º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Plans for 335 Birmingham apartments end 'supermarket war'

New city centre homes proposed, alongside communal facilities such as café and gym for residents

More than 300 new apartments are set to be built on the edge of Birmingham city centre - finally signalling the end of a long-running 'supermarket war' spanning the past decade.

The corner plot, at the junction of Lee Bank Middleway and Bristol Street, is known as 'zone 11' of Park Central and would complete Crest Nicholson's , albeit to a much smaller scale than previously envisaged.

This latest application is for 335 apartments, ranging from one to three bedrooms, with 217 of them to be managed and privately rented while the remainder would be placed for sale on the open market.

In addition, there could be a small convenience store and other commercial space alongside communal facilities such as café and gym for residents.

The flats would be built in a group of six blocks, some reaching up to ten storeys and arranged around a central courtyard with cycle and car parking.

The site, once the home of council-owned Haddon Tower, was going to house an Asda supermarket and the 27-storey 'Spiral Tower' containing more than 400 apartments.

But development of the 3.4-acre plot has been dogged by legal wrangles stemming from Tesco's desire to demolish nearby Monaco House and build a store there.

After ten years of false starts, Tesco it no longer planned to renovate the dilapidated old building which fronts onto the A38 Bristol Street and its planning permission there expires in October 2016.