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Plan to convert 1960s multi-storey car park into 100 flats

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Plan to convert 1960s multi-storey car park into 100 flats

Construction & Build

Radical plans to transform a 1960s brutalist multi-storey car park into over 100 flats have been lodged with Newcastle-Under-Lyme Borough Council.

Developer Capital & Centric aim to transform Midway car park into one-to-three bed flats with social hub, gym, mini-cine and lounge space.

Developer aims to give brutalist concrete structures in prime town centre spots a new lease of life while saving embodied carbon within them

The proposed neighbourhood is the first of three sites being brought forward with the Council to re-boot key town centre spaces, a project which has attracted more than £35m of investment from the Government’s Future High Street Fund and Town Deal Fund.

John Moffat, joint managing director at Capital & Centric, said: “The challenge of building on brownfield land is you need to be bold and creative in your approach. Our radical plans for Midway are exactly that, and will bring forward much needed homes in a prime town centre spot.

Existing Midway multi-storey car park

“People thought we were mad when we said we wanted to create new homes from a car park but the plans show that it can work and it’s actually made for a more interesting and unique neighbourhood.”

Councillor Simon Tagg, Leader of Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council, said: “The ageing and outdated Midway will soon be redundant with the opening of Castle car park and this exciting proposal avoids wasteful demolition and allows new housing to spring up on a prominent town centre brownfield site.

“Castle car park will provide a clean, safe car park for the whole town centre. Along with the regeneration of the Ryecroft and York Place with homes, shops and open space, we are beginning to see the visible signs our multi-million regeneration.”

Written by Aaron Morby at Construction Enquirer