grave were truly awful and (would) beggar all description.” (Wakefield and Halifax Journal) February 20th 1818. Their grief was shared with four thousand of the town’s people who had descended on the church to pay their respects to the child cotton spinners who went to their labours one night – and never returned home. Inside those little coffins were the remains of fifteen of the seventeen young girls, who perished in a raging inferno at Thomas Atkinson’s cotton factory at Colne Bridge on the morning of 14th Feb (Valentine’s Day) 1818. Two of the bodies would never be recovered; it is likely that they were the youngest and smallest. Three of the girls were aged only nine and should rightly have been at home safe in their beds. What it would have been like to have been in the churchyard on that winter morning all those years ago we can only dare to imagine. The picturesque surroundings would have been little comfort to inconsolable relatives and friends. Perhaps there was a blanket of snow covering the meadows and tree branches white with frost. Such scenic beauty sorely betrayed by the torment of all those who were gathered.
    [Show full text]