Crescent Innovation scheme to include 25 development plots with buildings up to 11 storeys in height
Plans for a 29-acre residential and life sciences district in Salford have been given outline approval.
The Crescent Innovation scheme, designed by Make Architects, is set to contain 933 homes and 1.7m sq ft of workspace in buildings up to 11 storeys in height.
It is being developed by a partnership consisting of Salford City Council, the University of Salford and ECF, a joint venture between Homes England, Legal & General and Muse.
The campus is a key part of the much larger £2.5bn Crescent Salford masterplan, one of the largest regeneration projects in northern England, which will include more than 3,000 homes and one million sq ft of offices on 252 acres of land.
Make’s phase of the scheme will include 25 separate development plots and five plots earmarked for landscaping and public realm, including a central plaza, which will be built over four main phases. It will be linked to the wider masterplan by a near five-acre podium, called Salford Rise, which will span Frederick Road.
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Salford mayor Paul Dennett said the council and its partners were pushing ahead with a vision to create a “world-class” research and development campus.
“The Crescent Innovation proposals are a key element of the wider vision for the Crescent area and will change the face of the area through the creation of a high-quality innovation environment, where people can achieve their full potential”, he said.
Several large projects are currently being planned for Salford, including a 3,200-home tower cluster designed by Matt Brook Architects which would include the tallest tower in the UK outside London.
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