A PROMINENT builder involved in a landmark development on Poole Quay owed around £16million to unsecured creditors who are unlikely to see any of their money.

All 107 jobs at Brymor Construction Ltd were saved when its business and assets were sold out of administration to Winchester-based Portchester Equity.

But an update from administrators reveals that most creditors, including a string of Dorset companies, are set to lose out – and that staff are owed more than a month’s pay.

Brymor’s high-profile projects include the Vespasian development on the site of the former Poole Pottery shop for local developer Fortitude. It built Southampton’s Horizon Cruise Terminal and had the contract for Southampton FC’s planned new gym at its Marchwood training ground.  

The company was working on around 13 sites at the time it went into administration.

The administrators’ report says new ventures owned by Portchester will pay £1.75million for the assets of parent company Brymor Group, which owns the Denmead-based business’s properties, and paid £400,000 for those of Brymor Construction Ltd.

Joint administrators Michael Magnay and Mark Firmin, of Alvarez & Marsal, wrote: “The group has historically traded profitably, achieving annual turnover of £82m and net profit of £1.1m in the year ended March 31, 2019.

“However, more recently, the group has experienced difficult trading conditions due to the impact of Brexit, Covid-19 and cost inflation in the construction sector.

“These recent difficult trading conditions resulted in net losses being generated by the group since 2020.”

Project delays from the second half of 2021 left the group with more cash going out than coming in, and the business called in an advisory firm to review its finances.

To read the full report by administrators on Brymor Construction Ltd, click below:

brymorconstruction.pdf

Brymor’s bank Santander refused to allow it more borrowing and it became unable to pay subcontractors and suppliers.

“The directors determined that as a consequence subcontractors and suppliers would stop attending project sites, and therefore ongoing work on project sites would quickly cease,” the report says.

“The group was unable to meet its liabilities as they fell due. Further, there were concerns that safety on sites could become compromised should subcontractors or suppliers attend sites seeking to recover goods.”

Brymor Construction was unable to meet its payroll on June 30 and no staff were paid between June 1 and administrators being appointed on July 8.

The report says Brymor Construction faces a shortfall to creditors of £19.1m, with £2m owed in VAT and an estimated £14.8m to unsecured creditors.  The parent company owed another £1.25m to unsecured creditors.

“Based on current estimates, it is highly unlikely that there will be a dividend to unsecured creditors,” the report says.

Portchester Equity had originally offered to buy the companies before they went into administration. But it withdrew the offer after Alvarez & Marsal made “a number of necessary adjustments to historic trading results”.

After the business went into administration, Alvarez & Marsal contacted 116 parties about buying them, but Portchester was the only one to submit an offer. It bought the businesses through new ventures with four Brymor directors on the board. 

Among the creditors thought to be owed tens of thousands of pounds are

  • A&G Bricklaying Ltd, of Broadstone, owed an estimated £38,854
  • Bluecord Roofing and Cladding of Bournemouth, £22,755
  • Prime Demolitions, Poole, £19,332
  • Queens Park Brickwork, Bournemouth, £17,564
  • RM Fabications, Wimborne £26,940
  • Reuby & Stagg, Ringwood, £18,000
  • SCA Group, Three Legged Cross, £180,386
  • T&K Electricals, Poole, £141,885
  • TA Colbourne Projects, Poole, £53,288