The Scotsman

Edinburgh’s £1 billion City Deal set to make ‘huge difference’

- By IAN SWANSON

0 Edinburgh’s City Deal cash will help fund research, roads, housing and the arts Edinburgh’s long-awaited £1 billion City Deal was today hailed as making a “real difference” to people’s lives.

The investment package – which also covers the other Lothian authoritie­s, Fife and the Borders – will be unveiled this afternoon after a lastminute round of meetings averted fears the deal could fall through.

The deal will include five new innovation hubs including cutting-edge research in space, health sciences, agritech and food and drink, linked to Heriot-watt, Queen Margaret and Edinburgh universiti­es, the Roslin Institute and the UK’S National Supercompu­ter Centre at Easter Bush.

There will be a £50m developmen­t fund to accelerate private housebuild­ing in areas such as Granton waterfront and £15m to set up a new Edinburgh homes company, which will lever in up to £250m borrowing to expand housebuild­ing in the Capital.

The deal also includes the 1,000-seater concert hall, a permanent home for the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, to be built behind the former RBS headquarte­rs in St Andrew Square.

It will help fund the new Sheriffhal­l roundabout on the City Bypass.

There will be £20m for roads in West Edinburgh to help deal with the congestion issues around large new housing developmen­ts.

And another £25m will go to help boost employabil­ity and reduce skills shortages across the region.

But there is no new power to introduce a tourist tax, as had been hoped.

The UK and Scottish government­s are each contributi­ng £300 million with around £200m coming from the universiti­es and other money from the councils involved. Scottish Secretary David Mundell said the deal would boost the economy of Edinburgh and the South-east Scotland for decades to come.

“It will make a real difference to the lives of people in the region, creating jobs and prosperity and driving investment,” he said.

Edinburgh’s is the fourth city deal to be agreed in Scotland after Glasgow, Aberdeen and Inverness.

Scottish Government Economy Secretary Keith Brown said the deal was expected to deliver 21,000 new jobs for the area.

“Taken together these projects will help the region continue to thrive and grow, fulfilling our ambitions for the region to be one of the fairest and most inclusive areas in the country,” he said.

Council leader Adam Mcvey said: “I’m delighted.”

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