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Commercial Property

£57m in Levelling Up bids made to ‘unlock Nottingham’s potential’

Bids put in for 20-acre Broad Marsh site, Bulwell town centre and Island Quarter

There are plans to make Lister Square a central part of the former Broadmarsh Shopping Centre

Bids totally £57 million have been put into the Government’s Levelling Up Fund to unlock a range of schemes in Nottingham’s Broad Marsh area, Bulwell town centre and the Island Quarter.

The city council has asked for £20 million to support work on the 20-acre Broad Marsh site. Plans to totally transform the area were drawn up following the collapse of intu, owners of the former Broadmarsh shopping centre, in partnership with urban designer Thomas Heatherwick.

The Broad Marsh bid would see the “Frame” of the derelict shopping centre retained and reimagined into a new space to bring people together in the city for leisure, performance and food, potentially unlocking 6,000 jobs and making way for 750 homes and more than 400,000 sq ft of commercial and business space.

The area would have what the council calls a ‘Green Heart’ providing a wildlife rich green space in the heart of the city centre, and the plans also include rejuvenating Nottingham’s cave network to boost tourism and World Heritage status.

A further £20 million bid has been made to regenerate Bulwell town centre, on the edge of the city, which the council says sits in the tenth most deprived constituency in England.

If successful it would see a new Bulwell Promenade with green space and public realm alongside the River Leen as well as improvements to the market place and restoration of historic buildings. Public transport would also be improved.

Meanwhile a £17m Levelling Up Fund Island Quarter bid would go into the 36 acre site which is already in the midst of redevelopment.

That bid has been submitted on behalf of developers Conygar, and focuses on renovating three warehouse buildings at the heart of the site, to create a community open theatre and creative and digital studio space. Access would be improved for pedestrians, cyclists and drivers with an upgraded junction connecting the site to Sneinton.