Hull's Cornmill Hotel set to reopen
The Cornmill Hotel started life in 1838 as an engine-house for the adjoining Holderness Corn Mill (now demolished). It is locally listed, and sits within the Holderness Road Conservation Area. After the mill closed, the building was converted to a hotel which closed in 2007.
In 2012 the building was put on the market and it was subsequently acquired by a developer who has brought the building back to life, creating a 19 room hotel and Italian restaurant. It is due to reopen shortly just in time to offer accommodation to the visitors to Hull during its year as UK City of Culture.
Photo: www.geograph.co.uk
LATEST CAMPAIGNS Building of the Month November 2024: Ivy Cottage, Kelvin Grove, Liverpool Ivy Cottage is a locally loved landmark building within the already famous ‘Welsh Streets’. Following SAVE’s major campaign in 2015 to revive the Welsh Streets, the streets were transferred to Manchester-based house builders, Placefirst, who have since undertaken the restoration of the neighbourhood with their heritage-led regeneration scheme. However, Ivy Cottage remains vacant and deteriorating having not yet joined the ranks of its surrounding neighbourhood as a restoration success.
PRESS RELEASE: SAVE renews objections to controversial plans for historic Whitechapel SAVE Britain’s Heritage has renewed strong objections to revised plans to flatten prominent historic buildings on Whitechapel High Street, and build a 17-storey tower block
LATEST EVENTS Canterbury calling - a SAVE walking tour with Amicia de Moubray Join SAVE Britain's Heritage and Amicia de Moubray for a walking tour of Canterbury during the Heritage EXPO 2024 . Learn about the city's history and the use of Mathematical Tiles in its buildings. We'll also visit the peaceful Franciscan Gardens, part of the first Franciscan settlement in England, established in 1224. This tour offers an informative look at Canterbury's architectural heritage and historic sites and it will take place in-between the free lectures offered during the Heritage EXPO.
Vanished London: how health has made and remade the city – SAVE talks by Dr Tom Bolton and Ross MacFarlane Dr Tom Bolton and Ross MacFarlane discuss how changing attitudes towards health have reshaped London, leading to the disappearance of entire neighbourhoods once deemed diseased. They explore the transformation of healthcare institutions and the evolution of health-related spaces.