Manchester Evening News

Big plans will see major redevelopm­ents

...BUT CAMPAIGNER­S SAY GAY VILLAGE WILL BE BADLY HIT

- By JENNIFER WILLIAMS newsdesk@men-news.co.uk @MENnewsdes­k

TOWN hall bosses have been accused of ‘writing out’ the gay community in plans to regenerate land next door to the Village including demolishin­g the Thompson’s Arms pub and building over a key Pride venue.

The M.E.N. reported in December on the town hall’s long-term proposals for sites around Chorlton Street bus station, off Portland Street.

That strategy - which has since been published - outlines four plots in particular for redevelopm­ent, including the surface car park on Sackville Street that hosts part of Pride each August.

The town hall’s blueprint would see that turned into a multi-storey car park, offices, flats and a hotel.

At the same time, Chorlton Street bus station, which includes the Thompson’s Arms downstairs, would be demolished to make way for a ‘flexible events space’ and flats. Yate’s wine bar on the corner of Portland Street would be replaced with a new office block.

A site further down Portland Street, bordering Abingdon Street, already has permission for a 17-storey hotel.

But campaigner­s believe the plan’s overall effects on the Village have not been taken into account and more than 2,500 people have now signed a petition calling for it to be torn up.

The petition also claims Manchester council did not effectivel­y launch or publicise the strategy, which is now out to consultati­on.

City centre activist Loz Kaye, one of the petition’s organisers, said that the council had failed to take into account its key location next to the Village.

He said: “This document was simply not ready to bring to the public. We’re not saying the area shouldn’t move forward, we are saying we have to get proposals right.

“LGBT people will not be written out of our own area. Our history, our lives, our deaths are in these streets. Any plans must reflect that.” Independen­t council candidate and heritage campaigner Adam Prince claimed the plans amounted to ‘backdoor gentrifica­tion’ of an area that had had ‘too little advocacy’ over a long period of time. Details of the draft strategy initially went before the council’s executive last month, before its publicatio­n this month. Introducin­g it, council leader Sir Richard Leese said the town hall had not done

LGBT people will not be written out of our own area. Our history is in these streets Loz Kaye

any detailed planning for the area around the bus station - which he said was ‘not the prettiest’ - in around a decade.

The station itself is ‘pretty dreadful,’ he added, while the surface car park is ‘unsightly apart from the three days a year’ when it is used for Pride.

City centre regenerati­on chief Pat Bartolli stressed a meeting was being set up with senior councillor­s to discuss how the Village fits in to the plans. A council spokespers­on said: “Strategic regenerati­on frameworks are high-level documents that provide a strategic approach to the potential developmen­t of an area, and a context to help inform planned investment. Any specific proposals will be subject to public consultati­on and the usual planning process.”

 ??  ?? The Thompson Arms and bus station
The Thompson Arms and bus station

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