Pictured above: Jamie Gordon
Leading law firm Geldards is celebrating after scooping the
Property Law Firm of the Year 2010 prize at the East Midlands
Property Dinner, organised by the Midlands Business
Insider.
Jamie Gordon, head of the 18-strong property legal team at
Geldards' Nottingham office, received the award on behalf of the
firm which was praised for advising on more than £120 million
of property transactions in the East Midlands from its Nottingham
and Derby offices.
Mr Gordon said: "Geldards has had a fantastic year and this
award is testament to our hardworking team. We have advised on a
number of major property transactions this year - and this activity
at Geldards has attracted a number of ambitious new lawyers to join
the firm.
"There is a real buzz of excitement and activity around Geldards
at the moment because of the high calibre of work we are attracting
and because of the experienced team who work here. The hard work
has paid off in that we have assisted high profile clients - and
have won this esteemed award on the back of that."
Geldards won the award for their involvement in three impressive
Midlands developments including the Speedo HQ and the new E.on
building in Nottingham.
There was praise for Geldards for its advice to developer Miller
Birch Limited on the move of E.on, one of Nottinghamshire's largest
employers. E.on has agreed to take a lease on a 105,000 sq ft
nine-storey building at the Guildhall site on the corner of Burton
and North Church streets in Nottingham.
The building, which will complete in 2012, incorporates
sustainable design principles, energy efficiency and green
technology to BREEAM's rating of "excellent."
A second deal saw Geldards advise the developer on all aspects
of the construction of a new purpose-built global headquarters for
letting to international brand Speedo at NG2 Nottingham Business
Park.
In a third impressive deal, Geldards advised on the purchase of
460,000 sq ft distribution centre in Centrum 100 Business Park in
Burton-on-Trent. Reported in the property press as being "the
largest occupational deal in the Midlands in the last three years,"
it was a highly complex deal the details of which - including
price and parties - are subject to a confidentiality
agreement.