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Completed in the early nineteen seventies, this thirteen-storey high-rise building spans around seventy-one thousand seven hundred square feet of office space, plus ground-floor retail and leisure units—home to Forbidden Planet and The Brass Pig—and offers fifty-eight parking spaces

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00:00A major shake-up is underway in Clifton as Clifton Heights, one of Bristol's most recognisable
00:06modernist office towers, hits the market for the first time in over 20 years, asking price
00:13over £16 million. Completed in early 1970s, this 13-storey high-rise building spans around
00:2271,700 square feet of office space, plus ground-floor retail and leisure units, home to the Forbidden
00:31Planet and the Brass Pig, and offers 58 parking spaces. Currently, over 26,000 square feet
00:39is vacant, creating a blank canvas for developers. Its iconic status and panoramic views make
00:47it ripe for conversation into any one of these things, 119 apartments, 261 student studios
00:55or a 238-bed hotel, pending planning permission. Agents from Hartnell Taylor, Cook and Griffiths
01:02Eccles say that the timing is perfect. Bristol's booming economy, youthful population and evolving
01:08workspace demands making Clifton Heights as a standout redevelopment prospect. This sale
01:14reflects a wider wave across the city. Redevelopment projects like Cannon's House, a 200,000-square-foot
01:22Grade II listed office, being transformed into the city's largest sustainable Grade A workplace,
01:29are already in motion. At the same time, modern offices like One Redcliffe and EQ are trading
01:36at high yields via major investments outside of London. Clifton Heights is now on the market,
01:42drawing interest.

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