º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Plan for HMO flats above Plymouth city centre shops

Developer wants to create small apartments with shared kitchens and bathrooms as new uses area sought for space above retail units

The Plymouth city centre building that could have its top floor converted into flats. Pictured when Game occupied the ground floor(Image: Google)

Plans have been drawn to convert rooms above a Plymouth city centre shop into housing - the latest in a series of similar moves as developers look to address the decline in retail and breathe new life into the city centre.

Plymouth City Council planners have given the nod to a pre-application inquiry to create a commercial unit on the first floor, potentially for use as a hair salon, and convert the second floor to small flats above on the corner of Armada Way and New George Street.

The applicant, Shir Ahmad of London-based real estate business Shir Investments Ltd, wants to create a 10-bed HMO (house in multiple occupation) on the top floor of the building, which until recently had Game as its main ground floor occupant. It is envisaged creating seven small flats, four for one person and three for couples, with shared bathrooms and kitchens.

Council planners said the proposal is acceptable in principle, with the Joint Local Plan seeking to increase the level of residential occupancy within the city centre whilst protecting retail units on lower levels.

If the development does go ahead it will add to a growing list of new uses for the upper floors of city centre buildings. Already, the 94-room OYO Plymouth Central hotel has opened above the Poundland store in New George Street.

Across the road, the 500-bed Plymouth Cross House student accommodation has been created in the upper floors of the former Derrys department store.

This comes as Premier Inn has just opened a 110-room hotel, and Thyme Bar and Grill restaurant, in the same building. It is mainly situated in what was once the Rileys snooker centre, in the Courtenay Street area.

Meanwhile, in February 2021, Property developer CPP London Properties Ltd received permission to transform the eight-story Moneycentre, close to the main university campus, from office to residential use.