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Retail & Consumer

Plans to restore Leicester’s Grand Hotel to former glory

Prestigious hotel has been 'spoilt by poorly designed shop fronts, cheap modern materials and oversized signage'

Postcard of Granby Street, Leicester in around 1900

Plans are being developed to restore Leicester’s Grand Hotel to its former glory.

The impressive Grade II listed building, in Granby Street, could be spruced up as part of Historic England’s High Street Heritage Action Zone campaign.

If it gets the go-ahead, shop fronts on the ground level will be reinstated as close as possible to the building’s original design, and a new shop unit on the Belvoir Street side added.

Doorways and delivery entrances would be fitted with bespoke iron gates, and new signs added in keeping with the building.

There will also be improvements made to the hotel entrance, with cleaning and repairs made to the windows and balcony.

Specialists would look at the existing canopy above the entrance and determine whether it could be retained and restored. The hotel has already undergone substantial internal refurbishment in recent years.

The project follows a successful grant for £750,000 secured from the High Street Heritage Action Zone programme in November, which will be used to fund vital repair works to the former Midland Bank building which stands nearby on the corner of Granby Street and Bishop Street.

The iconic Victorian building, designed by architect Joseph Goddard, is used by the International Society for Krishna Consciousness (ISKON). Its roof will now be repaired to protect its structure and remove it from the Buildings At Risk register.