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Council gets go-ahead to demolish private deteriorated building

BBC Published Jul 1, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Torbay Council secured legal go‑ahead to demolish the buildings at 62‑70 Victoria Street in Paignton, Devon.
spokesperson for the council, spokesperson
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Demolition of the buildings at 62‑70 Victoria Street is expected to take about six weeks and could begin within the next two weeks.
6 weeks · demolition duration2 weeks · start window
spokesperson for the council, spokesperson
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The cost of demolishing the buildings at 62‑70 Victoria Street will be recovered from the owners of the building.
spokesperson for the council, spokesperson
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Council leader David Thomas said unsafe buildings are not acceptable because they put people at risk or cause prolonged disruption in the heart of the town centre.
David Thomas, council leader
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David Thomas said the council's priority is to remove the unsafe structure, reopen Victoria Street quickly, protect the public, and recover costs from owners rather than local taxpayers.
David Thomas, council leader
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The buildings at 62‑70 Victoria Street were constructed in the 1890s as Bailey's Hotel.
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Torbay Council said the building posed "an unacceptable risk to public safety"

A council has secured the legal go-ahead to have a privately-owned former hotel demolished.

Torbay Council said it had appointed contractors to fully demolish the buildings at 62-70 Victoria Street in Paignton, Devon, after it was granted consent by magistrates on Thursday.

A spokesperson for the council said the structures had been "allowed to deteriorate to dangerous condition" and posed "an unacceptable risk to public safety".

They added demolition was likely to take about six weeks and could begin within the next two weeks, the cost of which would be recovered from the owners of the building.

Council leader David Thomas said it was "not acceptable for unsafe buildings to put people at risk or cause prolonged disruption in the heart of our town centre".

He said: "Our priority is clear: to remove the unsafe structure, reopen Victoria Street as quickly as possible, protect the public, and ensure costs are recovered from the owners rather than local taxpayers."

He added such legal powers had not been used for many years but were being invoked now because public safety was at risk.

The buildings were constructed in the 1890s as the Bailey's Hotel to accommodate and impress the increasing number of visitors arriving by train.

The row had been home to a pub, takeaway and mobile phone shop, but have stood empty since November last year over safety fears.

The owners of the properties have previously been contacted by the BBC for comment.

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