Further work planned for rugby league birthplace

Lyra AuldLocal Democracy Reporting Service
News imageBBC Shot from the pavement outside the George Hotel. It's a large stone building with numerous windows. Taken on a blue-sky day.BBC
The George Hotel in Huddersfield has been vacant since 2013

Further renovation work will take place at a Huddersfield hotel, seen as the birthplace of rugby league in 1895.

The Grade II* listed George Hotel has been vacant since 2013 and was bought by Kirklees Council in 2020, with the aim of refurbishing the building as part of a plan to transform the town centre.

In May last year, updated proposals were submitted to Kirklees Council, including an increase in the number of rooms from 91 to 108.

Plans have now been submitted for a detailed ground investigation to show the building is safe and stable, before the partial demolition and extension of the hotel takes place.

News imageKirklees Council Artist's sketch of the new extension and part demolition of the George Hotel. The street-facing part of the building remains the same while a new modern upper deck can be seen to the side of the building.Kirklees Council
International hotelier Radisson will move into the property once renovated

The George Hotel, built in 1851, was where representatives from 21 northern rugby clubs held a meeting on 29 August 1895.

It was there they voted to leave the Rugby Football Union to set up the Northern Union - renamed the Rugby Football League in 1922.

The hotel, which looks out onto the nearby Huddersfield Station, was once earmarked to become a national rugby league museum.

The latest application is part of an ongoing project to revamp the hotel into a 108-bedroom venue featuring a new bar, restaurant and gym run by international hotelier Radisson, according to the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

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