º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Enterprise

West Midlands business review of 2022 - part four: Birmingham's big beer festival, Edgbaston revamp and tributes to Chiltern chief

Our 2022 review of the business world in the West Midlands concludes with plans for a huge new beer festival in Birmingham, more regen plans for Edgbaston cricket stadium and tributes to railway pioneer Adrian Shooter

Clockwise from top left: Westside BID chairman Gerald Manton, Cole Waterhouse's Digbeth project, late Chiltern Railways founder Adrian Shooter and HS2 Interchange car park

Our review of the big West Midlands business stories of 2022 is in the home straight as we look at the final quarter of the year. We are starting off with plans for a new beer festival to be run by Birmingham's Westside Business Improvement District.

Its chairman Gerald Manton, who took on the role in March, chatted to BusinessLive about his plans for the city district which includes Broad Street, known for its lively night-life so popular with visiting parties.

Mr Manton said he planned to host a huge festival of ale in September and was also looking at revamping New Year's Eve celebrations and hosting open-air street markets with live music.

WEST MIDLANDS BUSINESS NEWS REVIEW OF 2022

The long-running redevelopment of Edgbaston cricket stadium took another step forward in October. A new hotel, skills centre and improved transport links could all be built as part of the next phase of work at the famous venue in Birmingham after Warwickshire County Cricket Club and the city council launched a joint bid for £20 million in funding.

Known as the 'Edgbaston Stadium and Community Masterplan', proposals include a multi-use community hub with the potential for an NHS walk-in centre, public space to host markets and events, a skills and apprenticeship centre and sustainable travel infrastructure.

A new £260 million mixed-use regeneration scheme in Digbeth took a key step forward after the developer behind the project acquired the land.

Manchester-based Cole Waterhouse bought the five-acre site for its project in Upper Trinity Street after entering an agreement with funder Ingenious to secure the land from multiple private owners. The masterplan for the site, which was consented last year, comprises 943 new residential units, public realm, a skypark, 133-bedroom hotel, flexible commercial space, car parking and the retention of the historic lock keepers cottage.