Company Tag: Stirling Ackroyd
Stirling Ackroyd names new Sales Director
Alastair Cochrane is now responsible for all the LRG-owned agency's sales across London & the South-East.
LRG acquires trio of estate agency businesses including Stirling Ackroyd
Estate agency group kicks off 2024 with more more acquisitions, including of a well-known prime London property firm.
Stirling Ackroyd Group picks up another London estate agency
Beresford's three sales and lettings branches in South East London are to be integrated into Nick Dunning's fast-growing and recently-consolidated Stirling Ackroyd network.
Former Lomond heavyweights take lead roles at Dunning’s Stirling Ackroyd Group
The former CEO and COO of Lomond Capital have taken senior positions at Stirling Ackroyd Group (aka Nick Dunning Associates), as the company angles to make four more estate agency acquisitions in 2022.
Dunning rebrands Townends to Stirling Ackroyd; plots more acquisitions
Nick Dunning plans to continue building his property empire, making "at least four acquisitions a year".
Another acquisition for Stirling Ackroyd
Nick Dunning-owned agency continues expansion across East London
‘Positive signs’ & a turn up in London as the Autumn sales market kicks in – Rightmove
Asking prices and activity are rising in the capital's higher-value brackets
Dunning expands Stirling Ackroyd; recruits a new lettings chief from Countrywide
'Various other opportunities are being reviewed with some nearing completion", says Nick Dunning, as My London Home rebrands to Stirling Ackroyd
Dexters teams up with Stirling Ackroyd to sell East London new-builds
Stirling Ackroyd New Homes will operate under the Dexters banner, marketing new developments from Shoreditch and Clerkenwell to Hackney to Peckham
Dunning acquires London agency Stirling Ackroyd
Acquisitive Countrywide alumni buys East London estate agency
#AutumnStatement: The prime resi industry reacts
What the luxury property sector thinks about the abolition of letting agency fees, more money for housebuilding and infrastructure, and no changes to stamp duty
London to lure US buyers fleeing new President?
UK capital looking like a pretty good option, given the circumstances