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Economic Developmentopinion

Just think what we could do with £200m from the Wholesale Markets

Birmingham's biggest land sale for decades - disposal of the Wholesale Markets - could be finalised within weeks, netting the city council more than £200 million.

by  Paul Dale
Birmingham Wholesale Markets
 

Birmingham's biggest land sale for decades - disposal of the Wholesale Markets - could be finalised within weeks, netting the city council more than £200 million.

Lawyers for the council and US development company Hines are said to be poring over the small print and close to reaching agreement about the exact boundaries of the 21-acre site on the edge of the city centre.

If the deal goes ahead, and that looks a certainty now, it will release the largest single urban redevelopment site anywhere in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, and one of the biggest in Europe.

More importantly for the council's Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition, the sale will produce funds beyond the dreams even of council leader Mike Whitby.

There's a lot you could do with £200 million. The £30 million funding gap for the new library is a mere bagatelle. The cost of delivering the Midland Metro extension from Snow Hill to the markets site, estimated at £70 million, could be paid for with plenty to spare. It would even be possible to cut through the ring road concrete collar at the appallingly-designed Holloway Head, thereby creating further potential for regeneration sites.

Whitby must think that all his Christmases have arrived at once. He will have good reason to look forward to the council elections in May, safe in the knowledge that he does not have to face the polls again until 2010.

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Magisterial put-down of the West Midlands' two-year investigation into congestion charging from Birmingham Lib Dem councillor Jon Hunt.