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Residential quarter and riverside park to be developed in Saltaire, Shipley

Proposals to demolish a vacant office complex on the edge of the Salts Mill World Heritage Site in Saltaire, Shipley and replace it with a sustainable residential quarter and riverside park, by Artisan Real Estate, have been given the go-ahead by Bradford Council.

The 11-acre site, sandwiched between the River Aire and the Leeds & Liverpool Canal, was formerly home to an HMRC office block that closed in October 2021.

The new ‘Saltaire Riverside’ development includes the provision of 289 new homes, more than 5,000 sq ft of commercial office space designed for flexible working and a café facing on to a new ‘pocket’ park and piazza. A sizeable riverside park will link the development to the River Aire, providing woodland, grasslands and lawns to act as a natural floodwater storage area whilst pedestrian links will provide direct access to Saltaire Rail Station and the canal towpath.

James Bulmer, Development Director for Leeds-based Artisan North said: “This is a hugely exciting development that will spectacularly open up a large riverside area that has effectively been closed to the public since the 1970s when the HMRC complex was built. Our completed development will become a modern interpretation of the neighbouring Saltaire village, bringing much needed sustainable family housing in an accessible, well connected and environmentally responsible setting.

“Progressing such a large development on the very edge of a UNESCO World Heritage site brings its own set of challenges and responsibilities, and we have taken time to understand and reflect the unique historical contexts of the Salts Mill location. Our final proposal, developed in partnership with Yorkshire-based architects Axis Architecture, is the result of a more than 18-months of design and architectural planning. This has been supported by a comprehensive and broadly very positive public consultation programme - including two design workshops with local stakeholders and three major public events.”

The scheme will see the demolition of the existing seven-storey HMRC building, which consists of two large hexagonal office blocks, with a construction start on site forecast for early 2024.

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