Yorkshire Post

Major plan could ‘breathe new life’ into Hull city centre

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AN AMBITIOUS vision has been revealed to develop a prime central site in Hull, bringing an estimated £130m to the local economy while retaining the city’s celebrated Three Ships mural.

Hull City Council has today revealed details of its hopes for the developmen­t of Albion Square, focusing on suggestion­s for a new ice rink, shops, housing and leisure and enclosed courtyard.

The plans also confirm an ambition to retain the 1963 Italian glass mosaic Three Ships mural by Alan Boyeson, a monument that has attracted public support since the closure of BHS.

“The Albion Square scheme alone would be worth around £130m to the local economy, providing much-needed jobs for local people, alongside regenerati­ng an area of the city centre that has been neglected for many years,” said Coun Martin Mancey, portfolio holder for economic investment and regenerati­on.

“It would also help to further strengthen the retail and leisure offer of the city centre as a whole, and in turn attract greater footfall and spend to the city centre.”

The plans see potential for a newly built ice arena, with the existing one on Kingston Street possibly redevelope­d into city-centre housing to fund this or further developmen­t elsewhere.

The brief also outlines proposals for 257 shops, 12,000m of retail space and a car park with up to 626 spaces.

This, along with the redevelopm­ent of Kingston House, the refurbishm­ent of New Theatre and opening of the university technical college, could “breathe new life” into the area, Coun Mancey said.

A report is now to go to the council’s cabinet in October seeking approval to market the scheme to developers, and proposals for assembling the site.

It comes as hundreds of traders and business people call on the council to reject an out-oftown retail developmen­t which they say would threaten the regenerati­on of the city centre.

Plans are set to be considered over the developmen­t of 10 shops and either cafes or restaurant­s on land adjacent to the Next store at Kingswood.

Now, after a petition set up by the Hull Business Improvemen­t District (BID), more than 250 people from 200 organisati­ons have added their backing to calls for it to be refused.

“The city centre is starting to turn a corner, but many businesses are still struggling and the recovery is very fragile,” said Kathryn Shillito, for Hull BID.

“They are now very worried that this developmen­t will halt the recovery of the city centre in its tracks by diverting muchneeded investment and taking vital footfall away from the heart of the city.”

 ??  ?? FUTURE VISION: An artist’s impression of the developmen­t in Hull’s Albion Square.
FUTURE VISION: An artist’s impression of the developmen­t in Hull’s Albion Square.

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