More than £108m has been committed through the WMCA’s Collective Investment Fund (CIF) and a further £31m through the Revolving Investment Fund (RIF), with the funds taking on added significance in recent months as the pandemic continues to hit the regional economy.
Both loan funds are being used to unlock difficult sites for commercial and residential development, helping to put in place some of the building blocks needed to drive a sustainable recovery from Covid-19 and help the region recapture its previous economic success.
Andy Street, Mayor of the West Midlands and chair of the WMCA, said: “Transforming existing brownfield land into new workplaces and communities has been a real success story for the West Midlands and despite the pandemic we have kept on investing in these regeneration projects.
“Since the start of the Covid-19 outbreak, we have actually secured even more cash from Government for this work, helping to protect our Green Belt while breathing new life into derelict, eyesore sites.
“This ongoing investment will also play a critical role in the region’s economic recovery from coronavirus. By funding schemes like these, we can help guarantee work for local firms while creating new jobs for local people.”
As well as providing loans, WMCA funding is also used to pay for the clean-up of old industrial sites that would otherwise lie neglected and undeveloped because of the high cost faced by potential developers.
Since the pandemic began, the two funds have been used to bring forward a number of schemes including:
Latest figures also show that firms moving into the new premises being built will generate an extra £5.5m in business rates.
Along with new workplaces, the two funds have also seen 629 new homes being built and the WMCA has hundreds of millions of pounds available in other funds specifically for unlocking brownfield land for new housing.
A focus on brownfield development is a key part of the region’s Kickstarting the West Midlands Economy: Our Investment Case to Government – a £3.2bn investment blueprint which was submitted last year and designed to recharge the regional economy and create long-term prosperity.
Ministers have already signalled their intention to back the blueprint, which had sought extra cash to extend the region’s brownfield-first programme.
In December, the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) was awarded more than £51m, including £24m from the Government’s £40m National Brownfield Housing Fund.
Due to the region’s strong performance over recent months in delivering new homes and jobs both at scale and pace, the £51m also included a further £27m from the Land Fund agreed in the region’s landmark 2018 Housing Deal.
Cllr Mike Bird, WMCA portfolio holder for housing and land and leader of Walsall Council said: “These latest figures show how the WMCA is targeting funding on developments that meet key Covid recovery goals, including more brownfield regeneration and getting people who lose their jobs back into work quickly.
“But at the same time, we are also securing new investment in construction technology and innovation, helping to drive the industries of the future while also giving people the skills needed to work in them.”
Access to both loan funds is provided by Frontier Development Capital Ltd (FDC), a fund manager working closely with regional property developers to arrange investments from the WMCA.
FDC’s Head of Property Finance Nick Oakley said: “Our Property Team continues to see that despite the ongoing challenges brought about by Covid-19 the regional property development market remains resilient. The continued investment into regional developments via the WMCA’s CIF and RIF will underpin plans to help the region recover and sustain growth.”