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Bingley Building Society was a UK building society, which merged with the Bradford Equitable Building Society in 1964 to form the Bradford & Bingley Building Society. Bradford & Bingley fell victim to the financial crisis of 2007–2010 and is now part of Santander UK, while its mortgage book is owned by UK Financial Investments Limited.
Bradford & Bingley plc was a British bank with headquarters in the West Yorkshire town of Bingley.. The bank was formed in December 2000 by demutualisation of the Bradford & Bingley Building Society following a vote of the building society's members, who swapped their nominal share of the building society for at least 250 shares of the newly formed bank.
Bradford Equitable Building Society was an English building society, which merged with the Bingley Building Society in 1964 to form the Bradford & Bingley Building Society. Bradford & Bingley fell victim to the financial crisis of 2007–2010 and is now part of Santander UK, while its mortgage book is owned by UK Financial Investments Limited.
The Bingley Permanent Building Society merged with the Bradford Equitable Building Society to form the Bradford & Bingley Building Society in 1964. It was decided to site the corporate headquarters in Bingley. This brought several thousand jobs to the town, but the building itself did not meet with universal acclaim and was demolished in 2015.
Barnsley Building Society; Bingley Building Society; Birmingham Midshires; Bradford & Bingley; Bradford Equitable Building Society; Bristol & West; Britannia Building Society; Burnley Building Society
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bradford_%26_Bingley_Building_Society&oldid=32589666"
1 History in the United Kingdom. ... Bradford & Bingley Building Society: 1991 Haywards Heath Building Society: merged with the: Yorkshire Building Society: 1992
An informal panel discussion on High Point in March 2018 included participants from the Bradford Civic Society, the Director of the Twentieth Century Society, Catherine Croft, and the architectural critic and historian Simon Jenkins. The non-binding discussion ended with a resolution to seek a new use for the building. [3]