Pictured above: Carriage Court, Welbeck Estate
A 19th century heritage property in the East Midlands is being
transformed into 21st century cutting edge office space.
Work has begun on the redevelopment of Carriage Court - one of
the extraordinary model estate buildings built by the fifth and
sixth Dukes of Portland in around 1860 on the historic Welbeck
Estate in Nottinghamshire into unique office accommodation.
The redevelopment work, part of the Welbeck Estates Company
Limited's ambitious plans to find new uses for one of the most
important groups of heritage properties in the East Midlands, will
see the former carriage store transformed into high specification
offices.
The Estate is hoping that the building, which offers 9,222 sq ft
of net letting space as one or up to seven suites, will act as a
catalyst to attract key creative industries including digital
publishing, design, architecture, advertising, software and games
development to Welbeck.
Occupiers will benefit from state of the art office space and
facilities including broadband, in an outstanding environment of
historic listed buildings, well maintained open spaces, ample
parking and an inspiring mix of other occupiers form the exciting
Welbeck Project including the Harley Gallery, Welbeck Farm Shop,
the School of Artisan Food and the Welbeck Bakehouse, with more to
come.
Robin Brown, managing director at the Welbeck Estates Company
Limited, said: "The history of Welbeck over the centuries has been
one of evolution where each generation has adapted the Estate to
meet the demands of the future.
"We have recognised the need to improve the quality of life in
rural areas, to encourage diversification of the rural economy and
to create new educational and employment opportunities.
"Part of this initiative is to put the heart back into a village
of remarkable buildings by developing a mixed use community where
people may work, live, learn and create. The office space is an
important part of this wider plan for Welbeck."
The Welbeck project follows four pillars - rural
diversification, education, creative industries and the arts and
aims to deliver genuine social and economic benefits to the local
community and wider region.

The Harley Gallery is built on the site of the estate's
Victorian Gasworks while the Welbeck Farm Shop and the creation of
Stichelton cheese in 2006 has brought national and international
recognition. The School of Artisan Food offers courses in artisan
food production skills and processes and research centre. The
Welbeck Bakehouse, which opened last year, is already producing the
very best in artisan products.
Tim Bottrill, partner at Knight Frank's Sheffield office, which
is acting as agent for Carriage Court, said: "The redevelopment
project as a whole represents one of the largest and most important
rural heritage property redevelopment schemes undertaken in the UK
in recent years.
"The aim is to bring to life a community driven by creativity
based on the Welbeck Estate by finding new uses for the heritage
properties.
"These offices represent a slice of history being taken forward
and transformed through an exciting project. Whoever takes up this
space will not only take exceptional new accommodation but be a
part of an exciting phase in Welbeck's future history."
The Welbeck Estate covers more than 15,000 acres of rural North
Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. At its heart stands the historic
Welbeck Abbey and Welbeck Village, the site of the Welbeck
Project.
Welbeck is midway between Sheffield and Nottingham on the A60.
It is located seven miles from the junction 30 of the M1 and ten
miles from the A1.