The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Flats plan for £1.5m former Petrofac HQ

- ALASTAIR GOSSIP

An empty Aberdeen office building – recently valued at £1.5 million – could be partially demolished to make way for flats.

Quattro House, in the south of the city, has lain empty since Petrofac vacated the premises in summer 2015 – with the energy services firm later paying a reported £5.5m to escape the remaining five-year lease in 2019.

Having been on the market as offices since 2016, the owners have concluded “no serious interest” over the last five years “demonstrat­es no demand for the site in its current form”.

Faro Capital has now indicated it wants to knock down the southern wing and part of the main building of the Altens office complex to build around 90 apartments.

The real estate investment firm, through consultant­s Halliday Fraser Munro, has lodged a proposal of applicatio­n notice (POAN) with Aberdeen City Council.

These are the latest in the ever-growing list of plans to convert former Aberdeen commercial headquarte­rs to adapt to diminished demand from the oil and gas industry.

Similar proposals were recently revealed for Atholl House in Guild Street and Alba Gate in Dyce.

Chartered surveyors AB Robb recently estimated there was a five-and-a-halfyear supply of office space in Aberdeen, which was making the empty blocks “financiall­y unviable” when paired with the “exorbitant” costs – including business rates – of keeping them.

Quattro House is still listed for sale at £1.5m with commercial estate agents Knight Frank, marketing the two-storey Wellington Circle offices as 44,425sq ft of space.

Its south wing is approximat­ely 9,000sq ft.

Halliday Fraser Munro senior planning consultant, Julie Robertson, said: “It is proposed to replace the southern wing with new-build residentia­l apartments.

“For the main building, it is proposed to repurpose and convert it to residentia­l apartments, including additional upper storeys.

“Overall, the proposed developmen­t will have a smaller footprint and therefore there is opportunit­y to provide high-quality outdoor amenity space for residents.

“It would be considered to be a sustainabl­e reuse of a redundant building, through repurposin­g of the majority of the existing buildings rather than complete demolition and rebuild.”

Vehicle access to the new developmen­t would continue to come from Wellington Circle, with a pedestrian route added from Wellington Road.

A POAN is a requiremen­t ahead of submitting formal plans for developmen­ts of more than 50 homes and is a chance for developers to consult the public before finalising proposals.

Views will be taken late next month or in April through an online public exhibition, with local councillor­s and residents to be informed.

 ??  ?? EMPTY: Quattro House on Wellington Circle in Aberdeen. Picture by Chris Sumner.
EMPTY: Quattro House on Wellington Circle in Aberdeen. Picture by Chris Sumner.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom