City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn deal

Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

You want to be careful jrb that swan could break your arm.
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

yeah whatever !! said:
tornandfrayed said:
You want to be careful jrb that swan could break your arm.

Maybe its a swan thats the canal serial killer..!!

[bigimg]http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-3CxQK-XadzA/UY_jeiObgoI/AAAAAAAAAHk/HbEL5sjSVgs/s1600/InspectorMorse..jpg[/bigimg]

Hmm
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

Manchester Confidential.

Time To Play Regeneration Game Again: Ancoats-New Islington

Jill Burdett smells money moving into east inner Manchester

Published this morning at 9:56 AM.

Time To Play Regeneration Game Again: Ancoats-New Islington

NOW the City Council has the money http://www.manchesterconfidential.co.uk/News/1bn-City-Housing-Investment-Game-Changer-On-A-UK-Scale they want to consult on how best to spend it to create new communities in Ancoats and New Islington.

Aesthetically, Ancoats and New Islington’s attributes are highly desirable, being a distinctive area with unique heritage assets that offer a fantastic opportunity to creatively reuse its historic buildings.'

Draft plans, set out back in 2008 have been updated by Deloittes and the revamped Neighbourhood Development Framework is now being aired to get people’s views and ideas and inspiration before it goes before the city council executive later this year.

It points out all the obvious things – how much has been invested in these two areas already/ proximity to the city core/ Metrolink/ the new primary school. It also points out how these are key to support future growth as part of the planned expansion of the city centre north and east of the established area in the next 10 to 15 years.

Get these two wrong and there’s not much hope for Miles Platting and the Irk Valley or even Holt Town.

The ambition seems to make the area, with its canals and 14 listed buildings an East Side Castlefield (although the maintenance of Castlefield is not without its issues). The idea is to make the most of what’s already there and building in new housing and new retail.

Murrays Mill gets special mention with a pledge that its basin should remain open and become a hub for new bars and restaurants with resi above.

7FT2_H.jpg

Murrays Mills are worth a tour

There is positive talk about street patterns and building heights and the need for more retail at street level which is fine around places like Cutting Room Square but further back it would be nice to have front doors onto streets and a sense of place rather than boxes above empty glass spaces.

Look at the aerial plan of the two areas though and its Ancoats Retail Park that forms a big chunk of nothingness and new plans already passed for this site don’t seem in keeping with the Neighbourhood framework. Hopefully oweners Hendersons can be persuaded to re-think and with the huge amounts of investment here there must be more profitable options for them rather than re-vamped sheds.

As the report says: 'Aesthetically, Ancoats and New Islington’s attributes are highly desirable, being a distinctive area with unique heritage assets that offer a fantastic opportunity to creatively reuse its historic buildings.'

7FT3_H.jpg

Don't mention the Dispensary

The last line will give campaigners to save the decrepit and largely destroyed Ancoats Dispensary a hollow laugh but the wish list includes:

- High quality, mixed residential homes set it a well-managed environment to encourage new neighbourhoods of choice.

- A licensing regime that will encourage a family-friendly, residential community.

- Pedestrian friendly developments with the encouragement of walkable neighbourhood layouts.

- Appropriate car strategy to minimise on-street disruption and encourage alternative, sustainable forms of transport.

- The framework also looks to take advantage of the locational advantages of Ancoats and New Islington, including the historical merits of the area, leisure opportunities (New Islington Marina, Cotton Fields Eco Park) and educational and cultural facilities – such as the recent refurbishment of

Cllr Jeff Smith, Manchester City Council’s executive member for housing and regeneration, said: “Ancoats and New Islington has been a key regeneration objective for the past twenty years. We have made great strides and some fantastic successes were achieved, but like many developments, these areas were hit by the recession.

“With signs of positive progress in both neighbourhoods, it is the right time to re-evaluate the strategy for Ancoats and New Islington and we urge local people to have their say on the future of their area.”

The consultation will remain open from 23 June to 22 July and the updated Ancoats and New Islington development framework will be considered by Manchester City Council’s executive later this year.

Open consultation events will take place on the following dates:

3 July 2.30pm - 7pm at St Michael's Church, George Leigh Street, Ancoats

17 July 2.30pm - 7pm, Vivid Lounge, Great Ancoats Street, New Islington

22 July 8am - 10 am, Unit 2, Royal Mills, Redhill Street, Ancoats.

For more information, please visit here. Regeneration of Ancoats and New Islington. http://www.manchester.gov.uk/info/2...494/regeneration_of_ancoats_and_new_islington

7FT4_H.jpg
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

A bit more info posted yesterday:

Council consults on framework for regeneration of east Manchester neighbourhoods
Manchester City Council is consulting on a new draft neighbourhood development framework (NDF) for the Ancoats and New Islington neighbourhoods in east Manchester. In its final form, the NDF will guide development in the neighbourhoods and will be a material consideration in determining all planning applications in the area.01 Jul 2014
Local planning policy Planning
The east of Manchester has been identified by the Council as an area that can contribute around 30% of 60,000 proposed new homes in Manchester over the next 20 years. The Ancoats and New Islington neighbourhoods, which are also the focus of the first phase of a 6,000-home residential development joint venture between the Council and investment company Abu Dhabi United Group, are seen by the Council as being potentially attractive to new workers due to their proximity to city centre employment opportunities, their transport links and local features such as the Rochdale and Aston Canals and the Cotton Fields Eco Park.
According to the draft NDF (48-page / 1.1 MB PDF), Ancoats and New Islington form "one of the relatively limited number of places in Manchester where there is an opportunity to plan and deliver high density development in a sustainable manner." Under the core principles outlined in the document, both neighbourhoods are intended to be predominantly residential with a mix of high quality accommodation, but "opportunities for a mix of uses should be sought that combine to create a distinctive sense of place and neighbourhood."
There is an emphasis on sustainability both in the use of the local transport links to Manchester Piccadilly and Victoria stations and in the design of buildings. Developers should "ensure new development helps to contribute to a walkable, pedestrian-friendly environment" and car parking strategies should be designed to promote sustainable transport use, according to the document.
"Ancoats and New Islington has been a key regeneration objective for the past twenty years", said Councillor Jeff Smith, the Council's executive member for housing and regeneration, in a statement. "We have made great strides and some fantastic successes were achieved, but like many developments, these areas were hit by the recession."
"With signs of positive progress in both neighbourhoods, it is the right time to re-evaluate the strategy for Ancoats and New Islington and we urge local people to have their say on the future of their area", said Smith.
The closing date for comments on the draft NDF is 22 July.

http://www.out-law.com/en/articles/...generation-of-east-manchester-neighbourhoods/

Jeff-smith.jpg
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

Anybody with more knowledge on gentrification of areas that could answer my query with regards to East Manchester and the developing which is part funded by ADUG.

if or when these new housing developments are built with the older/council buildings eventually gone, where will the people currently living in these areas eventually live if they cannot afford to buy the private properties?

Homelessness increases or moving into other areas of Greater Manchester, potentially increasing crime rates in these areas?

As much as it is all nice eye candy seeing the developments of East Manchester, what impact does it truly have on other areas of Greater Manchester?
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

bluegirl74 said:
City will see nothing from this but adug are setting the groundwork to be the largest private landlord in manchester.

What? Bigger than Robbie Fowler? Wow!

What was that FFP thing about income/expenditure from property within N miles of the ground being exempt?
I suspect you will be wrong if that is the case.
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

Why Always Ste said:
Anybody with more knowledge on gentrification of areas that could answer my query with regards to East Manchester and the developing which is part funded by ADUG.

if or when these new housing developments are built with the older/council buildings eventually gone, where will the people currently living in these areas eventually live if they cannot afford to buy the private properties?

Homelessness increases or moving into other areas of Greater Manchester, potentially increasing crime rates in these areas?

As much as it is all nice eye candy seeing the developments of East Manchester, what impact does it truly have on other areas of Greater Manchester?

whats gonna happen, is all the people who live there now, mainly working class people will be pushed out as they won't be able to afford it. no one will be botherd thought because the council will make a load of money.

people say the area will improve when in reality all thats gonna happen is all the rough looking people who dont have loads of money will be replaced by rich middle class folk who have more money.
 
Re: City owner and council to build 6,000 new homes in £1bn

Cheadle_hulmeBlue said:
Why Always Ste said:
Anybody with more knowledge on gentrification of areas that could answer my query with regards to East Manchester and the developing which is part funded by ADUG.

if or when these new housing developments are built with the older/council buildings eventually gone, where will the people currently living in these areas eventually live if they cannot afford to buy the private properties?

Homelessness increases or moving into other areas of Greater Manchester, potentially increasing crime rates in these areas?

As much as it is all nice eye candy seeing the developments of East Manchester, what impact does it truly have on other areas of Greater Manchester?

whats gonna happen, is all the people who live there now, mainly working class people will be pushed out as they won't be able to afford it. no one will be botherd thought because the council will make a load of money.

people say the area will improve when in reality all thats gonna happen is all the rough looking people who dont have loads of money will be replaced by rich middle class folk who have more money.


This.

The poorer people will be pushed further out to the margins, both physically, and psychologically.

It makes me laugh, These new flats (sorry apartments) are just shoddy plasterboard castles in the sky, no better than the council flats that will be knocked down. But because they have laminate floors, and the advertising boards show a young couple in bare feet, drinking wine, they are sold as a 'lifestyle choice' to aspirational pillocks who will saddle themselves with a lifetimes debt, just to be seen to own a shit flat that overlooks a canal.
 

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