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Caltongate's ex-owners in bid to buy back site

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Published Date: 26 May 2009
THE former owners of the Caltongate site in Edinburgh are to launch a bid to buy it back from administrators in a move that could revive the controversial £300 million development.
Former Mountgrange Capital directors Manish Chande and Martin Myers have raised £300 million and are keen to buy sites across the country where developers have gone bust.

It is understood that Caltongate, currently owned by Deloitte as Mountgrange Capital's administrator, is top of the list and the fund has launched "active inquiries" about a bid for the site.

However, Mr Chande and Mr Myers are believed to be growing increasingly frustrated by the delays they have faced in making their vision a reality.

Deloitte is not currently marketing the Old Town site because of concerns that it would not get the right value in the current depressed market.

If Mr Chande and Mr Myers regained control of the key Old Town site it is almost certain the development would progress in line with the existing planning consent for a five-star hotel and shops, offices and homes.

The Mountgrange Real Estate Opportunity Fund has raised the £300 million from investors including oil-rich sovereign wealth funds, endowment and pension funds and rich individuals.





The full article contains 213 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
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1

Buttress,

26/05/2009 00:14:03
Oh dear - should have read the Sunday Herald before writing this rubbish!

This development cannot go ahead as the council owns still a large chunk of the land and buildings.

http://www.sundayherald.com/business/businessnews/display.var.2509980.0.breakdown_of_caltongate_marriage.php

"THE DEVELOPER behind the collapsed £300 million Caltongate project in Edinburgh has indicated for the first time that it will not attempt to revive the project.

Manish Chande, co-owner of Mountgrange Capital, which was forced into administration by its banker Lloyds in March, told the Sunday Herald he was "close to divorce" from the project, expressing impatience with the planning delays and heritage objections that have dogged the four-year project.

Chande's decision to draw a line under Mountgrange's involvement in Caltongate comes as administrator Deloitte said it had held talks with other potential developers and that a deal could be "months if not weeks" away. This runs contrary to reports that Lloyds was leaning on the administrator to mothball the site until the commercial property market picked up in value..."





 

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Today's Vote

Should the Old Town’s Caltongate development be revived in its original form?
Yes, it was an innovative and stylish proposal
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