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Economic Development

Bidding war on the cards for prime Plymouth waterfront hotel site

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and international developers already eyeing land on Plymouth Hoe after previous hotel scheme never started

Weeds are the only sign of life at the site of the proposed 1620 hotel and apartment towers(Image: Penny Cross / Plymouth Live)

A bidding war could be about to hot up for the patch of Plymouth waterfront land that would have been the site of the abandoned £50million 1690 Hotel.

Top global real estate adviser Colliers International has been brought in by Plymouth City Council to market the land, once home to the now demolished Quality Hotel, situated in a plum position on Plymouth Hoe.

The council wants a high-quality, hotel-led, mixed-use development on the land and interested parties have until November 18 to submit their bids.

Colliers said it has already received “considerable interest” from º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and overseas developers – including from developers which had previously bid for the land.

How the double 1620 block is supposed to look, the hotel is the smaller of the two

The site is up for sale again after the ending of an agreement between the council and the original developer, Henley Real Estate Development Ltd, when it emerged that the company couldn’t raise the finance.

The elevated site, which extends to nearly a hectare and has panoramic sea views, was the site of the Quality Inn until it was demolished in 2016 and the site then cleared.

Henley was announced as the new owner in late 2016 and plans for an 11-floor hotel with 80 beds, and a 15-floor block of 88 apartments, were approved in 2017 .

The local authority was hoping the scheme would be finished in time for the Mayflower 400 celebrations in 2020. The “five-star” hotel was even to be called 1620 to mark the connection.