£600,000 spend on new harbour office criticised at People's Meeting
Posted Mon 17th December 2012 at 11:38
Plans for a 36 unit development on the Grand Hotel Site have been passed by the Building Development and Control Committee.
The mixed social housing and private development consists of nine two bed flats and four terraced properties built for Alderney Housing Association. After completion 23 luxury houses and flat will be built for the private market. Both parts of the development will share the same access road. They are being built by Grand Hotel Developments, the company that owns the Butes' Grand Hotel site.
Later this month the States due to vote on a grant of £296,000 to the AHA towards funding of the project, estimated at £1,465,246. Previously the States had earmarked well over £600,000 from its 2013 budget to give to the AHA for housing. But the AHA has secured private loans and partial ownership sales receipts to pay for the bulk of the project. "The States don't fund us 100 per cent which means we can go out and get external funding," said AHA manager John Weir.
Grand Hotel Developments director Paul Venton said he was 'over the moon' that the first phase of the project, the social housing element, could now go ahead. He said they hoped to start work in March.
"The project will benefit local residents and new residents moving to the island," he said. Tickled Pink, he said, were one of the local builders contracted for the work. "It also will be a boost to the island's economy, and in particular the construction industry. It has been my aim all along to work with local contractors. I am looking forward to getting started on the site," he added.
The Guernsey Bereavement Service has made three visits to Alderney over the past few months and would like to continue to help you. We are visiting the island again on
Tuesday, 23rd February 2024 and would invite anyone who feels they would like Bereavement Counselling to telephone the Bereavement Service Office on 257778 to make a time to meet one of our counsellors.
Tue 21st July 2026 Free entry, retiring collection for ABO. Pete Ellis escaped office life in 2000 to take up a life in the outdoors. Soon becoming an International Mountain Leader, he led trekking holidays in the UK, Europe and further afield for the next 20 years. During this time, he also indulged his passion for climbing mountains, which included, in 2012, Mount Everest. This completed the Seven Continental Summits (the highest points of all seven continents), an achievement accomplished by a select group of about 400 people.
This talk is about the final, Everest, stage of The Seven Summits. The climb was from the north, through Tibet, the route originally visited by Mallory and Irvine in the 1920s. It will be a personal tale of the trip, illustrated with many photographs.
, Island Hall, 19:00