Call Connection Service

This call connection service is provided by Directory Network Ltd and is in no way linked or affiliated with Crest Nicholson. The direct number can be found here at a lower cost.

All calls to our directory and call connection service are charged at a flat rate of £6 plus your phone company’s access charge.

All calls to our directory and call connection service are charged at a flat rate of £6 plus your phone company’s access charge.

Our Service: Calling from a Landline? Have a pen & paper ready.

Large businesses don’t like customers making telephone calls, so make it as difficult as possible on their website to hide away the contact telephone numbers and instead push you through to endless FAQ pages on their website. Directory Network makes it easy. Just select the business that you want to be connected with, then, click the call now button and we will do the rest.

When you use our services, we confirm the price of the service to you on the call. In addition, we will also read out to you the direct contact number for the service that you call. We recommend having a pen and paper to hand so that you can write this number down and contact them directly if required. Following the call, if you called from a mobile, we will also send you a free text with the services direct telephone number on it.

Want to record your call with Crest Nicholson? Directory Network offers a simple solution at no additional cost – simply select from the options to record your call and once the call is complete, we will send you a free text message with a link to your recording.

Our call recordings are sent to you by SMS once you finish your call. The call recording link is available for 30 days and we would recommend that you download the recording and store it in a safe place if you require it after the 30 day period.

If you are calling from a landline and wish to retrieve your call recording, you will need to use our contact form. Please tell us the telephone number you called from and an email address and we can send the call recording to you.

Directory Network connects customers to a wide range of businesses, including; travel, delivery services, catalogue and online shopping, mobile phone providers and energy suppliers.

We save customers time and connect you quickly through to the business that you wish to speak with.

The services mentioned on this website are provided by Directory Network Limited. We are not affiliated to or linked to any of the businesses mentioned on our website. We offer a call connection service

Crest Nicholson

Customer Services

Address

Crest House Pyrcroft Road Chertsey Surrey KT16 9GN

Phone

01932 580555

Hours

Not Known

Crest Nicholson is a British housebuilding company based in Chertsey, Surrey.

Crest Nicholson is a British housebuilding company based in Chertsey, Surrey.

The company was founded by Bryan Skinner in 1963 as Crest Homes and floated on the London Stock Exchange in 1968. One of the characteristics that differentiated Crest from most other housebuilders of the time was “not to hold large stocks of land”.

Crest’s first diversification was in 1969 when it bought En-Tout-Cas, the leading name in tennis court construction. More significant was the 1971 acquisition of Tony Pidgley’s earthmoving business. Pidgley teamed up with Jim Farrer, a board member and originally the estate agent who had provided Skinner with his first land. These two ran Crest’s housing until 1975 when they left to form Berkeley Homes.

In 1972, a new holding company, Crest Securities, was formed to facilitate further diversification. At the end of that year, Crest bought Camper & Nicholsons, the leading yacht maker, hence the change of name to Crest Nicholson. More unrelated acquisitions followed in the form of Lamson Engineering (1975), the spectacle makers Crofton (1979) and Greenwood Electronics (1983). Crest also bought the west-country construction firm of CH Pearce in 1985.

Bryan Skinner retired through ill-health in 1983 and, gradually, much of the earlier strategy was reversed. Non-housing businesses were sold in the late 1980s and in the housing division Crest began to follow a policy of acquiring a long land bank.

In 2007 the company was taken private after it accepted a £715 million offer from a consortium led by HBOS and Sir Tom Hunter, the Scottish entrepreneur. The company was re-listed on the London Stock Exchange in February 2013.

In 2010, subsidiary company Crest Nicholson (Londinium) Ltd. was party to a high court and Court of Appeal case which addressed the difference between the court’s role in construing the terms of a contract which two parties had agreed, and its role in assessing whether an offer capable of acceptance had been made, and if so, whether it had been accepted.

In 2018 it was reported that the chief executive of Crest Nicholson had stepped down as the company reported growing profits. Stephen Stone who had been the boss of the housebuilder for 12 years became executive chairman and Patrick Bergin took his place.

In June 2018 it was reported that the company would be pulling back from London as a cost-cutting measure. It will close its central London office and will be less likely to buy land in London.

As a result of the company’s lower profits, in January 2019, Crest Nicholson put a £400 million housing development in Hove on hold. The company’s chief executive, Patrick Bergin, told The Times that “It would be imprudent of us to make a commitment on a scheme of that type when we’ve got limited visibility on future pricing.”

In September 2019, the company appointed Peter Truscott as their new chief executive, adopting a new strategy to reduce overhead costs and reposition its margins.

In January 2020, Truscott said the company had over-concentrated on building off-site manufacturing capabilities, and would now focus on improving on-site operational efficiency and on introducing group-wide construction specifications to cut material buying costs.

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