August 6, 2018 10.58 am This story is over 67 months old

Council invests £5.5m in gym and lingerie factory

Don’t get your knickers in a twist

Don’t get your knickers in a twist, but West Lindsey District Council have invested £5.5 million in two new properties currently housing a gym and a lingerie factory.

The purchases, completed last week, were for two freehold properties in Sheffield, and will see the council collect the rent from individual businesses:

  • The first, on Penistone Road, is currently occupied by Better Gym. It was bought for £2.455 million, with a rent of £164,000-a-year.
  • The second, a unit on Drake House Crescent, is currently leased by Panache Lingerie. This once set the council back £3 million, while the rent will be £275,000-a-year.

The move follows last year’s purchase of a £2.35 million Travelodge hotel in Keighley, West Yorkshire. That property currently brings the council a rent of £159,430-a-year.

The £2.545 million building which is currently rented by Better Gym.

WLDC councillor Giles McNeill, chairman of the Governance & Audit Committee, took to Twitter to say he was ‘pleased’ to see the additions to the council’s portfolio.

He added: “We’ve made investments of just shy of £8m and are generating a return of £598k p.a. (7.58%) far better than the return of 0.43% we were earning on our investments in 2012!”

The council has put aside £30 million to build an investment portfolio, which it says is part of a financial plan to combat the future loss of Government money.

WLDC councillor Giles McNeill, chairman of the Governance & Audit Committee, took to Twitter to say he was ‘pleased’ to see the additions to the council’s portfolio.

He added: “We’ve made investments of just shy of £8 million and are generating a return of £598,000 p.a. (7.58%) far better than the return of 0.43% we were earning on our investments in 2012!”

Alan Robinson, Strategic Lead for People and Governance said the potential income from rent and future resale ‘will enable further investment in West Lindsey to support services, economic regeneration and growth’.

He said: “This income is vital in providing much-needed revenue for the council, supporting the continued provision of services in West Lindsey.”

He moved to reassure that the council follows a ‘stringent set of guiding principles’ when it invests, including a 14-point scoring criteria looking at factors such as the condition of the property, tenant financial standings, yield return and proximity to the district.

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