The Council decides on plans to be able to restore the listed buildings from MOPS-II II at home

The Council decides on plans to be able to restore the listed buildings from MOPS-II II at home

The restoration of a former Italian restaurant in Mold Back to Residential Housing begins when the Flintshire County Council approves a traffic management plan for the project.

The former the former Savoy restaurant building in the Chester Street is located in a terrace of Georgian huts originally a terrace.

The work was approved last year when the building was sold after it was not opened again after the Covid pandemic, but construction has not yet started.

The owners have now submitted plans to the management of the river of building traffic and material into the site, which has a single narrow access point from the Chester Street – signaled that the work will begin soon.

In the 1980s, which built in the mid-19th century as houses for industrial workers, the block, known as prices, were converted into the Italian savoy restaurant.

The Council decides on plans to be able to restore the listed buildings from MOPS-II II at home

The exterior of the houses listed in 1987 to preserve them as examples of industrial workers – has gone through some changes, with Chimneys being removed.

However, the new plans aim not to make any significant changes to the outside – except for maintenance and cleaning. In the open restaurant, the restaurant is divided into seven separate houses.

No parking spaces are connected to the real estate, but their proximity to the city center and public transport makes it a place in Category 1 where parking is not considered significantly.

James Battie, Flintshire planning officer, said the works would help keep the listed buildings.

“The identified work was developed sensitively to minimize the necessary loss of historical material, and repair original characteristics and replace them if necessary.

“The proposed use is appropriate for the building and its location, since the building is restored in its historical use.”

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