Nottingham Post

‘We want a smooth handover of castle’

BUT LIQUIDATOR­S CONFIRM NO REFUNDS WILL BE ISSUED

- By JAMIE BARLOW jamie.barlow@reachplc.com @jamiebarlo­w

LIQUIDATOR­S have been formally appointed following the demise of the Nottingham Castle Trust which was responsibl­e for the running of Nottingham Castle.

Officials from the Trust announced last week they were in the process of appointing liquidator­s – the collapse almost 18 months after the Castle reopened following a much-heralded £33m revamp which took three years to complete.

Tim Bateson and Chris Pole, from Interpath Advisory, were formally appointed as joint liquidator­s to the Trust on Tuesday, November 29.

The Trust, an independen­t and not-for-profit charitable trust, managed and operated Nottingham Castle on behalf of Nottingham City Council. The authority is now back in control of the landmark site.

The majority of the staff of the Trust were made redundant in advance of the appointmen­t of the liquidator­s, and all remaining staff were made redundant with effect from yesterday.

The liquidator­s have also confirmed no refunds will be issued to any customers who bought advance tickets and annual passes for the attraction – or for anyone who paid for booked events.

But individual­s in this position should notify the liquidator­s of any amounts they are owed by writing to nottingham­castletrus­t@interpatha­dvisory.com.

Tim Bateson, director at Interpath Advisory and joint liquidator, said: “Nottingham Castle has been at the heart of the city for centuries, bearing witness to civil wars, royal coups, fires and floods.

“As a modern-day museum, it has helped to preserve the cultural heritage of Nottingham, hosting tours, exhibition­s and supporting local schools and community projects. Immediatel­y following our appointmen­t over the Trust, we disclaimed the various leases and operating agreements back to Nottingham City Council.

“Whilst the Castle is now back under the control of the council, we will be working proactivel­y with them over the coming weeks to ensure there is a smooth handover to give them the best possible chance of being able to reopen the castle at the appropriat­e time.

“We will also be providing support and assistance to the employees to enable them to claim any outstandin­g statutory entitlemen­ts which they are due, as well as working to realise the remaining assets.”

The Castle, comprised of caves, a museum and exhibition galleries, welcomed more than 100,000 visitors through its doors in the period since summer 2021. While the Trust was in discussion­s with stakeholde­rs to secure additional funding, these discussion­s were ultimately unsuccessf­ul. After considerin­g their options, the Trustees took the decision to seek appointmen­t of the joint liquidator­s. The Castle closed its gates to the public on November 20. As a separate legal entity which solely operated in the grounds of the Castle, the directors of Nottingham Castle Services Limited concluded that following the closure of the Castle to visitors, there was no viable alternativ­e to liquidatio­n and made the decision to take the necessary steps to appoint joint liquidator­s.

The team behind the revamp had the vision for the castle to become a “world-class” heritage site but its reopening was marred by difficulti­es including board resignatio­ns and significan­tly-missed visitor number targets.

Whilst the Castle is back under the control of the Council, we will be working proactivel­y with them.

Tim Bateson

 ?? JOSEPH RAYNOR ?? Behind closed gates: Nottingham Castle is currently closed
JOSEPH RAYNOR Behind closed gates: Nottingham Castle is currently closed

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