Yorkshire Post

City regenerati­on gets the go-ahead

- JOHN BLOW NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: john.blow@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

DEVELOPMEN­T: A masterplan to redevelop a former industrial heartland of Leeds is set to go ahead – sealing a decades-long vision for the “declining” area. Councillor­s yesterday approved plans for part of Holbeck.

AN AMBITIOUS masterplan to redevelop a former industrial heartland of Leeds is set to go ahead – sealing a decades-long vision for the “declining” area.

Councillor­s yesterday approved CEG’s sprawling plans for the Globe Road part of Holbeck, to the south of the city centre, subject to certain conditions.

The £350m proposals for up to 750 homes, potential skyscraper offices between five and 40 storeys high, as well as leisure and retail plots, would form part of the South Bank – hailed by Leeds City Council as one of the largest redevelopm­ents in Europe – and could provide space for an estimated 10,000 to live, work and visit.

Coun James McKenna, chairman of the City Plans Panel, said that ideas for the so-called Holbeck Urban Village first began in the early 1990s and he urged the developers to “please build it”.

The “phased” regenerati­on is due to include five separate developmen­t “parcels” called Globe Point, Globe Square, Globe Arches, Globe Waterside and Beck Court.

Detailed plans for two offices between Globe Road and Water Lane were approved by members. Outline proposals for a mixed-use developmen­t of offices, retail, leisure, hotel, health, education and community uses, parking and up to 750 new homes along with new public spaces and landscapin­g, were also deferred to the council’s chief planning officer, Tim Hill, to agree fully.

A series of pedestrian routes created through the site would be supplement­ed by four new footbridge­s over the Hol Beck, five new pedestrian crossings and the narrowing of both Globe Road and Water Lane, the latter becoming one-way.

It would also involve the demolition of existing buildings and structures except a listed bridge crossing Hol Beck and the main part of a former print works.

A council report prepared for the panel members stated: “The area has been in decline for many years and a series of unrelated schemes have not come to fruition.”

Labour’s Coun McKenna told the meeting the plan is “a rather big piece of the jigsaw” in the regenerati­on of Holbeck.

He said: “I think it’s a magnificen­t scheme.

“You don’t always get the opportunit­y to thank developers.

“Please build it, please get on with it – it’s been a vision for a long, long time.”

CEG is working on designs for the site with Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, the architect behind Leeds’s imposing Broadcasti­ng Place, which won the Internatio­nal Tall Building of the Year Award in 2010.

CEG is also responsibl­e for the £400m Kirkstall Forge site, which has so far brought a new railway station and modern office building to the city.

And the company has previously acquired the crumbling Temple Works – a Grade I-listed former flax mill in Holbeck famed for once having what is said to have been the world’s biggest room. It is understood the firm bought that building for just £1 after fashion brand Burberry backed out of its own planned refurbishm­ent of the site.

During the meeting, CEG’s developmen­t director Jonathan Kenny reiterated the company’s commitment to the city.

He said: “This isn’t the beginning of the end of us in Leeds – it’s the beginning of the beginning.”

You don’t always get the opportunit­y to thank developers. Coun James McKenna, chairman of the City Plans Panel.

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