
A demolition team has been hired to demolish the former Bonny Street Police Station and Magistrates' courts in preparation for new developers at the Blackpool Central site. The clearance process, which will include Chapel Street car park and the old joke shop on Central Drive, will be led by DSM Demolition. Work is set to begin in the new year and may take up to six months.
During this period, the 15-acre council-owned plot will be marketed globally to attract fresh investment after the departure of the previous developer, Nikal, which had plans for hotels, restaurants and indoor theme parks. The council has terminated its land sale deal with Nikal but will retain £4.5 million from the original agreement signed in January 2020.
A multi-storey car park with a 1,306-space capacity recently opened at the site, with an option for the council to acquire it for a nominal sum in the future, reports Lancs Live.
The leader of Blackpool Council, Coun Lynn Williams, said: "Blackpool Central sits right at the heart of our plans to make Blackpool better for everybody. We're committed to attracting a world-class leisure development that creates jobs for our local people, extends our tourism season to be all year round and supports our local economy to grow.
"In the last five years at Blackpool Central, we've made more progress on this site than the 50 years before it since the Blackpool Central train station closed in the 1960s, largely paid for by the private sector without risking council tax payer's money."
She added: "The road to regeneration isn't always smooth but we will not stand still. We will continue our plans to demolish the courts and the police station early in the new year in order to create a shovel-ready site for a new leisure attraction.
"We have very high standards for the type of attraction which this site needs and any future scheme will have to match those ambitions. To deliver on that we need serious investors and we will be heavily marketing this opportunity to get that international calibre of attraction."
The demolition costs will be covered by the £6.95m allocated to the project from the previous government's Levelling Up fund.