From left; Cllr Pat Harley, leader of Dudley Council, Mayor of the West Midlands Andy Street and Jeremy Knight-Adams, owner of developers Avenbury Dudley at the derelict Cavendish House which is set to be demolished after blighting the Dudley skyline for decades
- Eyesore Cavendish House to be bulldozed thanks to £724,000 WMCA funding deal
- Work starts on £449m project to bring Metro trams to the town
The regeneration of Dudley town centre was given a double boost today (Wednesday January 29) with work starting on its long-awaited Metro tram line and confirmation that the eyesore, Cavendish House office block will finally be torn down.
Mayor of the West Midlands Andy Street and Cllr Pat Harley, leader of Dudley Council, officially broke ground on the £449m Metro line and announced a £724,000 funding deal by the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) to demolish the derelict seven-storey office block and clear the site ready for development.
Cavendish House has blighted the town’s skyline for years but following the intervention of the WMCA will now be knocked down within weeks, paving the way for the wider £82m Portersfield development featuring retail, leisure and housing.
The WMCA deal finally ends decades of inactivity on the site with several attempts to clear the vandalised 1970s block and regenerate the area failing to materialise.
The Metro extension, which is also being funded by the WMCA, will further transform Dudley, offering a long-awaited rail transit connection to the rest of the region, driving investment and economic growth.
The Mayor, a former managing director of John Lewis, said: “This is a massive day for Dudley, which like other towns in the West Midlands has been hit hard by changes in modern shopping habits and other factors, resulting in empty shops and offices and a lack of engaging spaces for the local community.
“But the WMCA is committed to reversing this decline, and I can’t think of a more visible symbol of ushering in a new era for Dudley town centre than the demolition of Cavendish House. This eyesore has blighted and held back the regeneration of the town for more than a decade, and I am delighted the WMCA could play its part in making sure this monument to stagnation is gone for good.
“The future success of town centres will also hinge on transport links, and so it is great to see work progressing on the Wednesbury to Brierley Hill Metro line, helping to better connect the borough of Dudley with the wider West Midlands.”
Cllr Harley added: “I am absolutely delighted that the end is now in sight for Cavendish House.
“It has been a blot on the skyline of the town centre for far too long but today’s news is a symbol of the recovery and resurgence of Dudley.
“Within weeks the building will finally come down and work will start on another exciting development for the borough.
“We plan to invest more than £700 million in the town centre over the next five years. Along with the new bus and tram interchange, and the proposed Metro extension from Wednesbury to Brierley Hill which will run through Dudley, it promises an exciting future.”
The Portersfield development, which required the demolition of Cavendish House to progress, will sit immediately next to a new £18m interchange station linking buses, trams and later Sprint rapid transit buses, which is set to be built by Transport for West Midlands (TfWM), which is part of the WMCA.
Cllr Patrick Harley (left), leader of Dudley Council and Mayor of the West Midlands Andy Street on site at the start of works on the £449m Metro tram extension in Dudley
Jeremy Knight-Adams, owner of Avenbury Dudley which is developing the Portersfield scheme, said: “Portersfield, along with the new bus station, Metro and leisure centre, will rejuvenate Dudley as a vibrant and forward-thinking town for the 21st century.
“It will provide a new gateway to the town and deliver over 350 residential apartments, 200 student units along with 60,000 sq ft of commercial development which will include a small supermarket, shops, restaurants, gym and offices right next to the new tram and bus interchange.”
The WMCA stepped in to fund the demolition of Cavendish House as part of a massive, region-wide urban renewal programme using hundreds of millions of pounds to help unlock stalled sites for redevelopment.
The programme is focussed on transforming derelict industrial land (brownfield) with new homes and commercial premises as well as schemes that can help reverse the decline of struggling town centres and high streets.
To support high streets, the Mayor set up a Regional Town Centres Task Force last year made up of prominent people from the worlds of retail, development, finance, housing, education and Government to work with local councils on moving forward redevelopment plans for town centres in the West Midlands.
Jon Bramwell, a managing director at HSBC UK Commercial Banking and chair of the Taskforce, said: “The Taskforce brings together expertise across the private and public sectors with an ambition to transform the spaces at the centre of our communities, and breathe life back into town centres across the West Midlands.
“The requirements of our town centres have changed, with a greater emphasis on places for social interaction and experiences, small businesses and public services. In addressing these needs, we aim to help these towns realise their full potential, and to attract people back to our high streets.”
To mark the start of the tramway, the Mayor and Cllr Harley joined workers building a £4.33m wall at Castle Hill, which is the first physical structure of the project.
The wall is currently being built with money from a grant agreement funded from the WMCA with completion expected this summer.
When it opens to passengers in 2023, the Metro extension from Wednesbury to Brierley Hill will offer people vastly improved transport links with up to 17 stops including Dudley Town Centre.
A CGI image of how the Metro will look in Flood Street, Dudley town centre