New Nottinghamshire County Council headquarters takes shape after weather delays

Work on Nottinghamshire County Council’s new £18m offices near Hucknall is getting back on track after a wet start to the year slowed progress.

The building at Top Wighay will replace the ageing County Hall in West Bridgford by early 2025, potentially saving £1.5m each year in running costs.

Construction began in January, but was delayed by one of the wettest springs on record.

Councillor Keith Girling at site of Nottinghamshire County Council\'s new offices

The building’s skeleton has now been put up, and the council is hoping it will officially be opened by March 2025.

Keith Girling, the cabinet member for economic development and asset management, said he was pleased with the progress as he visited the site on Friday (May 24).

“It is going well. I am always trying to push things forward – perhaps unrealistically – but the end date is on schedule despite bad weather at the start of the year,” he said.

“County Hall is a beautiful old building, but it’s costing us £1.7m a year to run, and that’s £1.7m that can be put into services. The running cost here will be a lot less.

“All the decisions made will be made in the middle of the county, and social services will be delivered from here, with Mansfield, Ashfield and Hucknall just up the road.”

The new offices for Nottinghamshire County Council under construction at Top Wighay
The new offices for Nottinghamshire County Council under construction at Top Wighay

Luke Melville, assistant site manager, said: “It’s been challenging when there’s a lot of water on the ground and heavy machinery moving about.

“It should run smoother now work on the superstructure has started.”

Plans for the wider 86-acre site at Top Wighay include nearly 800 homes, a primary school, a shopping centre and 21 acres for businesses and offices.

The new offices for Nottinghamshire County Council under construction at Top Wighay

The current County Hall costs £1.7m to maintain each year, in addition to £30m expected essential maintenance over the next 12 years and £28m to bring it up to modern environmental standards.

Keith Girling said the public engagement over what to do with the building once the council had left produced “some really interesting decisions, from a women’s prison to rooms for the homeless to luxury hotels”.

The council will now speak to interested developers on their visions for the site.

The new council building is being designed, project and cost-managed by Arc Partnership, and delivered through their construction partner, Morgan Sindall Construction.