Sat Jul 04, 2020 9:32 pm
Actually, there were other, more reliable (I know that's a relative concept in property development) developers who came and looked at the place but they were honest upfront about wanting grants to help them renovate - and frankly that would have been less expensive in the long run. Kenwright and his room-selling scheme were dodgy as hell but the Council officers loved him. I do understand that the Council wanted a least cost option to keep it standing, but why didn't they push Kenwright to keep the promises he made to them about things like securing the roof first? Still, on the bright side, at least this hotel hasn't burnt down like the one in Belfast.
Also, this may be a daft question, but if (as Simon says above) the Council didn't own the building, how did they manage to sell it to Kenwright in the first place?