ao link
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In
Twitter
Facebook
Linked In

You are viewing 1 of your 1 free articles

Ruth Cooke joins board of large developer

Ruth Cooke, the former chief executive of Clarion Group, has landed a role on the board of one of the UK’s largest land and property regeneration companies.

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Ruth Cooke has joined Harworth Group’s board
Ruth Cooke has joined Harworth Group’s board
Sharelines

Ruth Cooke joins board of Harworth Group #ukhousing

Ms Cooke, who had a brief stint as chief executive of the country’s largest association last year, has joined Harworth Group as a non-executive director.

Harworth owns around 21,500 acres on around 140 sites mainly in the North of England and the Midlands, with gross development value estimated at £2.4bn.

Her appointment comes just two weeks after she was drafted in as the interim chief executive of the 11,000-home association GreenSquare. Ms Cooke was hired by GreenSquare following the departure of former boss Howard Toplis.


READ MORE

Clarion appoints new chief executive as Ruth Cooke resignsClarion appoints new chief executive as Ruth Cooke resigns
Ruth Cooke appointed interim chief executive of 11,000-home associationRuth Cooke appointed interim chief executive of 11,000-home association

She will join Harworth on 1 April and will become part of the board’s audit committee.

Ms Cooke became chief executive of 125,000-home Clarion Housing Group in April last year.

However, that role ended in September when she took an extended period of leave and resigned in October.

Prior to her Clarion role, Ms Cooke was finance director and then chief executive of Midland Heart. Ms Cooke is also currently chair of Midlands-based housing association Connexus.

Alastair Lyons, chair of Harworth, said: “I am delighted to have Ruth joining our board. Their appointment further develops the breadth of composition and depth of commercial and sectoral experience of our board, and I look forward to their wise counsel as Harworth continues to execute its strategy of focussed growth.”

Linked InTwitterFacebookeCard
Add New Comment
You must be logged in to comment.
By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to the use of cookies. Browsing is anonymised until you sign up. Click for more info.
Cookie Settings