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Economic Development

Transformation of Manchester's 'brand new woodland town' with lido begins

Council wants to turn the 30 hectare area, with its 100 residents, into a 'new woodland town' complete with a lido and a new culture hub

Holt Town seen from the air, with the MCR Property Group land highlighted(Image: MCR Property Group.)

A 'derelict and empty' area on Manchester currently housing just 100 residents, is set to be transformed into a vibrant 'new woodland town' featuring a lido.

A comprehensive development plan for Holt Town has been given the green light by Manchester Council, which is aiming to rejuvenate the 30-hectare site nestled between Ancoats, Beswick, and New Islington.

The vision for the future includes creating a space for 4,500 homes, generating 1,500 jobs, establishing a 'culture hub' around Hope Mill Theatre, launching a 1km-long 'play link' for families, and introducing the city's first lido in many years.

Council leader Bev Craig praised Holt Town’s potential, heralding it as a place that could represent a 'first of its kind in Manchester... a brand new woodland town'.

In January, Cllr Craig said: "This neighbourhood will represent a people-first focus around active travel, green spaces, new play spaces for young people – and a digital first approach that will better connect the community with local services."

Construction has not yet commenced, held up by what council leaders describe as an 'old-fashioned problem' preventing the start of full-scale development.

Speaking at the prominent MIPIM property conference in Cannes, France, Shelagh McNerney remarked on March 11: "There's a level of investment needed within each plot. If you add up all of that across Holt Town that's a big number.

"We need that not just to make a nice place but to address some of the things under the ground. It's old-fashioned physical constraints that slow us down."