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Willmott Dixon has several business streams including construction, residential construction and interior fit out and refurbishment. [34] In 2017, it sold a 70% stake in its London-based residential development business Be Living to Malaysia's EcoWorld International, creating EcoWorld London.
Renovation of the site is being carried out by Willmott Dixon Interiors and is estimated to take around three years to complete, and initial plans suggest that events could be held on the site before the project is complete. [14] A fund of £17million has been set aside for the work, which commenced in May 2020. [15]
Elstree Screen Arts Academy offers full-time technically orientated courses to 600 students aged 14–19. A range of courses have a focus on technical skills, trades, crafts and technologies that support the entertainment, film, television, theatre, visual arts and digital communication industries.
The building work was carried out by Hertfordshire-based Willmott Dixon. It features a three-floor academic library, archive, dance studios and a studio theatre. It incorporates a covered internal courtyard, two cafes and external balconies and walkways culminating in a rooftop garden with views across Kingston upon Thames and the River Thames.
The interior and exterior of the pub was used as a location in the 2005 film Green Street and is ... a partner of Community Stadium developers Willmott Dixon. [10 ...
A major refurbishment of the Charles Street building, carried out by Willmott Dixon at a cost of £14 million to a design by Franklin Ellis Architects, was completed in 2014. [11] [12] This enabled Leicester City Council to move the council officers and their departments back into the building in Charles Street, which was then renamed City Hall.
A change of contractor (BAM was replaced by Willmott Dixon) then delayed consolidation of the Department for Education to autumn 2018. [23] In 2021, the building became the home of the Department for International Trade. [24]
Work began in 2019, carried out by Willmott Dixon, with completion set for 2023. [30] [31] The hall closed in 2018 for safety and refurbishment work, due to be completed in 2020 at a cost of £48 million. [32] [33] Because of significant unforeseen structural and heritage issues the works were extended.