Birmingham Post

Plan for another new tower in Broad Street

- TAMLYN JONES Business Staff

BIRMINGHAM’S Broad Street has seen an influx of high-rise developmen­ts in recent years – and it could soon have another joining the city’s skyline.

Developer Regal Property is eyeing a plot at 90-97 Broad Street to house a £150 million, 47-storey residentia­l tower with 526 apartments to rent, to be called ‘The Essington’.

The site, currently occupied by low-rise office buildings, is the merest of stone’s throws away from The Bank, Regal’s two-phase apartment project, which completed shortly before the onset of the covid pandemic.

Alongside the apartments, the newly-unveiled designs include co-working space, a cinema room, gym and yoga studio, cycle storage and one of the city’s highest private dining rooms on the building’s top floor. There would also be a pocket park on the ground floor for residents at the developmen­t, which is designed around an H-shaped floor plan.

If successful, The Essington would become the latest in a string of tall towers to be built or proposed for Broad Street.

Regal completed The Bank in 2020, comprising two towers of 22 and 33 storeys respective­ly and containing 406 apartments, while last year Moda Living opened the 42-storey, 481-unit The Mercian directly opposite.

Further west, US developer Cortland recently topped out its 35-storey block with 440 apartments at the corner with Ryland Street, and earlier this month new proposals were unveiled for a 32-storey, 294-unit residentia­l tower at 100 Broad Street at the same junction.

Regal’s developmen­t director Mark Holbeche told the Post: “The city is hugely undersuppl­ied with really good quality, wellmanage­d and lookedafte­r build-torent accommodat­ion.

“The Mercian has been hugely successful and has shown there is a demand and appetite for highqualit­y, build-to-rent apartments.

“Our research tells us that, for every apartment that’s available in Birmingham, there are 15 tenants looking to move in. “Broad Street is an area that has been designated for tall buildings so it’s a very appropriat­e location, especially with all the changes that have been going on in the Westside district over the last ten to 15 years, such as Paradise, Arena Central and in particular the new metro stop.

“Having done our homework, we believe the city is still hugely undersuppl­ied, we like to do something a little bit different and we like building tall buildings.”

Existing buildings on the applicatio­n site would be demolished to make way for the new developmen­t.

Plans have been submitted to Birmingham City Council and Mr Holbeche said he hoped to secure consent by the end of this year, with a view to starting constructi­on in the first half of 2024, and completing in late 2027.

Jewellery Quarter practice Glancy Nicholls Architects has designed The Essington.

The city is hugely undersuppl­ied with really good quality, wellmanage­d and lookedafte­r build-to-rent accommodat­ion. Mark Holbeche

 ?? ?? Artist’s impression of The Essington, planned for Broad St
Artist’s impression of The Essington, planned for Broad St

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