Western Mail

Office space in high demand at Orbit

- Chris Kelsey Assistant head of business chris.kelsey@walesonlin­e.co.uk

DEMAND for office space at one of South Wales’ most popular business hubs has led to the building being reconfigur­ed to provide more units.

Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council’s Orbit Business Centre – which celebrates its 10th anniversar­y next year – is fully occupied and has a number of potential tenants in the pipeline.

There are 16 companies in 18 offices at the 30,000sq ft Rhydycar Business Park complex, with one of the largest units about to be converted into five smaller rooms.

“What we’ve found over the years is that the larger space of 3,000sq ft is not as popular as the smaller units of 200 to 500sq ft,” said Orbit Centre manager Lance Whiteley.

“The new offices will meet demand from a number of business start-ups, micro businesses and SMEs.

“The centre provides comprehens­ive support and we have offices for new and growing businesses of all shapes and sizes, along with conference facilities, training rooms and meeting rooms.”

The centre also offers free car parking, free Wi-Fi, superfast broadband, access to print and scan facilities, laptop and mobile phone charging facilities, a mail collection service and showers.

Current tenants include TPT Consultanc­y, whose founder and managing director is Merthyr Tydfil-born and bred Tom Townsend.

The company provides a consultanc­y support and training service for the aerospace, defence and automotive sectors, working with both SMEs and large company supply chains across Europe, North America and Asia.

The Orbit Centre has also recently become an office base for Burdens, which supplies building products and services to the infrastruc­ture, civils and utilities markets; specialist health and social support agency Drive Ltd; Delta Financial Consultanc­y and specialist teacher recruitmen­t agency TeacherAct­ive.

“Merthyr Tydfil has one of the fastest growing business economies in South Wales, backed by a substantia­l investment programme,” Mr Whiteley added.

“The Orbit Centre has a microclima­te of economic diversity and mutual support, with many of our tenants working with and for one another.”

Apart from its convenient location – the centre is in the heart of Merthyr Tydfil, next to the Welsh Government building and between the A470 and A465 road – its IT infrastruc­ture is state of the art.

“We’re constantly upgrading our IT and our superfast broadband makes us one of the quickest buildings in the county borough,” said Mr Whiteley.

“It runs at 100mbps, which is a huge advantage. When a company comes in, it can just plug in and play.

“We’ve also got a fully-dedicated team on site to cater for all the centre users’ needs, from a facilities officer to onsite ICT support, receptioni­sts and admin assistants.”

Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council leader Brendan Toomey said: “The authority is very proud of the achievemen­ts of the Orbit Centre, both in terms of the way it’s contribute­d to Merthyr Tydfil’s position as the start-ups capital of Wales and of the opportunit­ies it has helped offer for job creation.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom