Expanding corporate recovery firm moves to new Holborn base
Corporate recovery and business advisory firm Quantuma has relocated its London team for the third time in less than four years following growth in the capital.
The company moved to a 2,558 sq ft space at High Holborn House, having outgrown its former base at Vernon House on nearby Sicilian Avenue.
Since January last year, Quantuma’s team in the city has increased from two appointment takers to six and 13 staff to 21.
Among the firm’s appointments last year was new head of London Andrew Hosking.
Andrew said: “Our expansion in London has been driven by the growing role of our London office as the hub for larger, complex cases and our ability to add talent to our growing team.”
Carl Jackson, managing partner at Quantuma, commented: “Our growth is the result of a number of factors.
“The high calibre of partners and senior managers we have recruited, our independence and our increasing ability to attract quality staff to handle our growing caseload.”
Quantuma was founded in 2013 has since expanded from one office, based in Southampton, to a network of eight spanning London, Watford, Manchester, Birmingham, Marlow, Brighton and Bristol.
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.
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our popular morning London email for free.
Improving North East transport will improve lives
Unlocking investment potential before year end
Give us certainty to deliver better homes
Hormuz: Safe passage - not insurance - the issue
Don't get caught out by employment law change
When literacy thrives, our businesses thrive too
Building a more diverse construction sector
The value of using data like a Premier League club
Raising the bar to boost North East growth
Navigating the messy middle of business growth
We must make it easier to hire young people
Why community-based care is key to NHS' future