Sunderland Echo

Station H plans revealed for former police building

BUSINESS AND CULTURE HUB PROPOSAL FOR GILBRIDGE HQ

- By Fiona Thompson fiona.thompson@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @fionathomp­sonjp

Plans to transform Sunderland’s former city centre police station into a £4million business and culture hub have taken the next step.

Charlie Hoult wants to turn the former Gilbridge Police Station, off St Mary’s Way, into Station H, which will feature office and space for events.

Sunderland City Council, which bought the building in 2016, has now submitted a change of use applicatio­n to its planners, setting out the proposals.

They include details of its “comprehens­ive refurbishm­ent” to set up work spaces and commercial and creative tenants, turning the empty four-storey building into a base for Sunderland’s “emerging Cultural Quarter”.

It notes its prominent gateway location in the city and how close it is to the neighbouri­ng magistrate­s’ court and Vaux site, nearby bars, Empire Theatre and Fire Station music and arts building, which will feature a 450-seat auditorium.

The applicatio­n sets out a flexible range of uses to maximise its potential from the start and also includes an applicatio­n so that a street vendor can trade in the rear yard, possibly once a week or for occasions. About 200 people could be based in the office space in Station H, which could be made even easier to reach under council plans to lengthen Garden Place, which runs between the Empire and the Dun Cow pub, to join up with Livingston­e Road.

Mr Hoult, who also runs Hoults Yard in Newcastle, said: “There’ll be some great spaces available, but our tenants will also have some fun too – at Hoults Yard we go far beyond being a business centre by creating a community vibe through Food Fridays, live music, live screenings, coffee mornings and charity fundraisin­g.

“We’re looking to complement what’s already on offer in Sunderland and have been impressed by Sunderland City Council’s readiness to do business.

“We’ll be welcoming a wide range of tenants to Station H and have already started giving tours to prospectiv­e clients.

The applicatio­n says: “This approach also addresses the Minster Quarter Masterplan’s aspiration to deliver a mix of uses across the area, which will facilitate the area’s growth as a destinatio­n for creative and cultural activity, generate footfall and grow the evening economy.”

It adds no external changes are proposed to the building, which was built in 1972, and the applicatio­n will not harm the listed buildings nearby or the conservati­on area.

The name Station H comes from a coded police reference from when officers signed off for home.

Anyone interested in signing up for a space in the building can email charlie. hoult@houltsyard.co.uk.

 ??  ?? Charlie Hoult outside the former Gilbridge Police Station.
Charlie Hoult outside the former Gilbridge Police Station.

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