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Architect BDN has designs on North West expansion with former police station conversion plan

BDN aims to turn the former police station into its new Cumbrian base as well as retail space, accommodation and new homes

A CGI of how the former Ulverston Police Station will look(Image: Building Design Northern)

North East architect Building Design Northern (BDN) is expanding further into the North West after unveiling plans to move into a former police station in Cumbria.

The Sunderland based architectural, civil and structural engineering company plans to breathe new life into the former Ulverston Police Station and Courthouse after buying the former constabulary buildings amid plans to turn it into a brand-new multi use destination for the market town. The firm has submitted a planning application, with CGIs showing how the empty disused buildings could be turned into a mixed-use venue with commercial space, offices, serviced accommodation and new homes.

If the plans are approved, BDN – which first opened a base in the county in 2018 – will move its Cumbria office to the police station, with a communal kitchen, meeting room and desk space proposed for the expanding practice. BDN has recently embarked on North West growth plans, appointing two new local employees.

Read more: People on the move: key North East appointments and promotions

BDN is driving the vision for Sheepfolds’ Stables, a £2m project which will see the Grade II listed building near Sunderland AFC’s Stadium of Light transformed into a mixed-use leisure venue with retail, food and drink and entertainment space. The Ulverston Police Station will be the third heritage building the company has taken on, following Sheepfolds’ Stables and the conversion of the Old Simpson Street School in Sunderland, which is now its North East head office. The £1m renovation project turned the 1800s, Grade II listed former Victorian school building into work space and eight luxury loft apartments.

The former Police Station will house commercial office space, with jail cells reimagined as boutique accommodation. The superintendent’s quarters which were demolished prior to BDN’s acquisition of the site, will house further serviced accommodation.

The Courthouse will have a new restaurant pavilion, with a surrounding courtyard of former garages converted into independent commercial space that is expected to attract retail businesses. Three one and two-bedroom dwellings are also detailed in plans, replacing former MOT garages, centred around a communal amenity space with a central green space.

The buildings fell out of use since they were vacated by the police in 2015, and despite being privately sold, have remained unoccupied since.