A leading national rehabilitation cost consultancy has rented a suite of offices at a Salisbury business centre for its headquarters.
Property consultancy Myddelton & Major successfully agreed a new 10-years lease with Jacqueline Webb & Company on behalf of the landlord.
The well-established company has taken units 18 to 22 at the Barnack Business Centre in Blakey Road, on the south west edge of Salisbury city centre, at an asking rent of £28,440 per annum.
Founded in 1985, Jacqueline Webb & Company produce nearly 1,000 reports annually for personal injury and clinical negligence claims.
The company moves into the Barnack Business Centre as it continues to expand.
Dean Speer, a partner at Myddelton & Major, said: “Jacqueline Webb & Company rent these premises as we see demand continue to grow for quality office space in the Salisbury area.
“They are a leading national company in their field, and another high-calibre tenant to take space through Myddelton & Major recently.
“It demonstrates the growing increase in confidence in the economic recovery as well as Salisbury’s continued success as a vibrant location for businesses of all types and kinds.”
Myddelton & Major has also successfully introduced a new tenant to Dean Hill Park on the Wiltshire-Hampshire border.
Acting on behalf of the landlord, partner Dean Speer introduced the company to a workshop and offices at Unit 13 in a building known as The Old Library.
He said: “The Old Library is part of a new redevelopment of former MoD buildings at Dean Hill Park to provide workshop, warehouse and office space.
“A varied mix of businesses are already trading successfully from the site.
“The new tenants are sure to be joined by many more new and expanding businesses as the site’s reputation grows.”
A new seven-year new full repairing and insuring lease for the 2,556 sq ft (237.45 sq m) premises was agreed.
Dean Hill Park was built as a Royal Naval armaments depot in 1938 as a store for heavy weapons for the fleet at Portsmouth.
It closed in 2004 and most of the site was sold by the MoD to Harving Ltd, a company that specialises in bringing redundant rural buildings into use to help generate employment in the countryside.
The site has parkland, fields and conservation areas, including an area designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.