Author: Team Foster Marlon

In 2020, Foster Marlon group was chosen as a finalist for the Newcomer of The Year Award by the ASAP Awards UK, which is a leading serviced apartments awards recognizing authority in the country. Our serviced apartment brand Terlon Apartments, in a very short span of time, was recognized for its quality of accommodation and for its high level of customer care and service. This has allowed Foster Marlon to rapidly gain reputation and credibility amongst the institutional investor market and it continues to grow from strength to strength. At the backend of the COVID 19 pandemic, Foster Marlon group's plans remain to expand the brand to multiple locations across the UK and eventually, throughout Europe, as it wants to implement its quality of development and service across a wide portfolio.

Developer Foster Marlon Group has acquired the grade two-listed 31 Dale Street in Liverpool city centre, with plans to convert the space into serviced offices and co-working space. The building dates back to 1879 and formerly housed the Reform Club. Liverpool-registered Foster Marlon, which delivered the £8m conversion of Liverpool’s Produce Exchange into 54 apartments in 2017, is to invest £1m in the renovation project. The development will offer 15,732 sq ft of office space and is to include a bar/event space and a boardroom of 20-plus seats to be billed as the Churchill room, a reference to a speech given by Winston Churchill in the building following World War II. It is to open in two phases, being fully open in summer 2019. A Foster Marlon spokesman said: “We are excited to have chosen Liverpool as the launching pad for the FM Works brand which will quite

Liverpool city centre building boasts stained glass and balconies with glass floors. The video below show how the historic Produce Exchange in Liverpool is being converted into apartments. The 1902 building hides a magnificent internal arcade complete with beautiful stained glass and glass-floored balconies. It’s now being converted into 54 apartments by developer Foster Marlon, who vowed to preserve those stunning historic features in its £8m scheme. The first show apartment has been completed, but most of the building is now full of scaffolding and contractors. The work could take another six months to complete. Liverpool- based historic building specialist NS Architects has designed the scheme. Director Nick Serridge said: “This should all be back to its former glory once this work is done.” Many of the apartments will be accessed from the arcade at the centre of the building. The stained glass windows looking out over the arcade will be preserved

The success of our efforts to enter the Chinese marketplace has been officially recognised by the Department for International Trade. FMG were delighted to receive the Greater China Rising Star award for bilateral trade between UK & China. This was awarded to the by DIT. The prestigious award was sponsored by UKTI and the European Regional Development Fund which took place at the Lowry Theatre in Salford. The award was open to businesses who have been rapidly growing in China and have shown tremendous success in a short time frame. FMG was selected from over a thousand companies and organisations including several universities. IT companies and sports teams such as Liverpool FC. FMG have built their entry into the Chinese market in conjunction with Sotheby’s International Realty around the development of the Produce Exchange building in Liverpool – a Grade II listed property located in the UNESCO World

International property agents are reporting increased interest from overseas investors, following the fall in the value of the pound by up to 10% against the dollar since the Brexit vote. According to Manchester-based advisor Matthew Lavin, of Benoit Properties International, there has been "a surge in interest in buy-to-let property from investors in the Middle East, Hong Kong and other countries with currencies pegged to the dollar". Lavin said: "Over the weekend we sold six apartments in the Produce Exchange in Liverpool to a group of buyers from Saudi Arabia, who had seen the news about the falling pound and seized the opportunity. They saved around $130,000 collectively compared to what they would have spent on Thursday night." In the past seven days, the value of the pound has fluctuated from $1.5 the day before the referendum to $1.31 afterwards, a 31-year low against the dollar. Lavin continued: "One

These images show the new-look Produce Exchange - which is to be converted into luxury apartments in an £8m overhaul. More than 100 years old, the glorious building is set to be converted into housing - with features from an old war memorial to perfectly preserved stained glass windows throughout its six floors. <br> Based on Victoria, the Grade II listed building´s top five floors are set to undergo a transformation into luxury accommodation - with a design that mixes both the old and the new. The £8m transformation is a joint project from international Foster Marlon and investors from Sotheby´s Hong Kong. 54 residential apartments are being built across the top five floors of the historic building and are set to be completed before July 2017. Foster Marlon´s director, Uzair Zaidi said he was ´honoured´ to be involved in the development. He said: "Huge demand for this project from international

A historic Liverpool city centre building may be turned into dozens of luxury apartments – including some overlooking the world-famous Mathew Street. Step inside the stunning Produce Exchange, a Grade II listed Liverpool city centre building brimming with spectacular features currently hidden from view. More than 100 years old, the glorious building is a developer’s dream with features from an old war memorial to perfectly preserved stained glass windows throughout its six floors. And the building could soon be given a new lease of life, with plans submitted to Liverpool council to regenerate the building and create dozens of luxury flats. Built in 1902, the Produce Exchange runs through from Victoria Street to world-famous Beatles hotspot Mathew Street. Currently vacant, the huge site has been used for a variety of purposes - from a goods depot to offices. It is currently at the centre of ambitious plans to bring