‘We’ve started to deliver pride in the community’
A NEW funicular railway to the high street, a communityowned solar energy farm and a coastal sculpture trail designed by world-leading artists are among the eye-catching developments coming to some of the Yorkshire towns chosen for a controversial £3.6bn Government fund.
One leading local businessman said the multi-million pound investment in his area for regeneration projects from the Towns Fund would help restore pride after years of under-investment.
In total 16 towns in Yorkshire and the Humber were shortlisted by the Government in 2019 for the fund, set up to “transform their economic growth prospects with a focus on improved transport, broadband connectivity, skills and culture”.
Nine were told how much they would be getting in last week’s Budget and shared nearly £200m, with funding for each individual area varying from £17.1 to £25m.
In Stocksbridge, home to the famous Samuel Fox steelworks which once created employment for almost all local families, the local Town Deal Board set out in its bid to Ministers how it had “endured decades of under-investment and been left behind in an economic sense, but also in terms of the opportunities available to our community”.
Its most notable development paid for by the Towns Fund is a town-centre funicular linking the high street with the Fox Valley shopping park, “serving a practical purpose and carrying bikes, walkers and shoppers, as well as becoming a great unique selling point for Stocksbridge”.
The funding will also help transform the high street by transforming part of it in Manchester Road into a “community crossover hub”, providing space for digital, creative and clean-growth businesses to work together as well as a space for local people to learn the skills needed for jobs in growth sector areas.
And a well-being approach and hydrotherapy centre at Stocksbridge Leisure Centre is being created to improve physical and mental well-being.
Mark Dransfield, managing director of Dransfield Properties and co-chairman of the Stocksbridge Towns Fund Board, said the town was a “wonderful area to live”.
He said the area boasted the best cycling in Europe, something he wanted to take advantage of by working with local pubs and hostelries to create a cycling tourism trail.
He said: “We want the best for our community. And what this has done for the first time in a long time, it’s united everybody and we’ve got a purpose and people feel as though they’re cared about and they’re recognised and it’s so important. We’ve started to deliver pride back into our communities now and it’s important to continue that journey.”
Similarly ambitious projects can be found in the other eight areas of Yorkshire which have been handed Towns Fund investment. But critics point out the funding being given to these areas represents only a fraction of the investment lost in the last decade as a result of austerity cuts.
In Goldthorpe, a former coal mining village, one of the elements of its Town Investment Plan is a community-owned solar power farm, which will provide electricity to be sold into local business and public buildings.
The city of Wakefield was given the maximum allocation of £25m and will focus on projects bringing about “economic vitality and socio-economic change where it is most needed in the city”.
One of these is improving Bread Street and Little Westgate, where the connections to the nearby cathedral are blocked by “vacant and underused” 1960s retail units. The local proposal will see the lost views and connection to the cathedral restored.
Whitby and Scarborough were awarded a total of £37m from the Towns Fund and both are involved in creating a Wild Eye trial, a new tourism product using world-leading artists and designers. Whitby’s will see a series of sculptures, wildlife viewing platforms and hides, each designed with “live stream” cams and sounds of the wildlife “which can be seen, experienced and enjoyed within Whitby and the coast”.
In Morley, a market town on the edge of Leeds, the funding will help create a new skills campus at the historic New Pavilion building. Gerald Jennings, the co-chairman of the Morley Town Deal Board, said the £24.3m in capital funding was “a huge bonus for the town and the wider district”.
He said: “It is one of those towns which has a lot of pride, a lot of ambition, but it hasn’t necessarily had the funding needed in the past. And in many ways it’s like any number of towns in Yorkshire and across the country. So I think it’s hugely important for Morley and for Leeds.”