Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

Asian firm acquires Kings Court Hotel for £2.75m

Nanak Hotels is led by British Indians Harpreet Singh Saluja and Karamvir Singh.

Asian firm acquires Kings Court Hotel for £2.75m

UK-based Nanak Hotels acquired the 60-room Kings Court Hotel in Warwickshire for £2.75 million. (Photo: Colliers International UK)

UK-BASED Nanak Hotels recently acquired the 60-room Kings Court Hotel, a 17th-century property in Warwickshire, England, for £2.75 million. This is the first regional acquisition by the privately held firm led by British Indians Harpreet Singh Saluja and Karamvir Singh.

Nanak Hotels, which operates a UK property portfolio, plans to invest in the property's refurbishment and repositioning, according to a statement from Colliers International UK, which brokered the transaction.


“We’re excited to bring Kings Court Hotel into our portfolio as our first Warwickshire acquisition,” said Saluja. “It has a solid foundation and loyal customer base. We see potential to develop the hotel while preserving its heritage.”

The West Midlands hotel, on a 4.2-acre site between Alcester and Redditch, began as a 17th-century farmhouse and now operates as a hospitality business with public areas, event and conference facilities and wedding capacity for up to 130 guests.

The hotel’s previous owner said Kings Court had been central to their work for over 30 years.

“It’s been a privilege to grow it into what it is today,” the owner said. “As we retire, we’re pleased to see it pass to a new owner who shares our commitment to hospitality and has a vision for its future.”

“The sale of Kings Court Hotel drew strong interest due to its size, location and trading performance,” said Josh Sullivan and Peter Brunt of Colliers International UK. “We’re pleased to have completed the transaction with Nanak Hotels and look forward to seeing how they develop the asset.”

In February, UK-based Shiva Hotels, led by founder and CEO Rishi Sachdev, secured $372m (£289m) to renovate The BoTree in Marylebone, London. Separately, Indian tech firm Oyo announced a $62m (£48m), three-year plan to expand its UK hotel portfolio by acquiring inventory and securing leasehold and management contracts, supporting 1,000 jobs.

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

 Ryanair

Ryanair has revised its family seating policy following scrutiny from the UK's competition watchdog

iStock

Families can now sit together for free under Ryanair's new seating policy

  • Ryanair has revised its family seating policy after the UK's competition watchdog opened an investigation.
  • Parents will now be able to access free seats at the rear of the aircraft instead of paying a mandatory reservation fee.
  • The airline says the change will not affect its overall revenue.

Ryanair family seating policy is changing after the airline came under scrutiny from the UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) over charges imposed on parents travelling with young children.

The budget airline said it will make free parent seats available at the rear of its aircraft for future bookings. The move follows a CMA investigation into whether Ryanair's previous family seating policy complied with consumer protection laws.

Keep ReadingShow less