Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Liverpool Waters

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Liverpool, England

Website
  
Liverpool Waters

Developer
  
The Peel Group

Address
  
12, Princes Dock, Liverpool Waters, Liverpool L3 1DL, UK

The peel group liverpool waters


Liverpool Waters is a large scale £5.5bn development that has been proposed by the Peel Group in the Vauxhall area of Liverpool, Merseyside, England. The development will make use of a series of presently derelict dock spaces at Central Docks, with much of the docks in a World Heritage Site. This is an area north of Liverpool's historic Pier Head. It is the sister programme of the Wirral Waters project. Since 2012 the two projects have enjoyed enterprise zone status, together forming the Mersey Waters Enterprise Zone.

Contents

Liverpool waters liverpool regeneration project rio


The development

The development is planned to create at least 17,000 full-time jobs and 21m sq ft of new commercial and residential floor space including 23,000 apartments and four hotels. The tallest towers are proposed to be over 50 storeys high.

It is split into four sectors:

  • Sector A: Bramley-Moore Dock, Nelson Dock
  • Sector B: Salisbury Dock, Collingwood Dock
  • Sector C: Liverpool Canal Link, including Trafalgar Dock, Clarence Dock, West Waterloo Dock, East Waterloo Dock
  • Sector D: Prince's Half-Tide Dock, Prince's Dock
  • The developers have stated that the project may take 50 years before it is finished. The proposals are presently at the planning stage and are subject to public acceptance. The planning applications were submitted by the developers on 4 October 2010. As of March 2012, Liverpool City Council has granted planning permission to the Liverpool Waters scheme as a whole. English Heritage has formally objected to the plans and UNESCO has expressed concern, placing Liverpool - Maritime Mercantile City on its List of World Heritage in Danger in 2012. The proposal was referred to Communities Secretary Eric Pickles to assess whether to hold a public inquiry. Pickles' decision not to call a public inquiry, announced in March 2013, means that the project can go ahead regardless, although it is unclear what the next steps are or when they may be taken.

    A monorail to link the area to Liverpool's city centre, with the potential to connect to the John Lennon Airport has been proposed.

    References

    Liverpool Waters Wikipedia