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Opinionopinion

Opinion: How can we make sure new towns like Manchester’s Victoria North thrive?

Patrick Clarke, º£½ÇÊÓÆµ & Ireland masterplanning lead at AECOM, on the joined-up thinking needed to make sure new towns become vibrant developments well-connected to local communities

A CGI of how the Victoria Riverside development will look(Image: FEC)

Last month, the government published 12 recommended locations for new towns across England, which included Victoria North, Manchester. Early phases of the North of England’s biggest urban regeneration project are already underway, but ‘new town’ status has put a fresh spotlight on the development, with other proposed sites spanning urban extensions, brownfield regeneration zones and standalone greenfield settlements.

Creating vibrant new communities will require significant investment in essential infrastructure, from utilities and transport networks to environmental considerations such as green infrastructure and biodiversity net gain. This is alongside social and economic infrastructure including schools, healthcare facilities, leisure amenities and places to work, all of which lie at the local level. So, in an era of strained public sector budgets and rising costs, it’s important to consider how local authorities can ensure central government’s plans deliver long-lasting benefits.

No town is an island

Recent new community projects have been smaller and mostly promoted by private developers viewing the scheme, its infrastructure needs and associated costs within the red line of their site. But the reality is that new developments don’t exist in isolation, and the potential for positive interaction between established and new communities that build on existing amenities and transport links can unlock significant benefits.

In Manchester’s Victoria North, this principle is already taking shape. The £4bn regeneration is expected to deliver 15,000 homes across 155 hectares and seven neighbourhoods over the next two decades. Early phases, such as Victoria Riverside, are creating a residential hub that connects directly to the city centre and surrounding communities via improved public spaces and walking routes.

In February, the wider scheme secured £1.5m from the government’s New Towns programme to support the business case for a new Metrolink stop at Sandhills, right at the heart of the emerging neighbourhood. The stop would link North Manchester’s new communities into the wider Metrolink network before it branches to Bury, Oldham and Rochdale. This presents a ready-made opportunity to integrate with existing transport infrastructure rather than starting from scratch – effectively providing the backbone for sustainable growth and reducing the cost and complexity of delivering entirely new transport hubs.

The government’s new Planning and Infrastructure Bill should also help here. It creates an opportunity for a more integrated approach, empowering planners to examine how new communities can tap into and enhance existing transport networks, utility systems and social infrastructure – reducing costs while creating more cohesive and integrated development.

At Victoria North, such joined-up thinking could unlock further opportunities for higher-density, mixed-use communities. Compact, well-designed neighbourhoods with new parks and green links that support active travel and healthy lifestyles can help Manchester meet housing demand while promoting a greener, more inclusive urban future.

It takes a village

It’s one thing to create new towns that are viable from a community and cost perspective, but to help meet the government’s housing targets, these new developments will need to be delivered at speed.