Coventry Telegraph

Two city centre sites are set to be transforme­d

- By LAURA HARTLEY News Reporter laura.hartley@reachplc.com

TWO city centre sites that have had no real use since World War Two are going to be transforme­d into apartments.

Plans have been submitted to Coventry City Council to transform two areas which will cost over £10million.

One area is just in front of an already developing site, and another includes an old pub which will be converted.

On Well Street, opposite the old Grammar School, a developmen­t forming of 40 high-quality flats for the city centre costing £7.5million is being proposed.

The project also includes 4,500 sq ft of retail and office space on the ground floor and, if planning permission is secured from Coventry City Council, work would begin in spring next year.

The other project completes the terrace of 1950s buildings that includes the Belgrade Theatre.

The new Mid-Century Apartments, designed in 1950s style, are to be built on a site that was designated for a cinema in the post-war plan.

The £3.5 million scheme would provide 14 one and two bedroom apartments facing southwest over newly landscaped gardens with a restaurant and terrace on the ground floor.

The project also includes the former Jaguar pub which will be converted for use by the Belgrade Theatre and a further two apartments.

The Mid-Century Apartments and gardens will improve the setting of the Grade I Listed St John’s Church, which is one of the city’s medieval gems that will be boosted by the city’s growing tourist economy.

The church was used as a prison for Royalists in the Civil War and is the origin of the phrase ‘Sent to Coventry.’

Both developmen­ts face on to Conservati­on Areas and the projects are intended to repair the wartime damage, in time for the city’s time as UK City of Culture in 2021.

Ian Harrabin, of CDP, said: “The two schemes are intended to repair the

damage of the past and build on the success of The Co-operative developmen­t by further revitalisi­ng this part of Coventry city centre.

“The Well Street project is designed to provide a transition from the historic Burges area to the new high-rise student schemes to the north - a bridge between old and new.

“The Mid-Century project celebrates the architectu­ral quality of the city’s post-war redevelopm­ent that has largely been overlooked until recently. The Coventry story of a great medieval city, reborn in the 20th Century is unique and a major part of the celebratio­n of the city in 2021.” Councillor Jim O’Boyle, Coventry City Council’s Cabinet Member for Jobs and Regenerati­on, said: “The developmen­t of the city centre after the war was never completed and left us with a few eyesore sites.

“I am very pleased that these two small sites are planned to be developed in a way that enhances some of our most important heritage.

“Now that many of our historic buildings are being restored, it is good to improve their setting, which in places isn’t the best. It’s important that we put on our best face for 2021, when the eyes of the country will be on Coventry.”

The two schemes are intended to repair the damage of the past and build on the success of The Co-operative developmen­t... Ian Harrabin

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