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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Liverpool Waters to transform city skyline with new skyscrapers in 2025

The Liverpool Waters project is a £5bn scheme which spans 2.3km along the banks of the River Mersey and is being delivered by property giants Peel

How Central Park at Central Docks could look(Image: Peel L&P)

The Liverpool Waters project is poised to "change the city's skyline" with "exciting" skyscraper plans in 2025, per the development's director. Touted as an "ambitious 30-year vision to completely transform the city's northern docks", the massive £5bn development initiative is spearheaded by property conglomerate Peel, stretching 2.3km along the River Mersey's banks.

Split into five distinct zones—Central Docks, Clarence Docks, King Edward Triangle, Princes Dock, and Northern Docks—the sweeping transformation will see the area from Liverpool city centre's north boundary extending to Bramley-Moore Dock, where Everton FC has erected their new stadium. .

The aim is to rejuvenate Liverpool's north docks, historically an industrial hub, with various residential, commercial, and cultural ventures. Granted outline planning permission in 2013, considerable headway has been observed since then.

This includes commercial and residential projects surrounding Princes Dock, a newly opened sauna, and this year's launch of the Isle of Man Ferry Terminal.

Moreover, over 200 homes have materialised in Central Docks since inception, but the lion's share of completed work is manifest in Princes Dock, delineating the initial phase of the extensive Liverpool Waters, reports .

Construction work taking place in Princes Dock in 2024(Image: Colin Lane/Liverpool Echo)

Everton Football Club is set to move into their new stadium for the 2025/26 season, and significant developments are expected at Central Docks and King Edward Triangle. The Central Docks project, backed by government funding and with contractors GRAHAM on site, and King Edward Triangle, earmarked for a cluster of skyscrapers, are both poised for progress.

Chris Capes, development director of Liverpool Waters, discussed the advancements made so far and what's next for Liverpool Waters in 2025. He said: "From our perspective, there has been a huge amount that has happened in the northern docklands this year, particularly two main projects that sit within the Northern Docks and Central Docks area. The Isle of Man Ferry Terminal, which opened earlier this year and is now the main connection between the north of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and the Isle of Man. That's a project that the Isle of Man has been delivering and we've been supporting them - it's fantastic for them and means they can move from their existing plot down on the Pier Head."

"Everton's stadium is also a huge one. Being built by Everton, that's a huge project for the city and one that's an absolute game changer for us. It just switches the focus to that northern part of the docks."