Massive student and residential apartments scheme gains consent

Urbanite Living has secured planning consent – subject to conditions – to develop the former Yorkshire Post site in Leeds.

This will deliver one of the city centre’s largest new residential and student living scheme.

The Leeds-based developer plans to build three mixed residential towers with new amenity and public realm on the prominent site which has been vacant since the Yorkshire Post group relocated in 2014.

The £400m scheme includes three residential towers, ranging in height from 25-42 storeys, designed by DLA Architecture with Quod acting as planning consultant.

The tallest two will contain 1,782 student beds in a total of 576 cluster apartments, along with leisure and well-being facilities.

The third building will provide 348 private rent apartments with significant landscaped roof gardens.

Key features of the brownfield regeneration will include a micro-forest, public square and riverside walk, joining the site up with further parts of new public realm along the riverfront.

Urbanite will work alongside Leeds councillors to restore and resurrect the Yorkshire Post/Yorkshire Evening Post mast heads and digital clock/temperate gauge within the site.

Urbanite is part of Asset Capital, a residential and commercial property investment company with a gross development value of more than £6bn.

The company has a development pipeline of over 3,500 student bedrooms across Sheffield, Glasgow, Birmingham, Leicester as well as Leeds and York.

Last year, Urbanite announced a £1 billion partnership with Prescient Capital to deliver over 6,500 student bedrooms over the next three to five years. Prescient had previously appointed Rick Gambetta of Hexagon Finance to assist with the funding of this significant development.

Daniel Newett, a founder of Urbanite, said: “Leeds remains one of the UK’s top university destinations with education space as well as student applications continuing to increase at a rapid pace.

“Furthermore, with a 30% year-on-year increase of graduate students staying in Leeds, the demand for rental accommodation is at an all time high.

“This scheme delivers uncompromising living spaces with fantastic public realm that is both sustainable and adaptable for the future whilst also supporting health and wellbeing of its occupants.”

Sue Sparling, director at DLA Architecture who is currently advising on many strategic mixed developments in Leeds City Centre, said: “We are very pleased to receive the support of councillors on the city centre plans panel for our proposed scheme on this important gateway into the city.

“Our design narrative really embodies the former uses of the site, woollen mill to paper mill, and embraces the local characteristics of the surrounding conservation area through form, materials and tone to create a new landmark scheme for Leeds.”

Urbanite says it hopes to be able to start development on site as soon as possible.

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