Send us your news tips, photos and videos Text LT and your message to 80360 or click here for more ways to contact us »
5:45pm Tuesday 13th May 2008
PLANS for a new apartments complex in Burnley could bring a touch of big-city architecture to the town, the developer has said.
Proposals have been submitted to Burnley Council to demolish Calder Vale House, Calder Street, and replace it with an eco-friendly eight-storey building, echoing Manchester's Urbis Museum.
The glass-fronted development would be fitted with solar panels and photo-voltaic cells to convert available sunlight into electrical energy.
Currently the building, on the banks of the River Calder, is home to the Active Way Beds and Furniture Centre.
Under the proposals 38 two-bedroom apartments and 12 one-bedrooom apartments would be created.
The ground floor would include a restaurant, with an entrance off Orchard Bridge, and commercial office space, with housing on alll other floors.
Agent Stephen Hetherington says in a planning statement that the plans "present an opportunity to regenerate a brownfield site in order to improve the image of the borough" and were based on the Urbis museum's model.
The eco-apartments are the latest residential regeneration scheme to be unveiled for Burnley town centre.
Proposals have been put forward to redevelop the Keirby Park Hotel, with an 11-storey apartment block pencilled in next to the landmark venue.
And masterplans for the Weaver's Triangle heritage site should bring dozens more residential properties to the centre of town.
Padiham Paul, Padiham says...
12:09pm Wed 14 May 08
Kevin, Colne says...
10:33am Wed 14 May 08
Bill, Burnley says...
9:32am Wed 14 May 08
Register for a FREE Lancashire Telegraph account and you can have your say on today's news and sport by adding comments on articles we publish. The best comments may even get published in the paper.
Please register now or sign in to continue.
Enter your postcode, town or place name
Search jobs in and around Lancashire
Search Now »
Find the right person for you
Search Now »
Search houses, flats, and all properties
Search Now »
Search new & used cars in and around Lancashire
Search Now »
Kevin, Colne says...
1:17pm Wed 14 May 08
I can't fall-out with your observations here. The over-supply of apartments in regional city centres such as Leeds, Liverpool and Manchester is desperate. Apartments can be had for 50p on the £ and still in some cases there are no takers. The danger is we end uop in the same situation in towns across East Lancashire. Hence my plea: proceed with caution.
One could tell we were near the top of the market when developers came forward with plans for apartment waterside living in Brierfield. It doesn't come much more crazy than this.
Too often the apartments being constructed are too small, but much the same can be said for new developments generally, inlcuding so called 'family' homes.
It always puzzles me that when people buy things at the supermarket they demand the greatest kilo per £ yet never make a similar calculation when buying the most expensive thing they're ever likely to buy in their lifetime - a house.
The question house buyers should ask is: what are we paying per square foot? Of course developers and estate agents never give this figure for to do so would reveal the sheer absurdity of the mania that has gripped much of the citizenry this past 8 years or so.
Kevin