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EXCLUSIVE: Photos reveal Barclays Bank fiasco in March as demolition bill pushes taxpayer spend past £1.1m — site now for sale at £295k

A TOWN CENTRE BANK. A MILLION POUNDS OF PUBLIC CASH. AND NOTHING LEFT BUT A GAP.

John Elworthy by John Elworthy
11:20am, February 2 2026
in Exclusive, Fenland District Council, News
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Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

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Exclusive photos taken by CambsNews lay bare the end result of Fenland District Council’s flagship regeneration gamble — a vast, gaping hole in the heart of March town centre where the former Barclays Bank once stood.

The images show the full scale of the cleared site on Broad Street, fenced off and empty, looming beside the war memorial and newly improved public realm. What they cannot show is the full cost of how March got here.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

That has now been revealed.

A Freedom of Information response confirms that Fenland taxpayers — via public funds — have paid more than £1.12 MILLION to buy and demolish the former Barclays Bank building, only for the land to be put up for sale for £295,000.

The true cost — finally in black and white

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

According to the FOI response, Fenland District Council paid:

  • £750,000 to purchase the vacant Barclays Bank building in 2023
  • £371,880.08 to demolish it

That brings the confirmed public spend to £1,121,880.08.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

The same site is now being marketed by Eddisons Commercial and Maxey Grounds for £295,000 — less than 40 per cent of what the council originally paid, and barely a quarter of the total outlay once demolition is included.

The arithmetic is stark.

£1.12 million spent.
£295,000 return.
A gap of £826,880 — before fencing, security, holding costs and professional fees are even factored in.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

What the demolition bill covered

The FOI response confirms that the £371,880 demolition bill covered:

  • demolition works
  • traffic management
  • equipment
  • contractors

All of it was funded through the Government’s Future High Streets Fund — a programme designed to revive town centres, not erase buildings and leave empty plots behind.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

Fenland District Council said the building was purchased at a price “commensurate with the asking price at the time” and that government approval was granted for both acquisition and demolition under FHSF governance.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

But critics say the figures now laid out raise profound questions about value for money.

Bought for £750k — sold for £295k

When the council bought the former Barclays Bank — vacant for two years at the time — senior figures described it as a “fantastic opportunity” and a “defining step” in the regeneration of March.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

The site occupies one of the most prominent positions in the town centre, adjacent to the war memorial and overlooking riverside public realm works.

Yet two years later, there is no development, no approved scheme and no named partner.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

Instead, the cleared land is being offered to the open market at a fraction of its original cost.

Warnings ignored — officers proved right

Perhaps most damaging is the fact that council planning officers explicitly warned against demolishing the building without a replacement scheme lined up.

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Their advice was clear and on record:

  • the building was not structurally unsound
  • reuse had not been seriously explored
  • demolition risked creating a long-term “missing tooth” in the conservation area

Despite those warnings, councillors unanimously approved demolition, citing vandalism concerns, asbestos and the building’s unpopularity.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

Officers warned the town could be left staring at a fenced void for years.

That warning now looks uncomfortably prophetic.

From regeneration to retreat

Instead of unveiling a new development, Fenland District Council has effectively stepped back from the site altogether.

The land is now being sold, with private developers invited to decide its future.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

Sales particulars talk optimistically about “new beginnings” and “flexible planning potential”, but make no mention of:

  • the £750,000 purchase price
  • the £371,880 demolition bill
  • or the combined £1.12 million public investment

There is currently no developer, no timetable and no planning consent.

Council defence

In its FOI response, the council stressed that the acquisition and demolition were funded entirely through central government grant, not council tax, and were intended to unlock wider socio-economic benefits rather than deliver a direct financial return.

It said the site was used as a compound and welfare base for surrounding public realm works, saving time and money elsewhere, and argued demolition enabled wider regeneration.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

The council added that any sale will include contractual deadlines to prevent long-term vacancy, and that any capital receipts will be retained for community benefit.

A question that won’t go away

Whatever the funding source, it remains public money.

And for many March residents, the reality is impossible to ignore.

They now look at an empty, fenced-off plot on one of the town’s most visible corners — a hole in the ground that cost more than £1.12 million to create.

As the exclusive CambsNews photos show, nothing stands there now but absence.

Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris
Exclusive CambsNews photos show the aftermath of demolition of the former Barclays Bank in March: a vast, fenced-off hole on Broad Street, next to the war memorial, where a landmark building once stood. PHOTO: Terry Harris

And one question continues to echo across Broad Street:

How did a flagship regeneration project end up costing more than a million pounds — and leaving nothing behind but a “For Sale” sign?

 

 

Tags: barclays bankBroad Streetdemolition costsEditor's ChoiceFenandFenland District CouncilFoIFuture High Streets fundHomepagemarchpublic moneyregeneration
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