Manchester opens doors to $2.3 billion science and tech innovation district


FILE PHOTO: Signage is seen on a building in part of the campus at the University of Manchester, England, May 25, 2016. REUTERS/Phil Noble/File Photo

MANCHESTER, England (Reuters) - The northern English city of Manchester on Friday opened the first phase of a 1.7 billion pound ($2.3 billion) hub for science and technology companies, part of a large-scale project driven by university and private sector investors.

The 'Sister' innovation district on the University of Manchester's former city centre North Campus envisages 2 million square feet (186,000 square metres) of commercial space and 1,500 new homes, and aims to boost the city's status as a science and technology centre.

University cities like Oxford, Cambridge and Manchester have been creating environments where investors can be on hand to partner with startup companies, a trend Britain's new Labour government wants to continue to attract more private investment to help upgrade the country's public services and infrastructure.

The 15-year project Sister project is a joint venture between the University of Manchester and Bruntwood SciTech, a development company owned by property firm Bruntwood, Legal and General and the Greater Manchester Pension Fund, and will see a total investment value on completion of 1.7 billion pounds.

The first tenant, climate tech investment company Sustainable Ventures, moves into the site's Renold Building this November.

"This is a significant moment for Manchester," said Bev Craig, leader of Manchester City Council.

Sister forms part of the government-funded Greater Manchester Investment Zone, which uses 160 million pounds of public money to help attract businesses to the city over the next decade.

Sister said it will announce plans for its first major development zone soon.

(Reporting by Andy Bruce; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

As TikTok runs out of options in the US, this billionaire has a plan to save it
Google says it could loosen search deals in US antitrust case
Is Bluesky the new Twitter for teachers in the US?
'Metaphor: ReFantazio', 'Dragon Age', 'Astro Bot' and an indie wave lead the top video games of 2024
Opinion: You can pay for white noise, but you don’t need to
Rumble to receive $775 million strategic investment from Tether
OpenAI unveils 'o3' reasoning AI models in test phase
Qualcomm secures key win in chips trial against Arm
US finalizes up to $6.75 billion in chips awards for Samsung, Texas Instruments, Amkor
Potential TikTok bidder seeks a CEO, prepares business overhaul

Others Also Read