7.4m sq ft of government requirements revealed

The government is to consolidate the civil service into 16 hubs across England totalling 7.4m sq ft.

Much of the space will be taken by HM Revenue & Customs, which is driving the programme and requires 13 new hubs as it is nearing the end of a 20-year sale and leaseback deal with Mapeley Estates. A further three hubs will be established without HMRC presence. JLL is handling the process.

The move forms part of the Government Property Unit’s strategy to reduce the government estate from 800 buildings to fewer than 200 by 2023 and shift power away from its Whitehall Campus, SW1. However, details obtained by Estates Gazette show the government is aiming to deliver the hubs from 2018-2021.

The new data shows how the hubs will be spread across the UK and how quickly they need to be in place.

Strategic hub Initial staff numbers Tenure New acquisition (sq ft) Hub start date
London – East 23,156 Leasehold 1.5m 01/04/2018
London – South 13,544 Leasehold 871,877 01/04/2018
London – West 1,861 Leasehold 118,403 01/04/2020
Peterborough 2,795 Leasehold 182,986 01/04/2018
Portsmouth 2,037 Leasehold 129,167 01/04/2020
Newcastle 2,237 Leasehold 139,931 01/04/2019
Leeds 7,850 Leasehold 505,904 01/04/2019
Sheffield 2,909 Leasehold 182,986 01/04/2019
Nottingham 6,534 Leasehold 419,793 01/04/2019
Bristol 5,108 Leasehold 333,681 01/04/2021
Birmingham 13,137 Leasehold 850,349 01/04/2021
Manchester 10,185 Leasehold 656,599 01/04/2018
Preston/Blackpool 8,034 Freehold 516,668 01/04/2018
Liverpool 7,807 Freehold 505,904 01/04/2018
Carlisle 4,115 Freehold 269,098 01/04/2018
Exeter 3,227 Freehold 204,514 01/04/2018

Strategic hubs are also due to launch in Belfast, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Wales between 2019 and 2023.

The multi-departmental hubs are designed to achieve economies of scale, enable easier cross-departmental collaboration and improve recruitment and retention.

The GPU is understood to be focusing on city centre locations, with a reduction in office space in Whitehall from 52 to 20 buildings by 2023.

The largest requirements for the new super-hubs remain in London, with a 1.5m sq ft hub earmarked for Stratford and 870,000 sq ft in Croydon, where HMRC is already in advanced talks to take the first office building at Stanhope and Schroder’s Ruskin Square.

However, Birmingham’s hub includes 850,000 sq ft of new space and Manchester’s initial requirement stands at 650,000 sq ft, with an option to extend to 950,000 sq ft.

An HMRC spokesperson said: “We are bringing our people together into 13 regional centres across the UK. We are taking the next step in creating a tax authority fit for the future delivering better, more modern services to customers and making it harder for the dishonest minority to cheat the system.

“There are a number of potential options that we are currently considering for the location of all our new regional centres.

“We will only confirm a particular development after we have told our people, who we have been consulting with throughout this process.”


Briefing: the hand of gov >>

JLL to lead on government hubs >>

Super-hubs of the North >>

HMRC moves on Ruskin Square >>

 


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