Lime Street closes for urgent Futurist repairs

Part of Lime Street in Liverpool closed on Monday to enable contractors to make safe the derelict former Futurist Cinema, currently subject of a legal battle between developers and heritage campaigners.

The city council said on Monday it had taken the action following a report by independent building safety inspectors last month, who found the condition of the structure on Lime Street has deteriorated with internal collapse, leaning walls and a high risk that cladding tiles may fall off.

Since then, a further independent report has found it is in worse condition than first thought, and structural experts fear the entire façade could collapse when work begins to make it safe.

The city council asked the Court of Appeal on 16 May to consider an alternative plan which would have meant taking the structure down to ground level without closing the road. This was rejected by a judge following an objection from SAVE Britain’s Heritage who, at an earlier hearing on 6 May, unsuccessfully attempted to get the essential safety work halted altogether.

In order to prevent any risk to the public or contractors, the road was closed in both directions and the work will be carried out remotely from outside the building using a crane and cherry picker to carefully remove unstable pieces of the structure.

The road will be closed in both directions from Skelhorne Street to Copperas Hill from 6am on Monday 23 May and is expected to reopen at 6am on Thursday 26 May. Pedestrian access will be maintained on the side of Lime Street opposite the Futurist.

Cllr Malcolm Kennedy, Cabinet member for regeneration, said: “We completely appreciate that this is going to cause a significant amount of disruption for motorists and bus passengers, but public safety has to be our priority and we have to comply with the conditions of the court.

“This building has suffered more than 30 years of decay and neglect, and independent inspection after independent inspection has shown it to be in a dangerous state of repair.

“We will be carrying out the work as quickly as we can and have endeavoured to remove the minimum amount of façade possible needed to make it safe. Anyone who has seen the photographs or the video footage of the inside of the Futurist will know what a terrible state it is in, which is exactly why we have brought forward a regeneration scheme to breathe much-needed new life into Lime Street.”

The proposed project by Neptune Developments with Regeneration Liverpool, a partnership between Sigma and the council, would see retail, a hotel and student accommodation built. IBI Group and Broadway Malyan are advising the development team.

Lime Street June 2015 design

Your Comments

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Why has it taken SAVE Britain’s Heritage over 25 years to become bothered about the much needed regeneration in the area?

By Peter Pownall

It seems very fishy to me that now the battle is on to save it – it is suddenly very dangerous and the ‘easiest’ solution is to take it down. Erm is this not a quick way to get rid of it – ooh its unsafe – sorry.

By Bob Dawson

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