This Pub is Closed Long Term
One of the most prominent buildings on the A30 in Camberley. The Cambridge Hotel was built in 1862. After a period as RSVP the pub was purchased by Stonegate in 2011 and reverted to its former name in 2013. However the Cambridge closed in July 2016, following the sale of the pub by Stonegate to London-based investor Shaviram Group. Stonegate claim that the Cambridge was "not a viable business", while Shaviram describe the pub as suitable for a "residential development".
A planning application, was approved by Surrey Heath Borough Council in October 2021 to convert the Hotel into residential accommodation, but with the possibility of a bar/restaurant being retained on the ground floor.
Historic Interest
One of the most prominent buildings on the A30 in Camberley. The Cambridge hotel was built in 1862 by Captain Charles Raleigh Knight, a property speculator, in association with the development of the Military Academy which was across the road. The area around the hotel became known as Cambridge Town but was renamed "Camberley" in January 1877 to avoid confusion by the General Post Office with the Cambridgeshire university town of the same name. Generally the fabric of the building has survived well, with only a few additions and changes from its origin, although the internal layout is much altered. The Kremer prize was conceived in the Cambridge Hotel in 1959 after Henry Kramer toured a Microcell factory.
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