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PRIVACY
Economic Development

East of Birmingham growth and jobs drive is launched

Birmingham City Council reveals vision to create 9,000 jobs in deprived half of city as HS2 relents over land dispute

Windsor Street Gasworks, in Nechells will be developed

Deprived parts of Birmingham blighted by , low skills and poverty wages could be transformed by a new economic plan.

The East Birmingham Prospectus for Growth also confirms that some 37 acres of the giant LDV-Alstom site in Washwood Heath will be made immediately available for industrial development after the HS2 company agreed to give up its claim on the entire site – earmarked for a train depot.

The prospectus highlights some 3.7 million sq ft of development sites, including the Birmingham Wheels site, Yardley Brook Industrial Estate and Windsor Gas Works, which could bring forward 9,000 jobs over the next ten years.

It is also the city council’s first response to the criticism in the Kerslake report that too much development and regeneration is focused on the city centre, leaving the rest of the city behind.

Much of the growth will depend upon the development of HS2 and linked transport projects such as the Metro extension to the east, and the continued success of Jaguar Land Rover and the expansion of its supply chain.

Hodge Hill MP Liam Byrne said: “This is the biggest plan for jobs in east Birmingham we’ve ever had. It was hard fought. But, by demanding the government, the council and HS2 pull together, we’ve got an amazing plan for jobs and skills.

“It is an explicit recognition that Birmingham can reach its potential and bring jobs and homes to east Birmingham.”

He said high-speed rail and its spin-offs would inspire growth. “Through HS2, the journey time to Canary Wharf will be just under an hour. That is a game changer for the city and its financial and legal services sector.”