Making waves... city's new river quarter
Worth £600m and with over 2,000 homes, Sirocco Quays project is launched
Friday, September 28, 2007
By Helen Carson
The £600m Sirocco Quays redevelopment in Belfast, which will include 2,000
apartments, will be launched today.
The ambitious, 16-acre waterfront scheme by award-winning developers The
Carvill Group is to transform a rundown factory site into a "unique
riverside community" in the east of the city.
The scheme will eventually include a hotel, childcare facilities, a care
home for the elderly, a supermarket and doctors' surgery all on-site.
Christopher Carvill, managing director of the Carvill Group, said: "As
one of the biggest developments of its kind, this exciting project will turn
a former industrial corner of the city into a niche shopping and leisure
venue, not to mention one of the UK's most vibrant investment opportunities."
The development is also set to create hundreds of new construction jobs
during the 10-year build programme, as well as 2,300 permanent jobs on
completion.
The Carvill Group has worked closely with the local community in a bid to
ensure the success of the scheme.
The area had been a flashpoint for sectarian tensions between those from the
Newtownards Road and the Short Strand, but the developers have held over 150
meetings with community representatives to address any concerns about the
development.
There is also a move to provide training for local people with funding from
the Prince's Trust to enable them to compete for jobs.
And with house prices in Northern Ireland at an all-time high, the Carvill
Group has made a pledge on property prices.
Mr Carvill said: "Affordability is another crucial strand, so families
which have grown up in the area can retain a sense of ownership and identify
with this exciting new era."
He added: "Although it is not legislation, we plan to include a mixture
of both social and affordable units."
And Sirocco Quays has impressive 'green' credentials, too, with waste
management systems which will encourage recycling, the use of renewable
technologies and a subsidised car club for residents.
"The car club we're planning means families who do not need to use a
car can hire one, reducing the need for car ownership and reducing Sirocco
Quays' carbon footprint," said Mr Carvill.
"It will be a place where residents walk, cycle or use public transport
rather than cars and where they'll find reducing their environmental impact
made easy for them," he added.
In addition, the development was planned around open spaces, one of which
will be a public park within the city centre - second only in size to the
grounds of the City Hall.
The historic Sirocco site is the last in the city centre with river frontage
and completes the Laganside project - one of the most prestigious in Europe.