care: The court documents focus on MBI Hawthorn Care, MBI Clifton Moor and MBI Walsden Care, the three care home project companies through which Woodhouse raised millions of pounds from private investors, but has so far failed to build any facilities, according to The Guardian. The filing also requests that the Afan Valley adventure resort is included in the administration orders. The move comes a day after an undercover investigation by the Guardian and ITV News highlighted questions about the business interests of Woodhouse, who has raised millions of pounds from private investors but whose firms have a multimillion-pound black hole . Uncovered the 200m theme park, the businessman and the missing millions Read more The filing also came as the Bear Grylls Survival Academy, Woodhouse's partner on his planned new 200m Afan Valley adventure resort in south Wales, said it was conducting a full internal review of the relationship . Creditors to Woodhouse's businesses filed an application with the high court in London on Thursday requesting the appointment of Phil Duffy and Sarah Bell, directors of insolvency firm Duff & Phelps, as joint administrators. A hearing to decide the outcomes of the applications could be set in the coming weeks. The couple say they were due their first interest payment of 78,000 from Woodhouse's company, Northern Powerhouse Developments NPD on 6 June this year but it has yet to arrive. Phil Duffy, managing director of Duff & Phelps, said The latest publicly filed accounts of those four companies show them to all be insolvent on a balance sheet basis so creditors are concerned that they are not going to get their money back . Two of the creditors involved in the application are Vijay Devadoss, a 62-year-old retired NHS orthopaedic surgeon, and his wife Anita, who invested 450,000 in nine rooms in Woodhouse's Clifton Moor development in June 2015.
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