º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Endsleigh Park's latest incarnation as event space aims to be all-inclusive

Former Our Lady of Mercy convent could now host a conference as Hull Serviced Apartments branches out

Endsleigh Park on Beverley High Road, Hull, where an event space has been created by owner Hull Serviced Apartments.(Image: HSA / Finesse Digital)

A new event space is launching in one of Hull’s more historic buildings.

Endsleigh Park on Beverley High Road has had a three-year overhaul after being taken on by Hull Serviced Apartments, as the award-winning business branches out from accommodation provision.

Set within four acres of walled gardens, the former convent turned teacher training college then bed and breakfast has been given a new lease of life by the dynamic operator.

Last year saw the launch of the , the newly built Endsleigh Village apartments and the launch of 48 serviced en-suite rooms in the main hall, now used by visitors to the city. With all of this work complete and the apartments now nearly all let, HSA has turned its attention to additional uses, for what it describes as an “incredibly versatile and picturesque” location.

Endsleigh Park on Beverley High Road, Hull, where an event space is being launched by owner Hull Serviced Apartments.(Image: HSA / Finesse Digital)

Managing director James Ledger said: “Endsleigh Park is such a vast and multi-faceted development that unlike our other projects where the sole focus has been on creating quality accommodation, this location offers so much more scope and opportunity for other uses and facilities as well.

 “We are so proud of our work that we want it to be seen, appreciated and used by as diverse a range of people as possible, both from the city and beyond. Plus of course in this day and age, it also makes absolute commercial sense.”

Mr Ledger was named ‘Entrepreneur of The Year’ at the Hull Live Business Awards. He is now talking to a wide variety of groups from both commercial and community backgrounds and has been pleasantly surprised by some of the ideas and plans people have already approached him with for the venue, first opened in 1901.  It can accommodate 150 people, with original pews retained.

“We were aware that it would make a great space for events such as conferences, training days, product launches and the like, but because it’s not just the rooms and internal spaces but also the sizeable grounds. We’ve had a lot of people come to us with projects with a real environmental, ecological and even holistic aspect to them, which really excites me.