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Economic Development

Hundreds of new homes at £65m scheme by Hill Dickinson Stadium are completed

Torus says Hartley Locks scheme aims to meet 'overwhelming demand for high-quality housing in North Liverpool'

The Hartley Locks scheme with the Hill Dickinson stadium in the background(Image: Torus)

A £65m housing scheme looking onto Everton's Hill Dickinson Stadium has been completed as part of regeneration of the city's Northern Docks. After almost three years, Torus has finalised work on the 195-home canalside development at Hartley Locks.

The scheme on Lightbody Street comprises of 185 apartments and a further 10 townhouses. The properties will be managed on a rent-to-buy basis.

Completion of the Hartley Locks project also included major redevelopment of a row of historic railway arches for commercial use, which is anticipated to create new jobs in the area. It is hoped the new homes can bolster further developments in the north of the city.

Steve Coffey, Torus group chief executive, said: "Hartley Locks is a landmark development that meets overwhelming demand for high-quality housing in North Liverpool and lets people take their first step on the property ladder. It has paved the way for wider regeneration nearby giving others confidence to invest and this will only increase now construction work has completed and people are living there.

"We have a lot of existing homes in the vicinity and our new partnership with Liverpool Council to accelerate place-based, housing-led regeneration in North Liverpool will really see us transform affordable housing options in the area."

Funding for the scheme came through an investment of £55m from Torus alongside an additional £6.8m grant from Homes England. Almost £3m was made available from Liverpool City Region Combined Authority's Brownfield Land fund.

Councillor Liam Robinson, Leader of Liverpool Council, said: "This is exactly the kind of high‐quality, forward‐looking development our city needs. Hartley Locks demonstrates how ambitious housing delivery and cutting‐edge sustainability can go hand in hand.

"Connecting homes to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest water‐source heat pump and Mersey Heat's network will cut carbon and future‐proof these neighbourhoods. The sensitive restoration of the Stanley Flight Canal Locks, the creation of new commercial space and the jobs this brings show regeneration that respects our heritage while unlocking real opportunity.