Help Sitemap Home Skip Navigation Contact Us Disability Statement


Premium Article !

Your account has been frozen. For your available options click the below button.

Options

Premium Article !

To read this article in full you must have registered and have a Premium Content Subscription with the Peterborough ET site.

Subscribe

Registered Article !

To read this article in full you must be registered with the site.

Boizot vows to save Great Northern



Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image
Click on thumbnail to view image

Published Date: 08 January 2008
Email Jonny Muir

THE man who returned the Great Northern Hotel to the splendour of its Victorian heyday today pledged the building would only be demolished "over his dead body".
The Great Northern Hotel – which has stood opposite Peterborough railway station since 1849 – has been earmarked for demolition as part of multi-million pound plans to regenerate the area.

What do you think about the plans?
Comment below, email us: news@peterboroughtoday.co.uk or telephone the newsdesk 01733 555111.
Do you have memories of the Great Northern Hotel? E-mail hannah.gray@peterboroughtoday.co.uk, or call her on 01733 588726.

The proposal is made in a Station Quarter Development Brief, which sets out a future vision of the train station and the surrounding area.

The brief suggests the Great Northern Hotel – owned by Pizza Express founder Peter Boizot – "would need to be removed to create sufficient space on the city side of the station".

Today, Mr Boizot, who has spent "millions of pounds" on renovating the hotel in the last 14 years, said: "I realise some fool could come along and demolish it, but it will be over my dead body.

"As far as I am concerned, the entrance to the station will be moved 200 yards north and the hotel will stay. I will not allow it to be demolished and will fight any proposal tooth and nail.

"I hope it remains in Peterborough for a long time, even after I am gone."

Mr Boizot's rallying call has been backed by Peterborough Civic Society – a group campaigning to preserve the city's heritage – Peterborough MP Stewart Jackson and the city's longest serving councillor Charles Swift, who are jointly calling for the historic hotel to be incorporated into the Station Quarter project.

However, Steve Compton, the acting chief executive of Opportunity Peterborough – the body charged with driving forward the city's growth – said demolition of the building was "not set in stone".

Mr Compton said: "The development brief assumes that the Great Northern Hotel would go. We need to determine whether that is the right course of action.

"We need to work out if we can build a world-class station with the hotel still in situ."

But, Mr Jackson said: "The Great Northern Hotel is part of Peterborough's heritage as a railway town. There is no way anyone can come along with a ball and chain and destroy the hotel, just to put up an office block in its place.

"Network Rail, National Express East Coast and Opportunity Peterborough need to think before they propose demolition of any buildings, especially ones with architectural merit."

In 2006, Peterborough Civic Society tried – and failed – to get the Great Northern Hotel listed building status, which would have protected it against development.

While the group is not opposed to the demolition of the '70s extension at the rear of the hotel, it wants the Victorian part of the building incorporated into the future development of the area.

Continued on next page

The full article contains 506 words and appears in Peterborough ET newspaper.
Page 1 of 2

  • Last Updated: 08 January 2008 12:00 PM
  • Source: Peterborough ET
  • Location: Peterborough
 
Prev
1
2
1

woodcote,

Werrington 08/01/2008 12:13:57
Now why demolish a perfectly good hotel, opposite a railway station? Peterborough was a railway town and it's heritage should be valued. If it is to be demolished what will go there-a taxi rank?I am not sure that the people who produce these ideas live in Peterborough. Maybe they come go back home to Cambridge or Stamford each day?
2

TravDav,

Thorney 08/01/2008 12:15:32
Come out and shout, there are wreckers about.
3

waynesill,

08/01/2008 12:16:22
The developers should think again, this city has lost too much of it's heritage already and is starting to look like lego land. Peterborough will just be another bland city with no character, whatever next the "Golden Arches" swinging from the Cathedral's West Front
4

nnooop,

Dogsthorpe 08/01/2008 12:56:17
Too much of the city's heritage has already been lost with the building of the Queensgate centre. Does anybody also remember the old gothic lodge that was demolished to build the Thomas Cook sportsd centre at Thorpe wood. What will be next - Longthorpe Tower or the Cathedral?
5

The Chief,

The Boro 08/01/2008 17:31:49
I remember hearing that the Pigeon Detectives got absolutely blind drunk there before their first Peterborough gig in 2006 - sure they'll be sad to see it go!
6

Joff,

08/01/2008 20:45:21
To lose the Great Northern hotel would be a bloody shame but there really isn't the space needed on the current site of the station to redevelop that quarter. Maybe the entire station could be relocated?
7

Joff,

08/01/2008 20:45:29
To lose the Great Northern hotel would be a bloody shame but there really isn't the space needed on the current site of the station to redevelop that quarter. Maybe the entire station could be relocated?
8

jimmyjenk1,

longthorpe 08/01/2008 22:44:33
ludicrous to even contemplate knocking down another pboro landmark knock the sorting office down there will be plenty of room
9

Ratiocinator,

Werrington 09/01/2008 08:53:10
Peter Boizot; proof, if it were needed, that the insanely rich totally lack imagination and original creativity.
10

,

09/01/2008 10:01:49
Comment Reported Unsuitable By User
Prev
1
2

 

Comment on this Story

 

In order to post comments you must Register or Sign In

 
 
 
  

 
 


Sister Newspapers:
Press Complaints Commission

This website and its associated newspaper adheres to the Press Complaints Commission’s Code of Practice. If you have a complaint about editorial content which relates to inaccuracy or intrusion, then contact the Editor by clicking here.

If you remain dissatisfied with the response provided then you can contact the PCC by clicking here.