MEETING ROOMS FROM ONLY £30!
Affordable Office/Workspace for Rent in Walsall Town Centre
Looking for a professional yet affordable office to rent in Walsall? This versatile workspace in Walsall town centre is available from just £8.50 per person per week (based on 27 sharing) – making it an ideal solution for small to medium businesses.
Prime location: Situated in the heart of Walsall town centre, within walking distance of shops, transport links, and multiple car parks for convenient access.
Size: Approx. 10m x 10m (100m² / 1,076ft²).
Capacity: Comfortably fits up to 27 people as a private office, or up to 35 people for meetings, training sessions, or workshops.
Freshly decorated: Neutral décor with carpeted flooring, providing a clean and welcoming professional environment.
Fully inclusive rent: Utilities, services, and key amenities included (*details available on request).
Flexible tenancy: Short-term and long-term agreements available to suit your business needs.
This Walsall office space offers everything you need to grow your business in a central, accessible location – without hidden costs.
*Office + the following - Utility (Heating and lighting), WiFi, Waste Management, Non-Domestic Rates£0 (if eligible for small business rates relief)Guardsman Daniel Blinco, 1st Battalion, Grenadier Guards, was killed in Northern Ireland on Thursday 30th December 1994. He had been on a foot patrol in Crossmaglen, South Armagh, when he was shot by a sniper.
His death was the first in Northern Ireland after the Downing Street Declaration, a “charter for peace and reconciliation” issued two weeks earlier by Prime Minister John Major and the Taoiseach of the Republic of Ireland, Albert Reynolds. It was a joint peace initiative, pledging to “seek mutually agreeable political structures in Northern Ireland and between the two islands”. He was also the last soldier killed by snipers in South Armagh before the first IRA ceasefire in 1994.
Guardsman Blinco had joined the army in 1991, and had planned to leave in 1994; this was his second tour of Northern Ireland. He is remembered as an avid sportsman, a friendly and outgoing young man. At a ceremony in his home town to dedicate a memorial bench in his name, his mother read out a poem “He is Gone” by English poet and painter David Harkins – one of the lines being "You can shed tears that he is gone, or smile that he lived”.
Daniel, from Melbourne in Derbyshire, was 22 years old.