Manchester has long been a home for visionaries and creative thinkers and nowhere more so than in its built environment. As part of 黑洞社区 magazine鈥檚 Manchester week, Carl Brown  and Ben Flatman profile some of the main movers and shakers in the city.

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From the Beetham Tower and the Trafford Centre, to Spinningfields, MediaCity UK and Salford Quays, the city of Manchester has long had a reputation for being a hotbed of construction and development activity.

The city, which was named as the third best in the world by Time Out in 2021, is seeking more development led-growth with ambitious net zero targets, plans for 30,000 zero-carbon social homes and Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham talking about building 鈥榯he Canary Wharf of the north鈥 in the city.

But who are the key movers and shakers in the construction scene in Manchester? After all Burnham鈥檚 ambitious plans will all be for nothing without the construction industry playing its part.

As part of 黑洞社区鈥檚 Remaking of Manchester week, we鈥檝e compiled a list below of some of the most influential figures from the world of property development, construction and architecture in the city.

Tim Heatley and Adam Higgins

Capital & Centric

The firm may have only been founded in 2011, but Capital & Centric is already one of Manchester鈥檚 best-known development companies. It claims that it has now completed more than two million square feet of commercial, residential, hotel and leisure development and is spending more than 拢2m a week on regeneration.

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Adam Higgins and Tim Heatley of Capital & Centric

Capital & Centric was founded when local lad Tim Heatley, who had set up a property company called Centric Property Group, merged his business with Capital Commercial Properties, started by former Peel Group director Adam Higgins. The company has since made its reputation by converting disused industrial buildings into mixed-use and residential developments.

Key schemes include turning the grade II-listed Crusader Mill into a residential complex with more than 200 loft apartments and converting Talbot Mill, a former cotton-spinning mill in Castlefield, into 200 homes. Kampus, an award-winning 拢250m, 500-home, build-to-rent complex in the city centre near Canal Street, was developed in partnership with Henry Boot and designed by Chapman Taylor. It opened last year.

In August 2020, Heatley told the Manchester Evening News how he became a property developer and bought his first house. 鈥淚 still can鈥檛 understand how I鈥檝e gone from that semi in Salford to spending 拢2m a week on regenerating entire quarters and districts of the city centre.鈥  

Daren Whitaker

Renaker

Manchester鈥檚 skyline is rapidly changing. Indeed a report last month by Solomon Investment Partners showed the height of the city鈥檚 20 tallest buildings has increased by 37% over the past 10 years, double the rate of London鈥檚. One firm that has contributed to this more than most is Renaker, founded by Daren Whitaker, a former quantity surveyor student at the University of Salford, who spent 18 years at Laing O鈥橰ourke before founding the firm in 2006.

Daren Whitaker

Daren Whitaker, founder of Renaker

Renaker says it has nearly 3,000 homes currently under construction, specialising in high-rise developments in and around Manchester city centre. This includes the four-tower, SimpsonHaugh-designed Deansgate Square luxury housing development which provides more than 1,500 apartments. The scheme鈥檚 south tower, standing at 65 storeys, is the tallest building in the UK outside London.

Other projects include a refurbishment of the grade II-listed Royal Mills building in Ancoats and the 308-home Lowry Wharf scheme on the River Irwell.

So, why high-rise? Whitaker himself, in an interview for Manchester City Region magazine in 2015, said that 鈥渢owers are the most efficient way to add vibrancy and mass to a city and accommodate growth. The changes on Manchester鈥檚 skyline are exciting and I think the city will look dramatically different in another 20 years.鈥

Ian Simpson and Rachel Haugh

SimpsonHaugh and Partners

One of Manchester鈥檚 most iconic buildings is the Beetham Tower (pictured below right) a 47-storey skyscraper developed by property investors the Beetham Organisation in 2006. The 554ft, slim neo-modern tower, which stands on Deansgate in the city centre, was designed by SimpsonHaugh, an architectural practice with deep Manchester links which has left its mark on swathes of the city centre.

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The 47-storey Beetham Tower, once Manchester鈥檚 largest tower, is iconic

Formed in 1987 by Rochdale-born Ian Simpson and Manchester-educated Rachel Haugh, the practice (known as Ian Simpson Architects until 2014) has designed well-known buildings including the 20-storey office tower No.1 Spinningfields and worked on the restoration of Manchester Central Library and the town hall extension between 2010 and 2014. Other projects include the all-steel residential skyscraper Number One Deansgate and the Shudehill Interchange transport hub.

The duo鈥檚 latest major project is an 11-storey office building at 4 Angel Square in the NOMA district for developer MEPC. 

John and James Whittaker

Peel Group

Whittaker made money from quarries and cotton in the 1960s and 1970s before acquiring control of the Manchester Ship Canal in 1987. This allowed Peel to develop the iconic Trafford Centre shopping complex on land attached to the canal in the late 1980s, which he eventually sold in 2011 for 拢1.6bn. Whittaker鈥檚 son James (pictured above) joined the business in 1995 and now serves as the group鈥檚 executive director of development.

James Whitaker

James Whittaker

Peel developed Media City UK on the banks of the Manchester Ship Canal in Salford, which was chosen by the BBC as its new home in the north. This in turn has persuaded other media organisations to move in. In 2016 Peel Land and Property announced plans to build 30,000 homes over the next 30 years.

Peel also holds shares in airports, sea ports and various other properties in and around Manchester and the North-west. In 2010 John Whittaker was named the most influential northerner by the Big Issue.

Tom Bloxham

Urban Splash

Once you have met Tom Bloxham it is hard to forget him. The charismatic co-founder of urban renewal specialist developer Urban Splash is larger than life, and rarely seen without his hat.

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Tom Bloxham, founder of Urban Splash

Urban Splash, which has won hundreds of awards for the architecture and design of its developments, specialises in regeneration. In recent years it has regenerated the New Islington area of Manchester, delivering 400 homes and 125,000ft2 of commercial space. Overall Urban Splash says it has spent 拢1bn on 60 regeneration projects, delivering 5,000 new homes and 1.5 million ft2 of commercial space.

Bloxham, who was once described by the Irish Independent as the 鈥淪teve Jobs of urban regeneration鈥, was awarded an MBE in 1999. He had a setback this year with the collapse of modular housebuilder House by Urban Splash, a joint venture with Japanese modular giant Sekisui House and Homes England.  

Sheikh Mansour

Abu Dhabi United Group

Mansour bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, known as Sheikh Mansour, is well known to football fans.

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The Co-Op arena, which wll be the largest indoor music venue in the country, is joint owned by Sheikh Mansour鈥檚 City Football Group

The billionaire member of the Abu Dhabi ruling family led the Abu Dhabi United Group鈥檚 acquisition of Manchester City Football Club in 2008 and currently holds a 78% stake in the club through the City Football Group holding company.

High levels of investment have helped the club win 17 domestic trophies, including six premier league titles since the acquisition. But it is not just on the pitch that the sheikh鈥檚 cash has had an impact.

In 2014, ADUG formed a joint venture with Manchester city council called Manchester Life which claims to have delivered more than 拢400m of investment into building a football academy, and community, education, leisure and sports facilities. The firm says it has invested more than 拢250m to deliver 1,500 homes across nine new developments and two mill conversions.

However, the Manchester Life venture was criticised in a report by academics at the University of Sheffield last month. It said researchers had not found evidence of income for the council from the venture and accused the local authority of selling off land too cheaply. The council has rejected the accusation that the deal was not good for the city. It said it was always intended to generate long-term returns and it had been a 鈥渃atalyst鈥 for further investment in the city.

Gary Neville

Relentless

From the blue half of Manchester to the red: Gary Neville was a legend on the pitch for Manchester United but he is now making his impact felt on the city in other ways.

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Gary Neville is making a name for himself in property development

He founded GG Hospitality with fellow former Old Trafford footballer Ryan Giggs, opening football-themed bars and hotels, including the Stock Exchange, a boutique hotel in a former Edwardian stock exchange building in Manchester city centre.

In 2015 he founded Relentless, a development company that is planning a 拢200m mixed-use project called St Michael鈥檚, on Jackson鈥檚 Row in the heart of the city centre. The 40-storey development includes a 200-bedroom five-star hotel, a spa, restaurants, a synagogue and a rooftop square. Relentless is partnering with local developer Salboy to build out the second phase of the scheme, including the 40-storey tower.

Neville may be a relative newcomer to the industry, but he has impressed many who have been in the development game longer. Tom Bloxham of Urban Splash told Insider Media in 2016 that Neville had impressed him at the Mipim property conference in Cannes. 

鈥淗e came across with honesty and integrity,鈥 Bloxham said. 鈥淗is level of knowledge was surprising given his relative newness to the market. He鈥檚 a Manchester boy at heart.鈥 

Joanne Roney

Manchester city council

Joanne Roney has an impressive track record in overseeing the delivery of major building projects in local government, including regeneration initiatives such as the Hepworth gallery project in Wakefield and the complete rebuild of the Park Hill housing estate in Sheffield in partnership with Urban Splash.

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Joanne Roney, chief executive Manchester city council

 The latter project, which was designed by architects Jack Lynn and Ivor Smith, was shortlisted for the RIBA Stirling Prize in 2013.

Her achievements at Kirklees council and Sheffield city council landed her the chief executive role at Manchester city council in 2017. On her watch the council became one of the first to declare a climate emergency in 2019, pledging to become a 鈥渮ero carbon city鈥 by 2038, 12 years ahead of the government鈥檚 target. Last year it invested 拢25.4m in decarbonising its own estate, which it says will save 3,100 tonnes of CO2 a year.

In February the council announced the launch of its housebuilding company, called The City. This aims to deliver 500 low carbon homes a year. A 128-home development in Rodney Street, Ancoats, will be the company鈥檚 first project.

Last year Roney was named chief executive of the year at the Muncipal Journal awards. The judges said she had 鈥渢ransformed the culture鈥 of the local authority.

When asked in 2017 by the Manchester Evening News why she took the council job, she said: 鈥淲hy Manchester? Manchester has always been, throughout my career, the place you went to. It was a hotbed of forward thinking 鈥 innovative, good ideas. You always had a connection with Manchester.鈥 

Stephen Hodder

Hodder+Partners

RIBA president from 2013 to 2015, Stephen Hodder has been a mainstay of the Manchester architecture scene for decades. He shot to national prominence when his practice won the inaugural Stirling Prize in 1996 with the Centenary 黑洞社区 at the University of Salford. Since then, the firm has been through a number of transformations, but his commitment to good design, education and the future of the profession has remained steady.

Stephen Hodder

Stephen Hodder

Hodder has built a reputation that extends far beyond Manchester and the UK. Recent high-profile projects include the Welcome 黑洞社区 at the RHS Garden in Bridgewater and Duncan Point, a high-rise residential development in Stratford, east London. In 2021 he took up the position of professor of architecture at Manchester School of Architecture.

 

Adam Kamani

Kamani Property Group

At a relatively youthful 33, Adam, the son of fashion retailer Boohoo Group founder Mahmud Kamani, heads up the Kamani Property Group, which has been buying up property and developing schemes in the city and beyond.

Kamani, who grew up in nearby Chorlton, has spearheaded the planned development of schemes including the Ancoats Works on the site of a former furniture factory, which will deliver 193 homes, developed in partnership with Capital & Centric. Kamani is also building a seven鈥憇torey office development in Dale Street in the heart of Manchester鈥檚 Northern Quarter.

Johnny and Paul Caddick

Moda Living

Johnny Caddick is the son of Paul Caddick, founder of the 拢380m-plus Yorkshire developer Caddick Group. Caddick Jr is now making a name for himself as managing director of build-to-rent firm Moda Living, a joint venture with Harrogate-based developer Generate Land.

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Johnny Caddick

The firm quadrupled its profit in the year to August 2021. This was achieved in part due to the completion of Moda鈥檚 flagship, the Ryder Architecture-designed 466-home Angel Gardens scheme in Manchester in the same year. 

Moda, alongside its investment partner Apache Capital, says it has finance for its 4,000-home development pipeline. It has also announced plans for a 5,000-home joint venture with funder JJR and a 拢1bn suburban build-to-rent venture with fund manager Ares.

Although Moda has plans to build BTR homes in many British cities including Birmingham, Brighton, Leeds, Liverpool, Edinburgh and Glasgow, its imposing 35-storey Angel Gardens scheme means that it is still most closely associated with Manchester. 

 

Deborah McLaughlin

ForHousing

Deborah McLaughlin has huge experience in bringing the public and private sector together to regenerate urban areas in Manchester and elsewhere in the North-west. Now a board member of Salford-based housing association ForHousing, between 2008 and 2016 she was the Homes and Communities Agency鈥檚 (Homes England鈥檚 forerunner body) executive director for the North-west. 

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Deborah McLaughlin

She oversaw the regeneration of the Ancoats area of the city and was a member of the Greater Manchester housing investment board and Greater Manchester land commission. She became chief executive of Manchester Place, a joint venture between the HCA and Manchester city council aimed at assembling land and attracting investment for housing.

She worked for GL Hearn, part of Capita, aiming to 鈥 in her own words 鈥 bring 鈥減ublic and private sector partners together to deliver outstanding real estate solutions鈥. As well as her focus on Salford through ForHousing, McLaughlin is also currently a regeneration commissioner at Liverpool city council. 

David and Alex Russell

Property Alliance Group

Since its foundation in 1990, Property Alliance Group has amassed a portfolio with a gross development value of 拢400m. Headquartered in Trafford Park, the firm has been active in developing property across multiple sectors including hotels, offices, residential and leisure.

Founder David Russell was joined in 2014 by son Alex, who serves as the group鈥檚 managing director. Notable schemes in Manchester include the 32-storey Oxygen luxury housing development in New Islington.

Russell Jr, speaking to Inside Media in 2017, said: 鈥淲e want to do a lot more commercial property, and we have focused on Manchester because it has a good brand. We can be on site within half an hour for the schemes we have in Manchester and the rule of thumb is that we do not go more than an hour outside the city.鈥

Gavin Taylor

Far East Consortium International

Gavin taylor far east consortium international

Gavin Taylor

FEC, a Hong Kong-based developer, investor and manager of homes, hotels and commercial property, expanded into the UK and Europe in 2011. Mancunian Gavin Taylor, who had many years鈥 experience working in development and construction in the airport sector, became FEC鈥檚 regional general manager.

He has been a key player as FEC developed major projects including the 拢235m, 756-home Meadowside development in north Manchester and the 600-home Victoria Riverside scheme as part of the Victoria North regeneration project.

Mark Stott

Select Property Group

Select Property Group develops build-to-rent apartments, along with student homes through its Vita business, and sells them to investors. It says it has sold 3,000 properties in Manchester alone, raising 拢890m. 

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Mark Stott, Select Property Group

Stockport-raised Mark Stott is the founder of the firm, which is headquartered in Alderley Edge, Cheshire. It has acted as master agent for Renaker on schemes in the city include the 52-storey, 414-home skyscraper The Blade and the 441-home tower Three60, billed as Manchester鈥檚 鈥渇irst cylindrical skyscraper, offering panoramic views from every apartment鈥. 

Select鈥檚 build-to-rent brand Affinity Living has completed several notable schemes including the 35-storey, 332-apartment Riverview development on New Bailey Street and the 188-home Riverside development near Spinningfields. 

Stott, who is the owner of Stockport County Football Club, was branded 鈥淪tockport鈥檚 most successful businessman ever鈥 last year by the local media.

Mike Ingall

Allied London Properties

Despite its name, development company Allied London Properties is associated most closely with Manchester. The firm, founded by Lincoln-born businessman Mike Ingall, is behind several major projects in the city, including the 拢1.5bn business and shopping district Spinningfields,, developed in the 2000s. 

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The Spinningfields shopping district

The project, spanning 20 buildings and 430,000m2, has been dubbed 鈥渢he Canary Wharf of the north鈥. Allied London is repeating the trick with Enterprise City, a new district near to Spinningfields being created in partnership with Lendlease UK and architect Levitt Bernstein.

Chris Oglesby and Kate Vokes

Bruntwood

Manchester-based office and retail developer Bruntwood was founded in 1976 by Michael Oglesby, and the family firm is now run by brother and sister Chris Oglesby, the chief executive, and Kate Vokes, a non-executive director and chair of the Oglesby Charitable Trust. Bruntwood owns several high-profile buildings in the city and has more than 100 properties across the UK. The group is now divided into Bruntwood Works, its workspace, retail and leisure arm, and Bruntwood SciTech. 

In 2018, Bruntwood became the first property company in the country to sign up to the UK Green 黑洞社区 Council鈥檚 net zero carbon buildings commitment. It aims to have reduced the carbon intensity of spaces under its control by 100% by 2030. Bruntwood Works is developing the Alberton, an office scheme with a rooftop holistic wellness centre and the UK鈥檚 highest swimming pool on top of a commercial building.

Joe Dempsey and Phil Gannon

Dempsey + Gannon, pictured below

Joe Dempsey and Phil Gannon are definitely two players to watch. They set up their practice together in 2020 at the start of the coronavirus lockdown. They had been working together for 10 years prior to this, after meeting while at Tim Groom Architects.

Joe Dempsey

Joel Dempsey and Phil Gannon

 

They are working on a wide range of scales and building types, including small residential projects, schools, offices and larger city-centre housing developments. Their practice is people focused, with a keen attention to the needs of the end users.

As well as jointly running the practice, Dempsey works as a tutor and research associate at the Manchester School of Architecture. The practice recently won two Manchester Society of Architects 2022 awards with designs for a private house and new commercial space.

Tim Groom

Tim Groom Architects

Tim Groom founded his practice from his dining room table in 2006 and has since grown the business into a well-established and respected leader on the Manchester architectural scene. Tim Groom Architects has built a strong reputation in a wide range of sectors, including residential, urban regeneration, student accommodation, hospitality and commercial.

Groom has developed a strong contemporary architectural language that responds to Manchester鈥檚 roots as an industrial powerhouse. His buildings often reference the old mill buildings and commercial architecture that still characterise large areas of the city centre.

Recent projects include the Blossom Street development within the Ancoats conservation area, close to the listed Daily Express building.

黑洞社区鈥檚 Manchester week

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It鈥檚 holiday season and 黑洞社区 is taking a staycation in Manchester: this week we zoom in on the north of England鈥檚 biggest and most vibrant city, talking to those shaping its skyline, creating workspaces, building homes, designing space for leisure and fun.

On Friday we published an exclusive interview with Andy Burnham, mayor of Greater Manchester.

 Further online features this week include:

You can also find all our Manchester articles in August鈥檚 print and digital edition out now