The international property and investment group, Lendlease, has announced that more than 500 jobs have now been created during construction of the Perry Barr Residential Scheme in Birmingham.
Lendlease, the principal contractor for the scheme on behalf of Birmingham City Council, announced that 512 jobs had been created against a target of 400, which was one of a number of objectives it was set in order to help support the local economy and bring wider community benefits.
Over £250m has been spent with the local community and more than 1,300 people have been upskilled on the site. The workforce has also put in more than 2,300 hours of volunteering for local charities including Birmingham Crisis Centre and the food bank at Eden Boys’ School.
Cllr Ian Ward, Leader of Birmingham City Council, said: “We’re determined that success for Birmingham will mean success for the people of Birmingham and this milestone on the Perry Barr Residential Scheme demonstrates the incredible wider benefit for the community of such a transformational regeneration project. We’re creating jobs, launching careers and delivering much-needed new homes for Birmingham and I look forward to seeing this vibrant new neighbourhood take shape.”
The tallest building on the scheme tops out at 15 storeys and the first residents are expected to move in during 2023. The scheme is part of the wider £700m-plus regeneration of Perry Barr in the north-west of the city, including improved leisure and community facilities along with upgraded transport infrastructure.
Lendlease are the Management Contractor for the Perry Barr Residential Scheme, working with Kier, Willmott Dixon and Vinci UK to deliver the project.
Anna Evans, Lendlease’s Project Director for the Perry Barr Residential Scheme, said: “This is a major milestone for the Perry Barr Residential Scheme and shows the immensely positive impact that Lendlease is having on the local community. Our wider efforts to raise awareness of the importance of sustainability will also have a lasting impact, and it¹s something Lendlease will continue to strive for as we aim for net zero carbon by 2025 and absolute-zero by 2040.”
New site hoardings have recently been erected around the site, designed by students from Birmingham Metropolitan College with the brief of raising awareness of Single Use Plastics (SUP). The hoardings were inspired by the SUP Ambassadors programme, a project developed with students from site hoardings Eden Boys’ School, that aims to raise awareness of SUP and its impact on the environment, people and wildlife.
Lendlease, together with construction partners, also sponsored the production of a new book aimed at educating primary school children on single use plastics, which was launched at Calshot Primary School, and has now been distributed to over 450 pupils in primary schools across Birmingham.