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Campaigners battle to save historic Birmingham church

Conservation campaigners are calling for Barratt Homes to halt plans to demolish the church and former orphanage as part of major new housing estate

House for sale with CASTLE in the garden

Conservation campaigners have launched a battle to save a historic Birmingham church and former orphans' home which are due to be demolished as part of a major housing development.

Barratt Homes on land at the corner of Bristol Street and Belgrave Middleway on the edge of the city centre.

Both Save Britain's Heritage and The Victorian Society have now written to Birmingham City Council voicing their objections to the plans to knock down St Luke's Church and the Highgate Centre.

Completed in 1903 and fronting onto Bristol Street, the vacant church was designed by noted Birmingham architects Mansell and Mansell, the team behind 44 Waterloo Street, now home to a Caffè Nero overlooking Birmingham Cathedral, and the Fattorini Works in the Jewellery Quarter.

The Highgate Centre, in St Luke's Road, dates back to 1877 and was most recently used as a city council office building but was once a home for orphaned children.

St Luke's Church in Bristol Street is set to be demolished

The 21.5-acre application site is owned by Birmingham City Council and the Homes and Communities Agency.

It once housed Matthew Boulton College and the St Luke's housing estate but has been vacant since the college buildings were demolished around nine years ago.

In a letter to the city council, Mike Fox, deputy director of Save Britain's Heritage, said the 'Bristol Street and St Luke's Development Framework' stated both buildings should be retained and if possible reused in any future development.