Businesses and market trades are to be asked their opinions of plans to revitalise Grimsby’s Freshney Place Shopping Centre after publication of proposals to introduce family leisure activities, a cinema and a new market.
Artists’ impressions of how a transformed western end of Freshney Place, Victoria Street and the Bull Ring could be, show an area unrecognisable from how it is now.
The visuals, all proposals at this stage, are being made public today ahead of the formal planning process. They are due to go before North East Lincolnshire councillors at Scrutiny and Cabinet meetings later this month, before being submitted into the formal planning process.
People, market traders and businesses will also be asked for their views with public events to display the proposed plans. They will be held later this month with comments taken into consideration when design amends are made before the final plans are drawn up.
Cinema operator Parkway Entertainment Company Ltd is already on board to operate the new cinema, the artists’ impressions and plans show where that sits within the new offer.
A paper prepared ahead of the North East Lincolnshire Council Scrutiny and Cabinet meetings re-affirms how the ‘Freshney Place Leisure Scheme’ will be supported by the already secured Future High Streets Fund, or from a successful Round Two Levelling-Up Fund. This bid was submitted last month with a decision expected from Government in October.
The scheme, it says, has a wider aspiration to ‘dilute the current over-reliance on retail space within Freshney Place, providing a more diverse offer’. It has been reported that this is a top priority, following North East Lincolnshire Council’s purchase of the shopping centre earlier this summer.
“The long-term decline of Freshney Place and Top Town Market would have a significant impact on the North East Lincolnshire’s economy and community. Delivery of the leisure scheme resulting in an improved evening economy, increased income from car parks and an enhanced market hall offer would be a positive intervention to not only safeguard the centre, but also for the viability and vitality of the town centre,” outlines the report.