The Scotsman

Airport business gateway close to take off

● Edinburgh scheme to create 12,000 jobs ● Homes, hotels and business planned

- By IAN SWANSON ian.swanson@jpimedia.co.uk

Developers have promised to create 12,000 new jobs with plans for offices, shops, leisure space, hotels and homes next to Edinburgh Airport.

The Internatio­nal Business Gateway( IBG), which has been talked about for more than a decade, would be built on vacant land between the airport’s Hilton Hotel and the main A8 road.

The developmen­t would include more than 122,000sqm of office space, 396 residentia­l units, 1,150 hotel rooms and almost 5,500sqm of retail and leisure space.

The plans are due to be considered by the city council’ s developmen­t management sub-committee tomorrow and officials have recommende­d councillor­s back the scheme.

West Edinburgh was identified as a“national dev elop men tass et” in 2008 and an implementa­tion plan for “Edinburgh Internatio­nal: Scotland’ s Global Hub” was launched in 2011.

The proposed developmen­t is being driven for ward by a consortium consisting of Murray Estates, Frogmore Property, New Ingliston Limited and Salmon Harvester Properties.

They said the masterplan for the site had evolved over many years of collaborat­ive working with the city council.

The IBG is intended as a shift away from the standard business park model to cre - ate a mixed-use developmen­t that will see activity throughout the day, with priority for pedestrian­s and cyclists over vehicles, plenty of green space and public areas.

Jestyn Davies, managing director of Murray Estates, said: “This developmen­t will be great news for Edinburgh and for Scotland as a whole.

“The thousands of jobs we will create here will be a huge benefit both to the city and to the many people who will commute from other parts of the country. For many people, this area is their entry point into Scotland and as such it needs a world-leading centre for business, commerce and retail.

“With co-operation from others we can get this ambitious developmen­t under way and deliver all the benefits that it will bring to the city, including a tremendous boost to infrastruc­ture.”

Edinburgh Airport said it supported the concept of an internatio­nal business gateway, but had objected to the proposed developmen­t because Eastfield Road – the only road into the airport – was already over capacity.

The developmen­t consortium said it was pledging £7.1 million to dual Eastfield Road from the Dumbbells round about and had written to the airport, inviting them to contribute £1.6m to complete the upgrade.

But the airport said it was the first they knew of that proposal and could not comment until they had considered the letter.

The area of the proposed developmen­t includes the Ingliston park and ride. The masterplan allows for possible redevelopm­ent of that site, but it is not part of the existing applicatio­n.

The developers said a significan­t number of jobs would be created during the infrastruc­ture and constructi­on program me and the first parts of the project would be completed within the next two or three years. The full developmen­t would be phased over 15 to 20 years.

Scottish Enterprise chief executive Steve Dunlop said: “The jobs, growth and connectivi­ty which the Internatio­nal Business Gateway will bring are good news for business and communitie­s in Edinburgh and across Scotland.”

 ??  ?? 0 Plans have been in the pipeline for more than a decade
0 Plans have been in the pipeline for more than a decade

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