Plans submitted for £15m housing development at former Silsden school sites
Lincolnshire neurodiversity assessment provider acquired
Keys Group, a provider of specialist education and care services, has acquired ADHD 360, a Lincolnshire-based private healthcare provider specialising in neurodiversity assessments, diagnosis and treatment.
The acquisition enables Halesowen-based Keys Group to expand and diversify the specialist support it offers to children and adults across the UK. ADHD 360 delivers services for both privately and NHS-funded clients, supporting individuals with ADHD, autism and other neurodiverse conditions.
David Manson, CEO of Keys Group, said: “As waiting times for ADHD and neurodiversity diagnoses continue to grow, ADHD 360 offers an invaluable and timely service.
“Many of the individuals we support – both children and adults – are neurodiverse, and we understand the transformative impact of receiving the right diagnosis and treatment at the right time. ADHD 360’s expertise will not only strengthen our service offering, but also help us to improve outcomes for even more people across the UK.”
Trade deal puts UK’s largest bioethanol plant at risk of closure
The future of the UK’s largest bioethanol production facility, Vivergo Fuels in Saltend, East Yorkshire, is uncertain following the removal of a 19% import tariff on US ethanol. The tariff cut was part of the recent UK-US trade agreement, which has intensified pressure on domestic producers already grappling with depressed bioethanol prices.
Vivergo, owned by Associated British Foods, had already scaled back production earlier this year due to market conditions. The company has now warned that, without immediate government intervention, it may be forced to shut down operations entirely, putting more than 160 jobs at risk and halting local wheat procurement.
The Saltend facility produces bioethanol for E10 fuel, which contains up to 10% bioethanol and is used across the UK to reduce transport emissions. It also supplies animal feed as a by-product. The plant’s viability is heavily tied to stable domestic policy and pricing conditions.
Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds has met with Vivergo and Ensus UK, the country’s other major bioethanol producer, to discuss the industry’s future. While the government has acknowledged concerns and expressed willingness to explore support options, no concrete commitments have been made to date.
The outcome may have broader implications for the UK’s low-carbon fuel strategy and domestic supply chain resilience.
Youth centre redevelopment plans move ahead in Rotherham
Plans have been submitted to redevelop a long-standing youth facility in Kimberworth, Rotherham, replacing the current building on Baring Road with a larger, modernised space tailored for youth and community use.
The existing site, which has been home to the Rotherham Blackburn Club for Young People since 1974, would be demolished to make way for a new, modular structure featuring a main hall, youth rooms, an outdoor patio, and enhanced accessibility infrastructure. The proposed facility would expand the internal floor area by 43% and retain four part-time staff roles.
The new design prioritises flexibility and sustainability, featuring timber-effect cladding, black aluminum fixtures, and a flat roof. Ten new cycle parking spaces and added shrubbery to support biodiversity are also included in the plan.
The project, submitted by Corstorphine and Wright on behalf of the youth club, aims to minimise construction disruption through off-site modular building methods. The club remains active during the planning phase, offering regular programming for young people aged 8 to 18.
The public consultation on the proposal is open until June 19. The upgrade is positioned to support expanded services and improve long-term community engagement, particularly in youth development and mental health support.
Harrogate College gets go-ahead for £22m campus rebuild
York law firm becomes employee owned
South Yorkshire Mayoral Combined Authority and Schroders Capital partner to drive infrastructure and housing investment
- Infrastructure – exploring options to deliver projects in areas such as wind, solar and biomass, hydrogen generation and storage and renewable heat
- Housing – support the delivery of aspirational and affordable housing, regeneration, social infrastructure and decarbonisation
- Venture Capital – consider potential investment models that could shape how public and private partners with a common interest could work in a more structured way
Sheffield to be part of project developing small brownfield sites for housing
- Bringing together a pipeline of small sites which will enable economies of scale in development
- Enabling private funding investment into the programme to develop the small sites
- Providing Government financial and expert support to enable Councils to get sites ready for development
Barwood Capital expands self-storage portfolio with Doncaster acquisition
Barwood Capital has acquired a vacant former car showroom in Doncaster as its third self-storage investment in partnership with Flexiss Group. The deal was completed through Barwood’s Regional Property Growth Fund V, which focuses on repurposing underutilised commercial assets into modern, energy-efficient storage facilities.
The site, a 33,592 sq ft former Arnold Clark showroom on Wheatley Hall Road, is located in an established commercial area approximately one mile from Doncaster city centre. Plans for the redevelopment include over 60,000 sq ft of self-storage space across two levels, with additional external drive-up units. The scheme is targeting an EPC rating of A, aligning with Barwood’s focus on sustainable asset transformation.
This acquisition follows two earlier investments: a former Matalan warehouse in Chester acquired in January 2025, and the Scott Self Storage Facility in Lincoln, acquired in summer 2024. Flexiss Group continues to serve as operator and development partner across all three assets, bringing operational scale and sector expertise to the portfolio.
The Doncaster site is positioned along a key arterial route, with high traffic volume and access to a major logistics hub, factors that support its potential to meet growing demand in an underserved self-storage market.
Espersen considers Grimsby site shutdown amid continued losses
Danish seafood processor Espersen is reviewing the future of its Grimsby processing facility, citing ongoing losses and shifting market conditions. The site, acquired in 2023, is reportedly underperforming, contributing to a group-wide pre-financing loss of DKr57 million (£6.48 million) in the last financial year. Group revenues also decreased 4.7% to DKK 3.3 billion.
Key factors behind the potential closure include reduced overall production volumes, increased raw material prices, particularly for Norwegian Atlantic Cod, and weaker market demand. The company attributed part of the cost pressure to sanctions on Russian imports and decreased quotas in the Barents Sea.
Although Espersen had announced investment plans for the Grimsby site in 2023, it now says those plans have been undermined by unexpectedly high capital requirements and deteriorating economic conditions.
If the closure proceeds, the wind-down is expected to take about 12 months. Espersen has not confirmed how many jobs could be affected. This would mark the company’s exit from UK processing operations, though it intends to maintain a local sales presence.
The move follows Espersen’s earlier closure of its Lithuanian site in Klaipėda, with production relocated to Poland as part of a broader cost-efficiency strategy that includes ongoing optimisation efforts in its Polish facilities.