Beautiful Georgian Architecture
Designed by Archibald Simpson in the 1820s
Modern Serviced
Offices
Sympathetically renovated to exceptionally high standards
Latest Technology Conference Suites
Fibre internet and cutting edge conferencing technology
City Centre
Location
10 minute walk to Railway Station;
25 minute drive to Aberdeen Airport
Discover Aberdeen Business Centre
Aberdeen Business Centre has comfortable furnished offices of varying sizes which are supported with the latest in business technology and offers all the flexibility you need to run your business.
We provide the perfect location for new business start-ups and more established companies. Business is changing and more and more businesses are now looking to serviced office accommodation as a hassle free, flexible and economical option for their office space requirements.
Make Aberdeen Business Centre Your Home…
Key Features
City Centre Location
Conference Rooms
On-site Parking
Video Conferencing
Staffed Reception
Mail Room
Admin Support
Reprographic Services
24/7 Building Access
WiFi
Cafe area
Shower
Flexible Terms
CCTV
Office Cleaning
Client Testimonials
Many businesses have made Aberdeen Business Centre their home to work, meet and develop. See what they have to say…
History
Aberdeen Business Centre is housed at 11 Bon Accord Crescent, one of the most historic, charismatic and elegant addresses in the city. Designed by Archibald Simpson, the city’s most celebrated architect, in the 1820s at the behest of the landowner, Aberdeen’s Incorporated Tailors. Bon Accord Crescent is a gently curving terrace of nineteen identical two-storey houses with basement and attic; each main floor typically having 3 windows or 2 windows and a door and the attic having 2 dormer windows. They were occupied by exactly those for whom they were intended; the wealthiest citizens of a prosperous and growing city.
“No situation, immediately in the vicinity of Aberdeen, possesses so completely the advantages of free air & fine exposure”
The scheme for Bon Accord Crescent is similar in style to that of Princes Street Gardens in Edinburgh, with the idea of giving amenity to the houses & occupants by preserving a green space opposite. Few architectural details are worked into the scheme aside from the pure stone granite facades and the railings. The terrace was built to reflect the contemporary fashions as seen in London, Bath, Cheltenham and Edinburgh (among other places) and it bears a positive comparison to any of them.