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Birmingham Post
Birmingham Post
Business
Tom Houghton

Elevator Studios sold as CERT property takes on Liverpool's largest creative hub

Liverpool's largest creative hub has been acquired by growing North West developer CERT property.

Grade II-listed Elevator Studios is a 90,000sq ft collection of four warehouses in the heart of the Baltic Triangle, and has now been sold by brothers Tim and Paul Speed, who acquired it in 2007.

The 200-year-old building is now home to dozens of music production, art, tech, games and marketing companies, and is fully tenanted.

The deal was for an undisclosed sum.

Tim Speed at Elevator Studios (Liverpool Echo/Colin Lane)

Tim said: “The original plan was to take these buildings that were once filled with goods from the port, and to fill them with businesses and companies with fantastic ideas.

"It's been great to have played a small part in the regeneration and reinvention of the City of Liverpool and in particular the Baltic Triangle in recent years.

"These buildings can never really be owned by anyone, they can only be looked after, and we wish Cert Property and their partners great success as the new custodians of the Parliament Street Warehouses.”

The former warehouse building was originally used to store cargo such as cotton, spices and coffee during the industrial revolution, and was one of the first buildings to form what is now Liverpool’s creative hub in the Baltic Triangle area.

The workspaces look to embrace the building’s original fabric, with exposed brickwork, beams and cast iron, making the building one of Liverpool’s most interesting commercial spaces.

Howard Lord, managing director of CERT property, said: "Elevator Studios is a perfect fit for our philosophy of investing in not just commercial spaces but communities.

"The building has already got an amazing energy and an established community of creative businesses based there who have grown from start-ups to mature businesses and we are looking to help support them with their future ambitions for growth with our plans for Elevator.

"We are already seeing our tenants talk to us about what will be a more physical experience-led environment to attract and retain talent.

"We plan to work with current tenants to make the building an even better place to work & create.”

The purchase comes just a few months after CERT completed the acquisition of the collection 91 and 105 Duke Street, now newly named 'Duke & Parr'', the latter of which is Liverpool’s grade two-listed former public library, from shipping company Bibby Line Group.

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