Updated 10:02am 30 June 2012

New food zone to dine out on blossoming culinary reputation

Plans for the food hub at the Harborne Clock Tower building
Plans for the food hub at the Harborne Clock Tower building

The city’s burgeoning status as a foodie’s paradise has been given a multi-million pound boost with a string of new restaurants – as the new council put the growing sector at the heart of its first manifesto.

Planners have given the green light to a new £6 million scheme around the Clock Tower in Harborne – which will include three restaurants and a cookery school – while this week also saw the San Carlo group launch its new Fumo restaurant in the city centre.

The region is also set to welcome another award winning chef after the owners of the Hogarth’s Hotel in Dorridge announced that the two Michelin-starred Martin Blunos was joining as culinary director for a new brasserie and upgraded restaurant.

The glut of new investment came as Birmingham City Council leader Sir Albert Bore announced a new food zone in the east of the city bringing together businesses from across the sector as part of his first major policy announcement since regaining power with Labour last month.

A business park will be set up for a cluster of firms in the food distribution and processing line where the firms will share a number of key facilities and good links to the motorway network. They will benefit from economic growth zone status.

The School Yard scheme in Harborne is a mixed use project being developed by EDG Property, Cube director Neil Edginton’s new venture, and will see the buildings around the Clock Tower – which has been covered in scaffolding for almost two years – transformed into a new food hub with a new public square and apartments.

The landmark scheme has already let the two restaurants to upmarket Italian chain Prezzo – which has teamed up with celebrity chef Aldo Zilli – and a new Mediterranean offering from Chris Kelly’s Metro Group, the company behind the successful Metro bars on Cornwall Street and in Solihull as well as the White Horse in Balsall Common.

Harborne School Yard food hub

Chris Kelly, managing director of Metro Group, said: “The Harborne site is part of the Metro Group’s expansion which has always been on the cards once the financial situation allowed. I think Harborne is a fantastic suburb of Birmingham and perfect for us and I could see us in places like Sutton Coldfield or Moseley as well.”

While the group’s other venues are more traditional, Mr Kelly – who owns the company with business partner Alastair Tyson – said the new restaurant would be tapping into a different kind of experience. He said: “I don’t want to use the word tapas as that makes you think just Spanish when I’d much rather Metro continental. This is going to be smaller sharing plates with continental wines and beers. This will be a smaller venue to our others with a lovely alfresco overlooking the new square catering for around 80 covers so we will have to think differently about how we prepare and serve food as we look more towards the grazing style of eating.”

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