Council says it wants to create a 鈥榰niquely Mancunian鈥 space in neglected square
Manchester city council has announced plans to launch an international design competition for a 拢25m redevelopment of Piccadilly Gardens.
Urban design and landscape teams will be invited to submit ideas for the 10-acre space in the heart of the city centre when the three-stage competition opens on 1 September.
The council said it wants to create a 鈥渨orld class鈥 public space with a strong sense of identity that is welcoming and 鈥渦niquely Mancunian鈥.
The site will include the streets which run alongside the square and New York Street, which runs parallel to the square鈥檚 south-west side behind the 30-storey City Tower.
Initial thinking about how the area will be used has been informed by a consultation with local people, businesses and organisations earlier this year which attracted more than 1,700 responses.
In a prior information notice for the competition published last week, the council said that it was important to the people of Manchester to have a green space in the city centre.
But it added that any planting would need to allow the space to stay flexible to accommodate the tens of thousands of people who walk through the square each day.
A spokesman for the council said that was a 鈥減opular option鈥 with local people.
The controversial one-storey pavilion, the Japanese architect鈥檚 only UK building, was built in the gardens in 2002 as part of a redevelopment following the 1996 IRA bombing of the city centre.
Proposals by architect Urban Edge and landscape practice LDA to in 2017 were scrapped after Legal & General, the pavilion鈥檚 owner, said they were unviable.
But a free-standing concrete wall which is part of the pavilion but owned by the council has already been demolished, a move which the council鈥檚 spokesman said was a 鈥渘o brainer鈥.
The spokesman said that another part of the early 2000s redevelopment, a fountain designed by landscape architect Edaw, now part of Aecom, could also be removed or replaced.
He said the council was 鈥渙pen minded鈥 about the fountains and will provide more details about what will be in and out of scope when the contract notice for the competition is published next month.
The council also hopes to remove the bus station that sits between the pavilion and City Tower if 鈥渋mproved alternatives鈥 can be found, which would add a significant amount of new space to the south side of the square.
But it confirmed that tramlines along the western side of the square and listed monuments including a statue of Queen Victoria would need to be retained.
Manchester council leader Richard Leese said Piccadilly Gardens had the potential to become an 鈥渙utstanding鈥 open space in the heart of the city which befits its international status.
He said: 鈥淲e recognise that it needs to be transformed to ensure that it can realise its potential as a welcoming and flexible space.鈥 He added that he wanted to create a space that people are talking about 鈥渇or all the right reasons鈥.
The reputation of the area has deteriorated in recent years with it becoming notorious for drug abuse, rough sleeping and crime, with one restaurant owner describing the square last year as a 鈥渨arzone鈥.
The square is currently home to a 42m-long horizontal sculpture of Big Ben covered in 12,000 books on politics wrapped beneath a layer of plastic.
The artwork, which was designed by Argentine artist Mart Minujin for the city鈥檚 international arts festival, is a response to the city鈥檚 conflicts with Westminster over covid-19 restrictions.
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