Approval granted for 213 homes, new leisure and retail and a 'pocket park' at Kirkstall Forge in Leeds

How the housing phase will appear.How the housing phase will appear.
How the housing phase will appear.
Plans for hundreds of new houses and retail outlets have been approved by planners for the latest phase of the £400m Kirkstall Forge development in Leeds.

Leeds City Council has resolved to grant planning permission for CEG’s Reserved Matters application for the first phase of its residential development at the site.

The proposals will provide 213 homes, including 77 houses offering three to five-bedroom family living. Work is expected to commence later this year.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Designed by Stirling Prize winners Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios, the style of their architecture is inspired by the local stone of the old forge building and Kirkstall Abbey.

To be situated just north of the river Aire, two apartment buildings are also proposed, each set over nine floors with upper floors set back.

Designed by architecture firm, Cartwright Pickard, they will provide 136 studios to three-bed apartments with 1,350 sq m of leisure and retail space on the ground floor. They will be set around amenity space, a new public plaza and pocket park, which can be used for events and activities.

Council officers had recommended approval be granted and stated that the development would "provide residential units of architectural merit and detail".

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

A spokesperson said that the houses will be designed so that space and light are maximised with high ceilings and tall windows. They will offer open plan living opening out onto gardens and terraces across different floors, with many roof verandas providing views of the valley.

CEG secured Reserved Matters (detailed) planning permission for 135 homes in 2019 and, as part of that permission, constructed two prototype homes. These will be thoroughly tested by the team once Covid-19 permits.

This new application leaves housing design unchanged, but by removing four of the homes this has enabled the two apartment buildings to be redesigned.

James Shimwell, Head of Residential Development at CEG explains: “The redesigned apartments mean we can deliver tailored build for rent apartments, managed by the Forge Life on-site team, which will bring new residents onto site very quickly

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“By including shops, leisure facilities and food and drink outlets on the ground floor, set around a public plaza and pocket park for pop up events, outdoor screenings and exercise classes, it will bring even more vitality to this exciting development.

“Through the consultation we’ve had some great feedback and look forward to progressing the next phase.”

Peter Cartwright, Founding Director at Cartwright Pickard, said: “Using materials which complement the wider masterplan, we have sought to celebrate the industrial heritage of the Forge using high-quality materials that will weather well as part of a vibrant development”

A team of Yorkshire consultants supported the reserved matters application which also included Lichfields, Pierre Angulaire, Richard Boothroyd Associates, Curtins, Bryan G Hall and Hoare Lea.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Michael Hepburn, Senior Director at Lichfields, said: “It’s great to see another phase of this exciting development progress towards construction. It’s particularly pleasing to gain this support for the first phase of residential development at Kirkstall Forge as the vision for this mixed-use scheme takes shape.”

The 57-acre site is already home to the Number One Kirkstall Forge offices, Butler’s deli restaurant, a new railway station and two prototype homes.