regeneration

Piccadilly Gardens Set for £10m Refurb

Manchester’s Piccadilly Gardens are set to receive a £10 million facelift as plans have been unveiled for a multi-million pound regeneration. Legal & General Investment Management Real Assets (L&G) will give the city centre space an overhaul as part of a £10 million investment, in conjunction with Manchester City Council.

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Henry Boot Chosen for Barnsley Town Centre Regeneration

Town centre redevelopment sits at the fore of most regional councils’ key strategies for development, with the addition of new public spaces, amenities and high street stores to bring in consumer traffic. As such, those works set out for the development of Barnsley’s town centre are regarded as a great

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Latest Issue
Issue 330 : Jul 2025

regeneration

Crest Nicholson and Waverley Borough Council seal partnership to regenerate Farnham Town Centre

Scheme consists of 239 residential units and nearly 10,000sq.m of retail and leisure space set in a new Town square in Farnham Award-winning developer Crest Nicholson and Waverley Borough Council have announced that work on the £115m Brightwells regeneration of Farnham Town Centre will commence in summer 2018. Comprising a new £40m retail and leisure hub, anchored by Marks and Spencer and Reel Cinemas, together with 239 new apartments clustered around a new town square, the development is set to transform and revitalise a much-underutilised part of the historic town of Farnham. The development includes 72 shared ownership affordable homes which will help meet a broader housing need and support first-time buyers in the local community. Once completed the commercial estate, which has been pre-sold to Surrey County Council, will include a six-screen cinema, eight restaurants and a combination of twenty-four retail units including a new Marks and Spencer Simply Food. The development will also refurbish part of the adjoining Sainsbury’s store and carpark. Detailed planning permission for the scheme has been secured, enabling work to commence in earnest in the summer. The centre, which includes new basement and deck parking for shoppers and residents, is expected to open in late 2021. The first residential dwellings will be occupied in early 2020 and the development will be completed in total by the spring of 2022.  The regeneration scheme secures more than £2 million of external investment into the Farnham community and includes an additional £2 million for highway improvements in central Farnham. Crest Nicholson estimates that once finalised the Brightwells site will provide Waverley Borough Council with a potential income of £700,000 to £900,000 per annum from a combination of rental income, business rates and car parking. Up to 400 jobs in the construction sector will be created during the development of the Brightwells scheme, with a further 400 permanent jobs in the leisure, retail and hospitality sectors once fully complete. Chris Tinker, Board Director at Crest Nicholson, explained: “We are pleased to have cemented our agreement with Waverley Borough Council and look forward to breaking ground on this significant development. Once complete the scheme will regenerate an important location in the centre of Farnham and deliver much needed new homes to the area. “We will continue to work closely with Waverley Borough Council and other stakeholders throughout the building phase.” Councillor Julia Potts, Leader of Waverley Borough Council, said: “The agreement means that our vision to deliver a scheme that will reinvigorate Farnham for residents, shoppers and visitors can finally now get underway. “This partnership with Crest Nicholson will transform Farnham town centre for future generations.”

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Challenges and opportunities ahead for hotel conversion businesses, industry event to hear

There are serious challenges ahead to finding suitable properties to convert into much-needed hotels, Ed John, a real estate partner in Shoosmiths’ hotel practice, will tell industry experts at an event hosted by Colliers International in London today. Ed will tell invited guests that due to undersupply of development land, pressures to preserve the character of the local built environment and conserve existing buildings – particularly in urban settings – in some locations the only feasible option is to convert old and sometimes historic buildings, preserving the character of towns, cities and wider communities in the process. “There’s no doubt that the business of converting existing buildings into hotels faces a number of challenges however, with constructive dialogue with local stakeholders, early engagement on design and planning as well as careful consideration of the issues well in advance of implementation, a conversion can yield some tremendous results” he said, ahead of the invitation-only event at Colliers International’s centre in George Street.   “We have seen how some truly iconic buildings can be enhanced and their heritage preserved while at the same time boosting local economies and turning some former eyesores into hotels of which our communities can be proud. You only need to look at buildings like The Ned, the former Midland Bank head office in the City – named after Edward ‘Ned’ Lutyens, or The Dixon, after John Dixon Butler – the architect who originally constructed the building in 1905 as the Tower Bridge Magistrates’ Court and police station to see what can be achieved with imagination – and a lot of hard work.   “This event will be a perfect opportunity for some of the industry’s brightest figures to get together, celebrate its successes but, more importantly, to share ideas for how we can continue to grow in this space and to develop ideas on how to tackle these challenges head-on.” Marc Finney, head of hotels and resorts consulting at Colliers, said: “We are in a window of opportunity right now for hotel development. Three or four years ago, following the financial crash, you could buy an existing hotel for less than the cost of construction – it didn’t make sense.  “Since then, starting in London but spreading quickly to Edinburgh, Manchester and other major markets, we can now see a plethora of UK cities and towns where development profits are available again.  “With the availability of clean sites few and far between in good central locations, there is an obvious spotlight on the opportunities that conversions can bring.” As part of the event, hospitality industry expert Jonathan Langston will be interviewing keynote speaker Dexter Moren, founding director of Dexter Moren Associates, who will be lending his insight on the 25 years of his leading hotel architecture practice. Other speakers include Marc Finney, head of hotels and resorts consulting at Colliers International, Ben Turner, a partner in Shoosmiths LLP’s hotel practice; Paul Cook, head of technology at ISG; Jonathan Manns, head of the UK regeneration team at Colliers; as well as Colliers’ head of UK hotel valuations David Hossack; Ben Godon and Allan Davidson, directors of Colliers’ specialist hospitality asset management practice. Andrew Sangster will moderate a panel with industry experts, which includes Clydesdale and Yorkshire Bank’s head of hotels Shona Pushpaharan, Colliers International’s head of hospitality management Clive Hillier, PPHE director of acquisitions and development Sabina Wyss di Corrado, and Adela Cristea, senior director, head of business development, UK and Ireland at Carlson Rezidor Hotel Group for Radisson.

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Piccadilly Gardens Set for £10m Refurb

Manchester’s Piccadilly Gardens are set to receive a £10 million facelift as plans have been unveiled for a multi-million pound regeneration. Legal & General Investment Management Real Assets (L&G) will give the city centre space an overhaul as part of a £10 million investment, in conjunction with Manchester City Council. L&G’s lease area is set to be extended in return. Bill Hughes, Head of Real Assets at L&G, said that they see the partnership with Manchester City Council and the proposal for Piccadilly Gardens as a chance to regenerate a prominent and well-used space in central Manchester that is also a thoroughfare to other parts of the city He continued: “Under the proposals L&G will dedicate £2m worth of investment in improvements to Piccadilly Gardens to make them more attractive and welcoming to families while deterring anti-social behaviour. The plans include removing the existing Pavilion building and feature wall and replacing them with two new Pavilion buildings linked by a covered area of new public space for year-round use. Greater Manchester Police have been consulted on the landscaping design “to deter anti-social behaviour and improve natural surveillance”. “The proposed Pavilion design will bring a new vibrancy and economy to Piccadilly Gardens which we hope residents can be proud of and visitors to Manchester will see as a destination in its own right,” Bill Hughes said. “L&G has a longstanding track record of working with progressive local authorities to bring forward regeneration and improvements to social infrastructure projects. We see Piccadilly Gardens as a prime example of this kind of collaboration in action.” The proposals for the Pavilion and Gardens will be undertaken and paid for by L&G. It is estimated that the cost will surpass the £10 million mark, of which £2 million will be invested in public realm improvements.

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Henry Boot Chosen for Barnsley Town Centre Regeneration

Town centre redevelopment sits at the fore of most regional councils’ key strategies for development, with the addition of new public spaces, amenities and high street stores to bring in consumer traffic. As such, those works set out for the development of Barnsley’s town centre are regarded as a great step forward in both expanding and redeveloping the centre for further commerce and prosperity. Serving as part of the construction programme set out for phase one of the Barnsley town centre redevelopment, it has been announced that Henry Boot will see the construction of a brand new central library, as well as the refurbishment of town centre retail establishments and the re-modelling and extension of Barnsley’s market buildings at the Metropolitan Centre. The works are also set to incorporate a brand new town square and further works for the public realm; however much of the works are pending the demolition of already existing structures. For management of the project, Turner & Townsend have been chosen alongside Queensberry Real Estate. The consultant will be seen to work alongside the council and will be providing private sector funding from either a property organisation or alternatively, an institutional investor to lay the foundations for phase two of the regeneration project. Phase two is expected to see the effective development of some 200,000 square feet of brand new retail and leisure space. Of course, Henry Boot’s appointment is great news for the company, where it will be playing a central role in the redevelopment of the local town centre. The project will also give Henry Boot an opportunity to showcase the standard of its work to the people of Barnsley, who will no doubt be in anticipation of the development. Tony Shaw, Operations Director of Henry Boot Construction commented: “As a local contractor, we are delighted to have been appointed to construct the Better Barnsley town centre development.”

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