Plans have been announced to create a new £20 million Eco Riverside Business Park in Coventry as part of an ambitious plan to create a major new heritage trail in the city.
Complex Development Projects, the company behind Electric Wharf, Fargo Village and the regeneration of Far Gosford Street, plans to create the new office park along the River Sherbourne.
The development of 100,000 sq ft of environmentally-friendly office buildings will be aimed at companies involved in innovation, information technology and the creative industries and could help attract over 400 jobs.
The project is part of the overall vision by Historic Coventry Trust to create a 70 acre heritage park centred on the restoration of the 14th Century Grade 1 Charterhouse and which will highlight buildings of national importance including Joseph Paxton’s Arboretum Cemetery and the listed viaduct designed by Robert Stephenson. The development will provide a naturalised riverside walk from the city centre to the heritage park.
Plans for the business park development, which would stretch along the river from Far Gosford Street to Charterhouse, are at an early stage but are being showcased today at the MIPIM property conference and exhibition in France.
Ian Harrabin, of CDP, is also hopeful that the scheme will attract Government support.
He said: “We want this business park not only to serve a very valuable purpose in ensuring that our creative companies have somewhere to grow and thrive but also in attracting inward investment.
“The development will set a new benchmark for eco buildings in Coventry and Warwickshire area with innovative design in a landscaped setting along the naturalised river.
“There will be a variety of building types predominantly catering for SME owner occupiers, and it will be overtly environmentally friendly.
“There is currently a chronic under supply of quality office space for small businesses to buy close to the city centre and the university and that is not good for growth or the development of the area.
“It is vital to provide a pipeline of suitable buildings to allow many of the privately-owned companies in those sectors to buy their own properties.
“The aim is to create a quality of place and a critical mass of activity that enables the city centre to retain and expand SMEs
“The growth of both universities generates SMEs but the type and quality of space available is very limited meaning that much of the growth leaves the sub-region – that is a trend we aim to help reverse.”
Harrabin also believes the overall development could provide a sizeable boost to tourism and a major element in the city’s bid for City of Culture in 2021.
“The plans for the restoration of the Charterhouse by Historic Coventry Trust are progressing well but there is just so much more potential if it all links to the city centre and university.
“Cities would give a great deal to have such fantastic historical assets yet for years they have remained hidden and neglected. This overall scheme aims to bring them back to life for the good of the city and the Eco Riverside Park will play a key role in making it a success.”
The Coventry and Warwickshire MIPIM Partnership will see a group of companies and organisations fund its presence, run a stand and host a number of events.
Warwickshire joined with Coventry – which has attended for 23 years – for the first time last year and is a joint partner at this year’s event.
The partners are Friargate, Jaguar Land Rover, The Coventry and Warwickshire Local Enterprise Partnership, Barberry, Study Inn, CEG, The Coventry and Warwickshire Development Partnership, HOIRBA-MIRA, Coventry University, University of Warwick, City Fibre, Wasps, Deeley, Downing, Complex Development Projects.