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£32m impact led build to rent scheme for key workers hits major milestone

GMI Construction Group and Cheyne Capital were joined by NHS leaders to mark the completion of the highest point of construction at a new £32m impact led housing scheme in Manchester. The development will see 35 per cent of homes reserved for key workers at discounted rents.

The 12-storey Oldham Road apartment building forms a key part of the regeneration of the New Cross neighbourhood in Manchester, which sits between the two highly-prized of districts of Ancoats and NOMA.

The construction company, which was appointed by Cheyne Capital to deliver the development led a topping out event attended by senior management and directors from Cheyne Capital and GMI.

Funding for the scheme was provided through Cheyne Capital’s Impact Real Estate strategy which aims to address the UK’s shortage of affordable housing. Under the social impact principles of the financing agreement, 51 of the total 144 apartments will be reserved for local key workers, such as nurses, teachers, and emergency services workers, at discounted rents. 

The project provides one of the largest proportion of homes reserved for key workers in Manchester, and as such the event was attended by Chairman of the Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Kathy Cowell, as a special guest. She officially marked the topping out milestone by congratulating the funding and contractor teams.

The development, which cost £32million to build, features one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments, as well as a 3,000 sq ft roof terrace and further high-quality amenity spaces for work, entertainment, and relaxation.  The scheme is accredited with the Home Quality Mark and a top-level Platinum Award with WiredScore, the global standard for in-building connectivity.

Manchester’s rapid economic development – with new offices, shops, bars, restaurants and entertainment venues – has sparked an accelerated demand for city-centre living over the last two decades.

In 1991, just 2,500 people lived in Manchester’s city centre. Since then, the rise in population has accelerated with an estimated 65,000 people thought to live in the city by 2019.

These numbers are expected to continue to rise with the city council predicting Manchester’s urban population will hit 100,000 by 2025.

But surging demand has led to surging prices, with council data suggesting rents increased by 10 per cent in the year to April 2022 alone.

Rents at the new Oldham Road development will be reduced by up to 25% for key workers.

 This Oldham Road development is part of the larger regeneration project being undertaken by GMI in the New Cross area of Manchester, which will see the construction of 378 homes over three major developments.

Oldham Road is due to complete mid-2023.

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