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Economic Development

How £390m plan for new student halls in Manchester city centre will look

The aging Man Met halls would be torn down and replaced with two buildings 30 and 24-storeys high for around 2,300 students

How the Cambridge Halls site could look(Image: Cartwright Pickard)

Plans worth hundreds of millions of pounds have been submitted to replace outdated student halls with modern high-rise university accommodation.

The proposals, which will now be considered by Manchester city council, involve the demolition of Cambridge Halls near Manchester Metropolitan University in Manchester city centre, and their replacement with two buildings of 30 and 24 storeys respectively, providing accommodation for some 2,300 students.

The plans show the complex will have 'internal and external rooftop communal amenity space', with ground floor areas designated for commercial and community use. National student accommodation developer Unite Students announced in May that it had entered into a joint venture agreement with Manchester Met to develop 2,300 new student beds at an estimated total development cost of £390 million.

The new site at Cambridge Halls, designed by architect Cartwright Pickard, is scheduled for completion in 2029 and 2030, according to Unite Students. The existing student accommodation, built near MMU in the 1990s, currently offers around 800 beds but is no longer considered suitable for students' needs.

Consequently, the university has committed to closing the existing accommodation on the site, with work expected to begin later this year.

The plans outline a 'phased' schedule of works, with more than1,100 beds slated for completion by 2029 and an additional 1,200 set to be ready by 2030. A central courtyard is also part of the proposal, reports .

The existing route through the site along Cavendish Street would be removed, with pedestrians and cyclists redirected along the adjacent Boundary Street West, according to the proposals.

A design and access statement by Cartwright Pickard said: "Internally the buildings will provide a highly varied mix of accommodation for the students with cluster bedrooms, post grad bedrooms, studios and fully accessible bedrooms.