º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Commercial Property

New owner for Jewellery Quarter building

Counting House, which is let to Wonderful World Models, sold just a few months after being placed on the market by Cushman and Wakefield

Cameron Thomson, senior surveyor with Cushman & Wakefield, outside The Counting House

A three-storey office building in the has been bought just a few months after being placed on the market with a sale price of £650,000.

The Counting House is a self-contained part of the Grade II-listed Derwent Foundry, at 3 Mary Ann Street close to St Paul's Square.

Derwent Foundry is a Victorian building, occupied for more than 70 years by Taylor and Challen which manufactured presses for the jewellery trades but which was later converted into apartments by former owner and developer MCD with a new wing.

The Counting House was developed at this time and is an office building with 8,540 sq ft of space, partly new build and partly from the Victorian Foundry.

The building is let to Wonderful World Models which has recently moved in and opened the Counting House as a visitor attraction, café and retail outlet for a range of models, including trains and planes.

The new owners  are private investors, and according to Cushman & Wakefield, there was stiff competition to buy the building, which was offered for sale at £650,000.

Cameron Thomson, senior surveyor at Cushman & Wakefield, said the sale was further evidence of the growing popularity of the Jewellery Quarter, which had seen in recent years.

"There is a growing confidence in the Jewellery Quarter as an up-and-coming area and it is becoming very popular both amongst occupiers and investors who are looking for stock outside the major prime centres, in order to get better returns at a time when economic confidence remains," he said.