Winding-up petition naming Boconcept Limited filed by Swedish holding company
Carlsson & Blom Holding AB has filed a winding-up petition against Boconcept Limited, a Suffolk property developer, in case CR-2026-004053. Full notice and Companies House record.
Information for general guidance, drawn from the public record. Not legal, financial, or insolvency advice. If you are affected by an insolvency, consult a licensed practitioner or qualified solicitor.
Carlsson & Blom Holding AB lodged a winding-up petition against Boconcept Limited at the Companies Court on 26 May 2026, court records show. The case has been assigned reference CR-2026-004053.
A winding-up petition asks the court to make a winding-up order. Filing one does not put the company into liquidation; the court must first make the order at a hearing. Until then, Boconcept Limited continues to operate as a legal entity.
The petition
The filing lists two parties: Carlsson & Blom Holding AB as petitioner and Boconcept Limited as respondent. Solicitor Michal Kampa is named on the court record alongside a litigant in person. The petition was filed under the Companies Court list, which handles corporate insolvency proceedings in England and Wales.
The notice does not set out the grounds for the petition or the amount claimed. No hearing date appears in the published record.
The petitioner
Carlsson & Blom Holding AB is the named petitioner. The filing identifies it as a party to the case but gives no further detail about the relationship between the two companies or the basis of any debt alleged.
What happens next
Once a winding-up petition has been filed, the court will list the matter for a hearing. If the court makes a winding-up order, Boconcept Limited would enter compulsory liquidation, a form of liquidation imposed by court order and distinct from a creditors' voluntary liquidation resolved by the company's own members. On a winding-up order, the Official Receiver, a civil servant of the Insolvency Service, would automatically take office as liquidator. Creditors could subsequently nominate a licensed insolvency practitioner to replace the Official Receiver if they chose to do so.
The petition is a court filing only. No order has been made and no liquidator has been appointed. Boconcept Limited has not been placed into any formal insolvency process at this stage.
The record
No officer names, registered office address, or secured charges appear in the court filing as published. No Companies House company data was available in the source bundle. Further details, including the registered address and current directors, can be found at Companies House.
Common questions
What does a winding-up petition mean for Boconcept Limited?
A petition is a court filing, not a court order. Boconcept Limited is not yet in liquidation. The court will consider the petition at the date listed in the notice; until then, the company continues to trade, but its bank may freeze accounts and counterparties may stop extending credit. The court can dismiss the petition, adjourn it, or grant a winding-up order.
Are you owed money by Boconcept Limited?
You are not yet a creditor in a liquidation; the company is still trading. If you support the petition, you may file a notice of support at the court named in the notice. If the petition is granted, you become an unsecured creditor in the resulting compulsory liquidation and the Official Receiver will invite you to submit a proof of debt.
Did you work at Boconcept Limited?
A petition does not by itself terminate your employment. Wages and holiday pay continue to accrue until the company stops paying you or is wound up. Watch the bank position closely; if accounts are frozen, payroll will be the first thing to fail. If the petition is granted, statutory redundancy and notice claims become payable from the Redundancy Payments Service.
Are you a director of Boconcept Limited?
Once a petition is filed, the company's directors have a heightened duty to consider the interests of creditors. Continuing to trade where there is no reasonable prospect of avoiding insolvent liquidation can expose directors to personal liability for wrongful trading under Section 214 of the Insolvency Act 1986. Specialist insolvency advice should be taken immediately.
Sources
- The London Gazette notice (code Petition - Winding Up Petition)
- Companies House record 10435439
- Editorial standards: how we source and review; five-pass pipeline.



