Times of Tunbridge Wells 2nd August 2017

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Wednesday August 2 | 2017

OF TUNBRIDGE WELLS

Apartment sets new record for top end property in town centre By Jonathan Banks

Council moves to quell fears over INSIDE future of iconic department store WINNING WAYS

Town’s new charity lotto hailed as a great success Page 3

Hoopers warn that theatre plan could put business at risk CORNERSTONE The popular flagship store

ANOTHER sign this week that the top end of the Tunbridge Wells property market is alive and well. It looks like a new record has been set with the marketing of a two-bedroom flat for just under £1,000 per square foot. Commanding a guide price of £750,000, the Castle House ground floor apartment on London Road has been designed by luxury developers Surrey-based Newcourt Residential, and brought to market by the national estate agents Savills.

TROUBLE ABOVE

Resident reveals alarming effects of Gatwick’s noise levels Page 6

EAT WELL, FEEL FIT

Attention

Local nutrition experts Keris and Matt show you how Page 42 PHOTO: Lee Smith

One surveyor, who did not wish to be named, said the listing at £955 a square foot has ‘almost certainly set a record for the town’. By comparison, a flat of almost the exact same size in the recently built Royal Springs development just down the road next to The Forum, attracted a lot of attention at less than half the price. The average price for a flat per square foot in Tunbridge Wells is £386, according to property website Zoopla. The buyer of the Castle House flat will get 785 square feet to stretch their legs in, but only have to walk a few yards to the railway station. There is also parking.

By Adam Hignett adam@timesoftunbridgewells.co.uk

THE borough council has pledged to find a ‘workable’ solution with Hoopers after the department store warned that the current plans to build a theatre next door would threaten the viability of the business. In a strongly worded statement issued last week on the eve of a major council debate about the future of the £72million Civic Complex project, the department store indicated that hundreds of jobs could be in jeopardy. Their concern hinges on the use of their

car park at the back of the store as an access route to the proposed venue, which Hoopers believes will adversely impact their customers and the wider business.

‘It would create an existential threat to the current operation’ In addition, they accuse the council of issuing a ‘threat’ to place a Compulsory Purchase Order [CPO] on the customer car park to achieve this access, warning it would have a ‘devastating effect’ on Hoopers’ ability to function effectively. A Hoopers spokesman said the top-end

retailer has been ‘inundated’ with enquiries from customers, staff and members of the general public who are concerned about the theatre’s impact on the business. They added: “Hoopers believes that if the council’s planned access route comes to fruition, it would create an existential threat to the current operation and viability of an iconic independent retail business… [It will] affect not only the store in Tunbridge Wells but the operation of its three other stores in the group that rely upon services from this store. “The group itself provides employment

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MUSICAL YOUTH

Get your children involved in theatre this summer Page 58


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