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Commercial Property

How Cardiff's new 16,500-seater indoor arena will be funded

The arena will be at the heart of plans for a £1bn mixed-use development at Atlantic Wharf in Cardiff Bay

An artist impression of what the indoor arena could look like

The indoor arena project in Cardiff Bay is expected to provide the catalyst for a £1bn mixed-use transformation of Atlantic Wharf, but how is it being funded?

After months of fine-tuning, Cardiff Council and US-owned Live Nation Entertainment - one of the world’s leading entertainment groups - last week closed the financing deal for the 16,500-seater arena, which is scheduled to open in 2028.

Once forecast at £150m, the cost spiralled following the pandemic and rising inflation. The current price tag of around £300m also includes £20m for the required relocation of the existing Travelodge hotel on Hemingway Road and the construction of a new one.

Live Nation will operate the indoor arena under a 45-year lease with the council. The entertainment giant has also agreed to provide capital investment of up to £150m towards the construction cost.

The arena will be located on the existing car park of Cardiff Council’s Atlantic Wharf headquarters building, with the required public realm also covering the opposite car park site at the council-owned Red Dragon entertainment and leisure complex. It will sit at the heart of long-term plans for a mixed-use development, delivering new council homes, private residential, hotels, offices, retail and leisure space, across a 30-acre site. A new multi-storey car park for the arena will also be built.

The initial projected cost of the arena pre-Covid was intended to be solely financed by the local authority borrowing from the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s Public Works Loans Board (PWLB), with the arena’s rental income from Live Nation offsetting the financing costs. While the council’s borrowing commitment is unchanged, why has Live Nation now agreed to provide such a huge capital contribution?

The company has projected, even with the required investment, significant long-term returns from operating the arena. Live Nation, which owns acts, ticketing (through Ticketmaster), and venues, is currently subject to an anti-trust probe by the US Department of Justice.

Since the initial cost analysis, interest rates on short and long-term debt from the PWLB have increased. The amount of fixed rent that Live Nation has agreed to pay the council has not been disclosed, but it will rise annually in line with the RPI (retail price index rate of inflation). Each year, therefore, the rent the council will receive will rise - assuming, of course, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy doesn’t suffer deflation.