New £200m property investment fund has a lust for leisure
POSTED 10 Aug 2015 . BY Jak Phillips
Otium Real Estate founder and CEO Ashley Blake (left), with finance director Pierre Hardy
A new £200m investment fund seeking opportunities to acquire leisure properties has completed its first three transactions and is on the hunt for further assets.
Property investment company Otium Real Estate raised £200m in December 2014 for its leisure-focused fund Otium Leisure Ventures, which seeks to add value through active asset management. Exclusively targeting leisure real estate – such as leisure parks, city centre leisure blocks and stand-alone assets including cinemas, restaurants, health clubs and bowling alleys – the acquisition of the first three assets totalled more than £30m.
The initial transactions include the Nuffield Health gym in Cannock for £4m, the Westgate Leisure Park in Wakefield for £12m and, most recently, the Newport Leisure Park at £14m. The Westgate Leisure Park and the Newport Leisure Park house a selection of well-known leisure brands such as Cineworld, Nandos, McDonalds, Harvester, Frankie & Bennys, Pizza Hut and Mecca. According to Otium, other deals are in the pipeline.
“We are delighted to have successfully acquired these three assets within seven months of our fund launch and achieved the creation of our first fund,” said Ashley Blake, CEO of Otium Real Estate.
“The leisure market is in great shape, with acquisition opportunities for those with specialist sector knowledge. Strong occupational demand and increasing consumer confidence are boosting leisure spending, making it an outperforming sector for property investment.”
Les Mills has launched a reformer Pilates workout. The 45-minute workout blends traditional
reformer movements and more contemporary exercises, choreographed to music.
According to research which tracked more than 147,000 people for 30 years, 90-120 minutes
of strength training a week may deliver some of the biggest long-term health rewards.
Panatta brought together four of the most influential figures in bodybuilding history on the
stage of RiminiWellness 2026: Phil Heath, Lee Haney, Ronnie Coleman and Hany Rambod. [more...]
New £200m property investment fund has a lust for leisure
POSTED 10 Aug 2015 . BY Jak Phillips
Otium Real Estate founder and CEO Ashley Blake (left), with finance director Pierre Hardy
A new £200m investment fund seeking opportunities to acquire leisure properties has completed its first three transactions and is on the hunt for further assets.
Property investment company Otium Real Estate raised £200m in December 2014 for its leisure-focused fund Otium Leisure Ventures, which seeks to add value through active asset management. Exclusively targeting leisure real estate – such as leisure parks, city centre leisure blocks and stand-alone assets including cinemas, restaurants, health clubs and bowling alleys – the acquisition of the first three assets totalled more than £30m.
The initial transactions include the Nuffield Health gym in Cannock for £4m, the Westgate Leisure Park in Wakefield for £12m and, most recently, the Newport Leisure Park at £14m. The Westgate Leisure Park and the Newport Leisure Park house a selection of well-known leisure brands such as Cineworld, Nandos, McDonalds, Harvester, Frankie & Bennys, Pizza Hut and Mecca. According to Otium, other deals are in the pipeline.
“We are delighted to have successfully acquired these three assets within seven months of our fund launch and achieved the creation of our first fund,” said Ashley Blake, CEO of Otium Real Estate.
“The leisure market is in great shape, with acquisition opportunities for those with specialist sector knowledge. Strong occupational demand and increasing consumer confidence are boosting leisure spending, making it an outperforming sector for property investment.”
Les Mills has launched a reformer Pilates workout. The 45-minute workout blends traditional
reformer movements and more contemporary exercises, choreographed to music.
According to research which tracked more than 147,000 people for 30 years, 90-120 minutes
of strength training a week may deliver some of the biggest long-term health rewards.
The UK's four Chief Medical Officers have published a refreshed edition of Physical activity
guidelines: UK Chief Medical Officers' report, updating the evidence that underpins the nation's
physical activity recommendations and placing greater emphasis on strength, balance, reducing
sedentary behaviour and, for the first time, supporting people taking weight loss medications.
Places Leisure has exchanged contracts to build and operate a flagship £60m water and leisure
destination on behalf of Basingstoke and Deane Borough Council.
Panatta brought together four of the most influential figures in bodybuilding history on the
stage of RiminiWellness 2026: Phil Heath, Lee Haney, Ronnie Coleman and Hany Rambod. [more...]