New owners unveil vision for Alderley Park

The new owners of Alderley Park have today shared their vision for the future of AstraZeneca's former R&D site, which they say will see the site support over 7,500 high value skilled jobs.

Manchester Science Parks (MSP) shareholders were joined by local, regional and national business and community leaders at a celebratory launch event held today at the site.

Manchester Science Parks, who with majority shareholder Bruntwood acquired the 400 acre site in March, revealed its ambition to maintain top quality bioscience as the cornerstone of its commercial strategy.

MSP praised the investment record of previous owners AstraZeneca, and set out how the state-of-the-art research facilities at the site will be adapted to a new business model, where a community of businesses would specialise in different aspects of the drug discovery chain, working in a campus environment to encourage collaboration and the sharing of risk.

Chris Oglesby, Bruntwood CEO and MSP Chairman, said: "Through our acquisition of Alderley Park, we have a unique opportunity to create a diverse innovative community of bioscience businesses which is internationally respected for the quality of its work and as a sustainable business model. With our partners and the community of exceptional scientists who choose to remain at the Park, we will build a flagship for a vibrant life sciences industry in the North of England."

The vision for Alderley Park to remain at the forefront of bioscience innovation is supported by MSP's public sector and academic partners, including the two Manchester universities, Manchester, Salford and Cheshire East Councils, and the Central Manchester Foundation Trust.

Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell, President and Vice Chancellor, The University of Manchester, commented: "I am delighted to see the progress that has been made in ensuring the future of Alderley Park as a site of outstanding science. This has been achieved through excellent collaboration between the partners who are here today."

Former owners of the site, AstraZeneca, will continue to have a presence at Alderley Park, with over 700 employees retained on site and has pledged a £5m contribution to the 'Alderley Park Springboard Fund' that will be used to support new businesses starting up at Alderley Park.

MSP will also contribute £5m to the new Fund, and is optimistic that further contributions will ensure that it can play an important role in retaining and nurturing talent and enterprise at Alderley Park.

Cllr Michael Jones, Leader of Cheshire East Council, confirmed he is going to ask Cabinet to invest money in the Fund, which is initially hoping to raise £40m to be focussed primarily at start-up and early stage businesses.

He told alderleyedge.com "I am going to go away now and think about the number to put in, think about what's the value, talk to the officers and make a recommendation to Cabinet. I'll then make an announcement to Council.

"We are investing in new science that could keep people's lives long. We've got an elderly population this will allow it to grow and for people to live longer at home. We could maybe get rid of cancer forever, just imagine that and Cheshire East money could go into it.

"We won't invest unless there is a clear chance of getting a return though but I think it could become a revenue stream for us."

Cllr Michael Jones is also looking for the Government to invest "as much as possible" in Alderley Park.

Mene Pangalos, Executive Vice President Innovative Medicines and Early Development, AstraZeneca, stated: "As we handover ownership of Alderley Park, we can look back with pride on the important role the site has played in our success. We are delighted that our legacy of scientific innovation stretching back many decades will be built upon by Manchester Science Parks, helping ensure the UK remains a global leader in life sciences."

George Osborne MP was a keynote speaker at the launch event and presided over the handing over of Alderley Park from Mene Pangalos, Executive Vice President Innovative Medicines and Early Development at AstraZeneca to Chris Oglesby, Bruntwood CEO and MSP Chairman.

The Chancellor of Exchequer said "What you're doing here is vitally important. When AstraZeneca made the decision to create a new R&D centre in Cambridge and to sell Alderley Park I immediately recognised, as did many others in this room, the potentially devastating consequences for this area and that's why we went straight away in to setting up the Task Force, engaging with the company and bringing forward this strategy.

"The key decision we took was we wanted not only wanted to secure the long term future of Alderley Park but also the development of a strong life sciences cluster in this part of the country and together I believe we've risen to that challenge and I really welcome the scale and the ambition from Manchester Science Parks to create a world class bioscience campus here.

"There is already a cluster starting to emerge within the existing bio hub incubator with an incredible 61 companies created on the site so far*. It is a fantastic start but that's all it is - it is a start. It already exceeds our own expectations but obviously there's still a lot to do to secure the future of this site as a great centre for science in the North West and I'm very excited about the plans we have and I give a commitment, not only as your local MP but on behalf of the Government to do absolutely everything we can to support your work here and turn this into a really bright part of Britain's scientific future."

Speaking about Pfizer's potential bid for AstraZeneca, George Osborne added "Our overriding national interest is securing good jobs and good sites in Britain, manufacturing and science jobs. We will support whatever arrangement best delivers that for Britain and I regard it as a key part of my job to engage with and meet the management of AstraZeneca and Pfizer to secure Britain's economic interest.

"I think it's a huge error of judgement for anyone who cares about British jobs and British science to turn down the chance to engage with AstraZeneca or with Pfizer. It means putting politics above Britain's national economic interest, I will not do that. The Government will not do that because if you're not even in the room or on the end of a phone call what chance do you have to put British science and British jobs first."

When asked about how much housing forms part of the plan for the site, Chris Oglesby said "We're currently in the process of master planning the site here. We've acquired this site to create a world class bioscience centre and that's the key driver but there is more to delivering a world class bioscience centre than just the bioscience facilities here and we'll be consulting with the local community, working up that master plan to establish what is the best way to deliver that world class bioscience cluster."

Cllr Michael Jones added "If you want the science centre to be as good as it can be then we've got to be open to enabling housing. We're not in the process of destroying this wonderful environment, you can be sure of that, and my members who represent the area are passionate about it, but we've got to be realistic. Jobs are vital for this country, we're still coming out of recession and enabling housing we will look to support."

At the end of the presentations John Patterson, Nether Alderley resident and former director at AstraZeneca, asked "We've heard a little about housing, but nothing specific, would you like to comment about the Green Belt? For most of the local residents the Green Belt is sacrosanct will you keep it that way?"

Chris Oglesby responded "We will be engaging very shortly with local residents on our plans and we recognise that the physical beauty of this site is one of its key attractors and it's vital that we maintain that."

Cllr Michael Jones added "We are not going to allow the Green Belt to be encroached unless it's the absolute last real opportunity we have and here there no need for it. You don't need to go anyway near the Green Belt to develop what I consider to be enabling housing. You can have that assurance from me."

* Of the 61 companies currently located on site, 5 are new companies created by former AstraZeneca employees.

Photo: (l-r) Chris Oglesby, Mene Pangalos and George Osborne.

Tags:
Alderley Park, AstraZeneca
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Comments

Here's what readers have had to say so far. Why not add your thoughts below.

Stuart Redgard
Sunday 11th May 2014 at 3:36 am
I find it hard to believe that the site can support 7500 jobs without significant redevelopment or expansion. When AstraZeneca announced they were to move all R&D jobs to Cambridge an article on this site reported that Alderley Park housed around 2,900 employees. http://bit.ly/1gp2Jci

Of these about 1600 employees were to be moved to Cambridge, 550 were to be made redundant and 700 Non R&D employees would remain at Alderley Park. http://bit.ly/1sfWCwa

Where is the space going to come from for an extra 4600 Jobs (7500 - 2900) at Alderley PArk without significant redevelopment or expansion. Oh and possible new housing as well!

And by the way Councillor Michael Jones, the whole of this site is in the Greenbelt!!!
Kathryn Blackburn
Sunday 11th May 2014 at 10:39 am
Booths Hall Park Knutsford re-run Science Park -.'' Physical beauty of the site its key attraction.'' Green Belt site. Bruntwood - We shall shortly be engaging with local residents- We genuinely have no thoughts on building here.- Michael Jones September 2013 says they havnt put anything forward for Booths Hall so we have not included anything for it (in the housing numbers for Knutsford) - December 2013 150 houses announced for Booths Hall site.
Councillor your assurances are worth zilch.
Barry Buxton
Tuesday 13th May 2014 at 4:45 pm
Cllr Jones seems to have got rather carried away with the emotion of this event, viz "We could maybe get rid of cancer forever, just imagine that and Cheshire East money could go into it."

Before he starts proposing to Cabinet that Cheshire East taxpayers should sink yet more money into this site rescue attempt, namely contributing to the Alderley Park Springboard Fund, he needs to think more deeply about why AstraZeneca are moving their R&D out.

Multi-functional co-location in bioscience, or "working in a campus environment to encourage collaboration", requires close proximity to medical schools, hospitals, research institutes and academia. AstraZeneca Cambridge will have it, the new Manchester Airport MediPark will have it and the new UK Centre for Medical Research and Innovation in London will have it. Alderley Park has none of this critical requirement.
Terry Roeves
Tuesday 13th May 2014 at 4:55 pm
I have just counted 21 bioscience related companies, plus 4 accountants/lawyers on Alderley Park. 61?
Michael Jones as usual again fails us, unless somebody knows differently.
Friends who work there refer to it as a ghost town. Of course I want it to be spectacularly successful, but CEC should keep well clear. Feels like socialism to me, not the best way to encourage innovation frankly.
No wonder the CEC core plan for employment and housing land is in a mess. After 40 years working at the leading edge of semiconductor engineering, I only ever met one MP, one DTI man and one local government official. Non had a clue what we were about. Complete waste of time. Keep clear Mr Jones and let innovation flourish. If inventions are any good, venture capital will take them to market.
Pete Taylor
Tuesday 13th May 2014 at 10:31 pm
Michael Jones seems to believe that he is running an investment bank, rather than serving the people of Cheshire East.
The role of a Local Government council is to provide services to the Council-Tax payer; it is not to lend (or give) vast sums of money to speculative commercial ventures, yet Jones has already overseen the (seemingly unsecured) loan of £1million to Alderley Park (does anyone know exactly where that went to?) and an undisclosed amount (larger) to the Bewilderwood childrens' adventure park proposed for Tatton Park. Both these issues have been widely reported both here and elsewhere in the local and national press.
I'm hoping that this is another case of Jones engaging mouth before brain, along the lines of his "no fracking" gaffe but somehow I know it's going to result in tax-payers money not being used for the purpose it was intended for.
As for Osborne's willingness to get into bed with Pfizer- does he not read any financial media? for example: http://bit.ly/1nG6zFw

All the international business media, our own Business Secretary and even the US Government seem to have caught on, but not "our chancellor". This move is yet another case of big business trying to avoid paying any tax and is exactly the sort of cynical exercise our MP should be throwing his weight against, rather than supporting it.
Simon Worthington
Wednesday 14th May 2014 at 9:58 am
I reread Mr. Jones comments several times in an attempt to decode his tortuous syntax! So we are, via rates, to support a more than doubling of jobs on a greenbelt site miles from any major conurbation and with few public transport links. Lets be generous - 10,000 vehicle movements per day would seem reasonable. When the new Airport Freight City is complete (Airport MediCity is in Wythenshawe - what has the airport to do with it) with it's 1.4 MILLION sq.ft. who knows what the vehicle movements will be. Then, according to Mr. Jones, we will have to build more houses for all these workers. Why not ignore the new jobs and the new workers and return the now redundant site to greenbelt?
Gridlock approaches, housebuilding expands in a concerted attempt to lower house prices and the area deteriorates with green space disappearing. Even Stockport Council has questioned the decision making abilities of our "leaders". Head for pastures new before we become part of Greater Manchester..........