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Urban Splash and igloo Regeneration to lead Liverpool Festival Gardens housing project

The development zone of the 90-acre site extends to 27 acres

Redevelopment work on the former Festival Gardens site, Otterspool(Image: Colin Lane/Liverpool Echo)

The regeneration of Liverpool's Festival Gardens site is set to move forward again with the appointment of a new development partner. Liverpool City Council has selected a joint venture company, spearheaded by Urban Splash and igloo Regeneration, following a procurement process initiated last autumn.

These two firms have formed a partnership to work on an innovative and sustainable housing scheme on the riverside location. The Festival Gardens' development zone, part of a larger 90-acre site, spans 27 acres and is situated three miles south of Liverpool city centre.

Festival Gardens was previously a landfill site that underwent transformation, landscaping, and planting to become the venue for the Liverpool International Garden Festival in 1984. Currently, the site is divided into three distinct zones.

These include the development zone – a 27-acre area incorporating the former 'Pleasure Island' dome, plaza and waterfront bund, the gardens – a 25-acre green space surrounding a large landscaped mound with a substantial surface car park remaining from Festival Gardens, and the Southern Grasslands – a 37-acre portion of the former Festival Gardens land that was landscaped and opened as a park two years ago.

Remediation and infrastructure installation commenced in early 2021, with construction company VINCI completing the work by summer 2023. The process and ground infrastructure works amounted to a cost of £53m, funded by the council, Homes England, and the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority, reports .

This remediated land was utilised to create the new Southern Grasslands green space.

ION Property Development, the previous development partner, no longer holds exclusivity for the site, having reached a mutually agreeable settlement with the council. Last year, the council initiated a procurement process for new developers to take over the project, as ION had previously been working on the site's transformation.

The brownfield development scheme, one of the largest in northern England, is supported by Homes England and the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority. Urban Splash and igloo Regeneration are now collaborating with the council to transform the site.