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Commercial Property

Step inside Birmingham's Ringway Centre as future hangs in the balance

Developers are hoping to secure consent to replace 1960s block with new apartments as campaigners bid for 11th hour reprieve

Birmingham's famous Ringway Centre could soon be demolished if city planners back proposals for new apartment blocks(Image: Nick Wilkinson/BirminghamLive)

It is nearly a decade since the hustle and bustle of working life teemed through its offices and corridors but now Birmingham's famous Ringway Centre sits a derelict and vandalised mess.

Wires hang from the ceiling, huge chunks of plasterboard and fibreglass insulation lay strewn all over the floor and graffiti is sprayed over the walls. It has even been used as a pop-up nightclub by people looking for a free place to host a party.

Owner and developer CEG is hoping to demolish the 1960s building in Smallbrook Queensway and replace it with three towering residential buildings containing around 1,700 apartments, 7,500 sq ft of commercial space and amenities for residents.

But the controversial project has not been without its detractors as campaign groups and heritage societies have been working long and hard to block any attempt to knock it down.

With the application due to go before Birmingham City Council's planning committee in the coming weeks, BusinessLive took a tour inside the complex and saw it in its current state. The images can be seen in the gallery below.

Still clad in a purple Commonwealth Games banner, CEG has owned the six-storey Ringway Centre for many years and even operated the four floors of offices and ground-floor commercial units as landlord before tenants vacated the space around nine years ago.

There are still a small handful of businesses in situ at street level, including legendary Birmingham nightclub Snobs at the corner with Hurst Street where it has been based since 2014 but whose lease expires this year.