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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Derelict Plymouth office site goes on market after firm's liquidation

Mayflower House is due to be demolished with plans approved to build an 18-floor student flat tower on the site

Mayflower House, in Plymouth, undergoing demolition (Image: www.brutonknowles.co.uk)

A derelict Plymouth city centre office block where a dead body was discovered is now being marketed as a “development opportunity” after the company which owned it went out of business.

Property consultants at , where the current dilapidated building is earmarked for demolition. It has been used by rough sleepers with police

Now Bruton Knowles is marketing the plot, on the intersection of Mayflower Street and Armada Way, as a “mixed use development opportunity” on behalf of fixed charge receivers.

In 2016, Mayflower House was given planning permission to be demolished and replaced with an 18-storey tower containing 490 student flats above shops and offices.

How the consented student flat building on the site of Plymouth's Mayflower House could look(Image: www.brutonknowles.co.uk)
How a new 18-storey tower could look on the site of Plymouth's Mayflower House(Image: www.brutonknowles.co.uk)

An attempt was made three years later to amend this to 332 student bedrooms, 2,381sq m of offices and a 120-bed hotel, but no full application was ever submitted.

A Bruton Knowles brochure said: “The proposed development will comprise of a purpose built student scheme, providing in total 490 bedrooms, arranged as 52 clusters and 78 studios.

“The scheme will also comprise communal facilities being: reception, laundry room, staff room and external bike store and paved areas. The property currently comprises an existing office and retail building, demolition works HAVE commenced.”

Demolition work but was then halted and has not restarted during the coronavirus pandemic. Experts from London-based Hill Demolition had moved on to the site, covered the building in scaffolding and plastic sheeting and placed fencing around it, and was awaiting further instructions when the pandemic struck.