AN old colliery could hold the key to the multi-million pound regeneration of a struggling Liverpool community.
The council is putting the final touches to a deal to sell off former colliery Dingle Bank, a 10-acre site in Garston which it bought 10 years ago for less than £1m. (where is this land?)
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The land could now be worth up to £10m, and the cash is earmarked for the area’s regeneration efforts, possibly including the long-awaited “cultural village” idea. The news was today welcomed by community leaders, who urged the council to press ahead with the plan.
Cllr Peter Millea, executive member for regeneration, said: “This land was primarily bought to help regenerate the Speke-Garston area.
“We are now sitting on land which cannot be used for anything else, we cannot just sell it off to fill a gap in the council’s budget. The money has to be reinvested in Garston.” Projects which the council is now considering for slices of the cash include the ongoing house-building scheme in Garston Under The Bridge.
Garston urban village hall, which runs community activities and sport classes, desperately needs funding.
The Garston cultural village plan, which aims to transform rundown shops in St Mary’s Road into premises for artists and creative designers, also needs support.
The project’s business plan is in the hands of council officials, but a recent bid for European money failed.
Cllr Millea said: “We support the concept, but it is a case of finding the resource to do it.
“St Mary’s Road has character and if we can retain it as much as possible by putting in artists and craft shops which sell as well as produce goods, it will help small businesses grow.”
nick.coligan@liverpool.com
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