Beech Salford Co living , Beech Holdings, p.planning docs

Beech has developed co-living schemes in Trafford and Newcastle. Credit: via planning documents

Beech proposes Salford co-living

Two sites close to the Langworthy Metrolink stop could be redeveloped into a 238-unit residential complex under plans lodged by the developer. 

Beech Holdings has submitted proposals to Salford City Council for the creation of two 10-storey blocks on the corner of Eccles New Road and South Langworthy Road, providing a mix of studio and one-bedroom options for residents. 

The developer already has permission to convert the existing Hollywood office building – located on one of the sites – into apartments but is now planning to knock it down to create one of the two co-living blocks. 

The other site is currently used as a car park for residents at Brookfield House, another Beech office-to-resi scheme that completed recently. 

Designed by Beech in-house, the co-living development aims to plug a gap in the market amid rising demand for rental properties in Manchester and its surrounds. 

“Co-living can contribute to easing pressure by providing a professionally managed, turnkey residential solution that will appeal in style, amenities and services to the city’s young professional, graduate and transient communities,” according to a planning statement prepared by Paul Butler Associates.

Beech Salford Co living, Beech Holdings, p.planning docs

Each resident would benefit from more than 100 sq ft of communal amenity space. Credit: via planning documents

Each unit would provide a sleeping area or bedroom, a study area, a seating area, a shower room, storage, and kitchenette facilities. 

The units are “deliberately sized – 322 sq ft for a one-bed and 215 sq ft for a studio – efficiently to encourage residents to use the communal spaces and amenities which underpin the co-living concept”, the planning statement explains. 

The communal facilities – a key part of the co-living concept – include residents’ lounges, gyms, coworking spaces, multimedia events spaces, a pair of roof terraces, laundry facilities, and kitchen and dining areas. 

To learn more about the application, search for reference number 23/81688/FUL on Salford City Council’s planning portal. 

“We are really excited to be working alongside Salford City Council on this landmark development for the co-living sector,” said Beech founder Stepehn Beech.

“The council has demonstrated great vision and foresight in recognising the need for this kind of community, and amenity lead offering. As well as providing quality apartments to a hugely undersupplied demographic in the area, the development will also create dozens of new jobs in both the construction and operation of the building.”

Beech is no stranger to the co-living concept, having already delivered schemes such as Westpoint in Trafford and City Co-living in Newcastle. 

In March 2021, Stephen Beech told Subplot that co-living is “what young graduates have been telling us they want since 2015”.

Your Comments

Read our comments policy

Let’s call a spade a spade – this is student accommodation by another name.

By Anonymous

Not for me, Clive

By Balcony Warrior

19sqm studio apartment!? NDSS were introduced for a reason!

By Anonymous

Decent filler. Hope to see the whole of Eccles New Road transformed in a similar way over the coming years.

By Anonymous

Nice scheme. More development in Langworthy/Pendleton/Weaste, please!

By Verticality

Compared to the recent building on the other side of the junction the sizes of apartments within this building are insufficient. Salford should chuck this one and demand appropriate room and apartment sizes!

By G Jackson

What does “decent filler” mean? These are homes not a remedy for tooth decay.

By Two thirty

Strikes me that Salford needs a Co-Living Planning Policy framework that effectively guides the market to where this type of development should be promoted. Proposals that are not operator led should not be consented.

By Anonymous

it has not got planning approval

By Anonymous

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