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New Birmingham library could cost council tax payers £590m

Coun Brew (Con, Northfield), who last year unsuccessfully challenged Coun Whitby for the Tory group leadership, said he was concerned that the council was “storing up problems for the future” with the growing cost of repaying loans which would eat into money that could otherwise be spent on front-line services.

Artist impression of the altered design for Birmingham Library showing the landscaped lower terrace.

The city already has £2.4 billion of debt, although it remains safely within the limits set by the Government for prudential borrowing.

Coun Brew added: “These schemes seem to be costing us more than we first thought. The next few years will be difficult enough in terms of public spending pressures from central government.”

Ian Ward, deputy leader of the opposition Labour group, said it was “highly unlikely” that the council would be able to raise £34 million in sponsorship in the present depressed economic climate.

Coun Ward (Lab, Shard End) added: “Mike Whitby’s claim that this is coming in under budget simply isn’t right. This is an extremely expensive project and I think we have to question the value for money for council tax payers.”

The council remains confident that substantial reductions in the final bill for the library can be achieved.

Assistant culture director Brian Gambles said he expected minimum additional savings of about £17 million. It was also unlikely that more than a fraction of a £10 million contingency fund would be spent, he added.

Mr Gambles said: “What we have negotiated with Carillion is £4.2 million below their target cost. That’s an immediate saving. Carillion’s fixed lump sum is £144.5 million, of which about £100 million is fully tendered, negotiated and agreed.

“The other £44 million is fixed only in the sense that it has a ceiling. It won’t be any more than that, but may well be less.

“The furniture for the library hasn’t been designed and we have a generous allowance for it. We can be very confident that we will be within that.

“We know we can drive down further some construction components of the budget.

“The cost of removing the contents of the Central Library to the new library is still under discussion.

“I would be confident that the £4.2 million we have already identified as a saving will be in the order of 25 per cent of the total savings.”

Mr Gambles warned against becoming too concerned about repaying borrowing costs, the impact of which will be reduced by inflation over 40 years.

He said: “When you buy a house over 25 years with, say, a £200,000 mortgage you don’t think of the cost of the house in terms of the £400,000 that you will be paying back.”

The £3 million a year set aside for maintenance was an essential part of the project, he insisted.

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Plummeting land values take toll

The business plan for the new library has fallen foul of the credit crunch and plummeting land values.

When council leader Mike Whitby announced in October 2007 his grand plan to build the library on a car park in Centenary Square, he envisaged raising a quarter of the £193 million cost from selling valuable sites in the city’s possession.

The deal rested on using £30 million from a capital receipt for the Wholesale Markets site at Digbeth and £15 million from disposing of the Paradise Forum site of the existing Central Library.

In fact, the 21-acre markets site has still not been sold and the council has long since realised that the redevelopment of Paradise Circus is likely to be so costly and complex that there is little chance of any profit from land sales.

A further £39 million of the cost of delivering the new library was unaccounted for, even in 2007.

Estimates in the original business plan by Capita Symonds proved to be sound. The cost of construction was set at £89 million, preliminary work at £27.6 million, and construction cost inflation at £30 million – a total of £147 million. As it turns out, construction firm Carillion will be handed a fixed-lump sum of £144.5 million to deliver the library.


 

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