Manchester City Council appoints Lambert Smith Hampton to valuation and property services framework
National commercial property consultancy, Lambert Smith Hampton (LSH) has been appointed to Manchester City Council’s valuation and property services framework for a period of 4 years.
The framework will be used by the Council to appoint property consultants to assist them in the delivery of key projects in the City.
Following a competitive process, the public sector team at LSH has been selected to advise the council in a range of specialist services.
The new framework extends to commercial valuations, landlord and tenant advice, property advice and acquisition and disposals.
The appointment follows a number of previous advisory projects for the council, including West Gorton local centre, Holt Town regeneration area and a Newton Heath development site.
These projects saw LSH provide valuation and agency services to support ongoing regeneration schemes in the different boroughs.
Richard Platt, northern head of public sector services at LSH, said: “LSH understands Manchester City Council’s specific requirements having had extensive experience in working on similar projects in the past.
“Our involvement with the Council this time will allow us to help shape the next chapter of projects and further develop a successful working relationship with Manchester City Council.”
Want your business, product or service to be seen regionally and nationally? Bdaily helps you get your story in front of the right audience, every day. Find out how Bdaily can help →
Join more than 55,000 subscribers by signing up to our daily bulletin each morning here.
There is no perfect time when selling a business
What next when social media career help goes?
The psychological contract that nobody signs
Time for strategy built on the foundational economy
Why being ‘work-ready’ matters more than ever
The North's future doesn't end at Manchester
Exit or legacy? Why every owner needs a plan
Who speaks up for SMEs when giants get bigger?
The true value of HR in an AI-driven working world
What new business rates guidance means for pubs
Business success starts with people investment
It's time to confront the digital poverty crisis