The upsurge in tourism to the Isle of Wight during the Covid-19 pandemic has led a Shanklin hotel to plan a big expansion.
Luccombe Manor, part of the Garden Isle Hotel Group who were featured in News OnTheWight’s Deep Dive into the hospitality crisis, is asking the Isle of Wight Council for permission for 15 more rooms in a three-storey extension.
The hotel, which has views across Shanklin and the Bay area, has, planning agents say, been extended many times onto the main Edwardian building.
Needed to meet the increased demand
Agents, Nova Architectural, on behalf of the hotel, say the proposal has been put forward to meet the increased demand on the tourist industry as local holidays have boomed due to Covid-19.
They say expanding to meet demand will, in turn, increase the staffing at Luccombe Manor, ‘giving locals an opportunity to learn and grow within the hospitality and tourism sector’.
Creating a natural flow
To avoid the extension looking tacked-on, an extra floor is proposed to be added to an existing extension to add a more natural flow.
Overall, due to the area needed to add the extra bedrooms, two would have to be removed first, so the net effect would only see 13 new rooms added.
Support from ferry company CEO
The extension has already had the support of Red Funnel, with its chief executive, Fran Collins adding the first public comment, saying it was “pleased to support accommodation enhancements which are sensitive and appropriate to the Island’s unique culture and constraints and which, in turn, support both the local and visitor economies”.
Red Funnel works with Luccombe Manor, and the Garden Isle Hotel Group, as a transport partner.
Ms Collins went on to say in her submission to the Isle of Wight Council, it believes permitting the development would allow the hotel group to ‘further support’ the Island’s tourism industry.
View the plans
To view the plans, or comment on the application, 21/02405/FUL, you can visit the council’s planning register.
The public consultation period closes on 28th January.
This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which News OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may have been made by OnTheWight. Ed
Image: Sven Mieke under CC BY 2.0