Jubilee Centre

About this building

Jubilee Centre offering space to let from 120 sq.ft. to 7000 sq.ft currently accommodating photographers, distribution, training and interior designers.

The Jubilee Centre has a range of units available from 120 – 7000 sq.ft. to let for a range of businesses.  Having the benefit of large windows, goods lifts to all floors and wide corridors.

The majority of the units benefit from double door access.

You can see old features around the building, with the metal girders and fire hose reels which are redundant, but left to add character to this 1930s building.

Address

130, Pershore Street, Birmingham, B5 6ND

Rent a unit

Find out more from about units to let in the Jubilee Centre. All units are managed on our behalf by Prince Warne Properties.

Search available units

 

Uses for units

  • Artists colony
  • Dedicated storage
  • Distribution
  • Industrial
  • Office
  • General purpose
  • Photography studio
  • Warehouse
  • Workshop

Building details

  • 24-hour access
  • Audio entry door
  • Communal facilities
  • Onsite caretaker
  • Goods lift
  • Passenger lift
  • Loading bay
  • Roller shutter
  • Cleaning of communal areas

 

Travel

Travel details

  • Parking
  • Bike store

Travel times

  • Public car park: three minutes walk
  • Coffee and sandwich shop: seven minutes walk
  • Convenience store: eight minutes walk
  • Bus stop: eight minutes walk
  • Train station: eight minutes walk
  • Motorway: eight minutes drive

 

Building history

The Jubilee Centre was built in the 1930s for the company Fisher and Ludlow who started off making “tinwares” in a small workshop, but then moved to making military components during the Boer and Great wars. Eventually they moved onto steel panels for motor car bodies, which is when the Jubilee Works was built.

Jubilee centre

By World War II they again started making components for the war effort which made them a target for Luftwaffe bombers. Fisher and Ludlow relocated to the 103 acre aircraft factory in Erdington.

The building then became home to the G.P.O telephone factory refurbishing Bakelite telephone bodies until they moved to Cwmbran in South Wales.

The local authority converted the building into enterprise workshops however, a high level of rent arrears and a low level occupancy resulted in the council leasing the building to MIA in 1983. The centre provides 75 workspaces for all types of industries and artist studios. The Centre now has a very high occupancy level.

Did you know?

Because Fisher and Ludlow made military components, there is evidence of bomb damage to the brickwork?