A £122m cash injection to remediate derelict brownfield land, opening private sector investment for 1,100 new homes in Newcastle, has been announced by the government.
The money will fund groundworks and infrastructure to fix complex land issues at Quayside West,a 6.2-hectare site and home to the former Calder’s lead works, close to the city’s main station.
Housing and planning minister Matthew Pennycook said: “We want to see previously used land prioritised wherever possible.
“We are acting to make it easier to build homes on abandoned, disused and neglected urban brownfield sites across the country – boosting housing supply, regenerating communities, and delivering economic growth.
Northeast mayorKim McGuinness said: “This derelict land is in a great location on the banks of the Tyne yet has stood mostly unused for 20 years, which is a huge waste of potential.
“We’ve secured funding so we can get the last brownfield site in Newcastle city centre ready to start building the homes that local people need.
“This won’t be a vast estate, where people can’t access the services they need, but a thriving community with great transport links, green spaces and shops.”
The £122m will herald a new development platform and appointment of a private sector delivery partner, with the procurement process to start in the next few months.
National Federation of Builders, NFB, policy and market insight head Rico Wojtulewicz said he hoped SMEs would get the chance to be involved with the preparation and delivery of the site.
“We understand the temptation to give contracts to national tier one contractors, but local contractors or builders not only have the skills for these works but because they employ locally, give local people the experience to upskill or set up their own local construction companies.”
Brokers Hank Zarihs Associates said development finance lenders would be happy to lend to SMEs who win contracts for the site due to its location and backing by key authorities.
Thousands of new jobs will be created
Quayside West is one of the largest parcels of land at Forth Yards, and is targeted to become a new, sustainable mixed-use neighbourhood. Homes England bought the site in 2024, entering a strategic place partnership with Newcastle city council and the Northeast combined authority.
Leader of Newcastle City Council, Cllr Karen Kilgour, said: “Forth Yards is arguably Newcastle’s most exciting development site that, in time, will provide thousands of new homes and create hundreds of jobs.”
Newby developers did gain planning permission from the council to build 1,000 homes there back in 2020 but abandoned the project when they went into administration a few years later.
The city council hopes that in 15 years’ time, there will be a whole new part of the city to the west, adding significantly to Newcastle’s economy. Its development framework for Forth Yards -21 hectares of land hugging the river Tyne – includes: Forth Goods Yard, Pottery Lane East, Pottery Lane West, Quayside West, Newcastle Utilita Arena and Newcastle Heliport.
In March, the government announced that Forth Goods Yard, a 2.57-hectare parcel of land on Forth Yards, would become a future site for 5,000 new homes. The houses would be built under Platform4, a new Network Rail property company, which the government hopes will unlock sites for 40,000 new homes over the next decade.
LinkedIn Question: In what ways could the Quayside West project serve as a model for unlocking challenging brownfield sites for future development?