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PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Lycetts to move into prime Newcastle city centre office Bank House

The insurer is swapping its historic base at Milburn House for the Pilgrim Place development

Left to right: Kristian Sorenson of George F White, Charles Renwick and Neil McGuire of Lycetts and Tony Wordsworth of Avison Young.(Image: David Wood)

Insurer Lycetts is set to move its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ head office into Newcastle’s most prominent new office after more than half a century in its historic city centre offices.

Lycetts is set to move its 105-strong Newcastle workforce into Bank House – the first phase of the multimillion-pound Pilgrim Place development – after exchanging contracts on 10,000 sqft of new office space. The company was founded on Tyneside in 1961 and now has 16 offices around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The group specialises in farm and estate insurance and also provides financial services, commercial and bloodstock insurance advice and has more than 155 staff spread across its º£½ÇÊÓÆµ estate, but has spent the past 60 years in Milburn House on Dean Street. The insurance broker, risk management specialist and financial services provider, has signed a 15-year lease at Bank House, which will see the firm occupy the entire sixth floor of the 14-storey building when construction completes next April.

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The deal is the second Bank House letting to be confirmed within recent weeks. Last month, DAC Beachcroft announced that it had committed to 15,000 sqft of space, across one and a half floors within Bank House, which is the first of three offices to be developed at the southern end of Pilgrim Street.

Charles Renwick, Lycetts’ divisional director, said: “The move to this majestic new building will offer us fantastic opportunities to grow our business as we look to the future,

“Newcastle is a prime location for Lycetts to be based and the company is immensely proud of its North East heritage. There was never any question of us leaving the city, but there has been a need to accommodate expansion and modern working practices. The open plan environment of Bank House will open the door to greater collaborative working.”

Designed by Ryder Architecture, Bank House has features aimed at helping to reduce CO2 emissions during the building’s lifecycle, including the use of air source heat pumps and sustainable technologies to help reduce and monitor energy consumption.