Countryside announced in April that it was losing 拢10m a year from its three timber frame manufacturing facilities and it had more manufacturing capacity than it needed. The board said then that it was 鈥渃onsidering all options and will act quickly to minimise losses arising from manufacturing鈥.
The decision has now been made that it will be Bardon that closes, a new 350,000 square foot facility that had not even been brought into production yet.
It represents a major U-turn for the company, which had bet the house on offsite construction. In 2018, it acquired a timber frame factory in Narborough, Leicester which currently produces open panel timber frame products and employs around 40 people. In 2019, it opened a second timber frame factory in Warrington producing closed panel timber frame products with 85 employees. In 2021, a third factory was built on a greenfield site in Bardon, Leicestershire, at a cost of 拢20m, for making closed panel timber frame products. Bardon also houses a research and development area.
Bardon is Countryside鈥檚 largest and most sophisticated facility capable of delivering 3,200 closed panel modular homes per year. It more than double the previous 2,800 units capacity of Warrington and Narborough combined.
Countryside has been without a chief executive since Iain McPherson was pushed out in January. It is also subject to a takeover battle with certain shareholders wanting to seize control and de-list it from the London stock exchange.
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