A BRADFORD developer is to build a new nano park in Leeds after the "outstanding success" of its first such venture in Bradford.

The Nano Park Company, owned by developer Frank Marshall Estates, has already built 18,000 sq ft of prime workshop and office space in small units in Bradford, near the M606.

The firm is now rolling out its pioneering concept across Yorkshire. Its nano park model creates small employment units, providing an ideal base for small and fledgling companies and satellite operations for larger firms.

Edward Marshall, a director of the Bradford-based Nano Park Company, said: “The astounding success of our ground-breaking nano park in Bradford, which is completely full, has encouraged us to repeat the model elsewhere in Yorkshire.”

So the Nano Park Company has bought a one-acre site in Pickering Street, Armley for £300,000 from iconic Yorkshire textile company James Hare. The deal was brokered by the Leeds office of Carter Towler.

Mr Marshall explained: “This is an ideal location for us, midway between Leeds city centre and the Leeds Outer Ring Road, with its swift access to Yorkshire’s excellent motorway network. Ours will be one of only a very few small industrial schemes in the city.

“The arrival of Channel 4 in Leeds is acting as a catalyst for a creative resurgence in the city, while Yorkshire Television’s studios are only two minutes away, so we will be looking to attract artistic, tech and media companies, as well as the more traditional small industrial property occupiers.

“At Armley we will be speculatively building seven small hybrid units, with warehousing space below and offices above, together with a larger, stand-alone 5,000 sq ft unit. We are in the age of the entrepreneur with more and more small and start-up companies looking for self-contained space of their own. We expect up to 50 jobs will be created on site,” he said.

A planning application for the eight units will be submitted to Leeds City Council shortly and, if approved, work to create the new Nano Park will begin in the third quarter of the year. It will be ready for occupation in spring next year.

“We are now providing flexible, affordable and attractive business premises to help companies of this type to grow and prosper, where they want to be. This could be in an attractive setting, a great location or a site with superb transport links. They were snapped up at Bradford – and we have every confidence they will be in Armley.”

The site was once occupied by James Hare's Bankfield Mills, and now houses a small office park with an acre of adjacent development land. It is that land which the Nano Park Company has bought.

The firm is also planning to roll out its concept across Yorkshire with sites already earmarked in Halifax, Wakefield and Skipton.

Edward Marshall concluded: “I think we’ve dropped on the right idea at exactly the right time. If all goes well, and we find the right sites, we could build three or four Nano Parks a year.”