The cost of refurbishing Manchester Town Hall has climbed to £525m, with completion now scheduled for spring 2027. Main contractor Bovis, which began work in 2020 when it was trading as Lendlease, originally worked to a £330m budget and a 2024 handover date.
Manchester City Council confirmed the latest £95m increase in a project update, describing the scheme as “the largest and most complex heritage project undertaken in living memory anywhere in the UK.” The council said the construction phase, which started in 2020, has been hit by a “unique combination of challenges.”
External pressures have included disruption from the Covid-19 pandemic, a volatile economic climate influenced by factors such as the war in Ukraine, and sharp inflation in construction materials and labour. The council also highlighted a steep rise in contractor insolvencies, with three firms delivering work packages on the project entering administration in the last six months.
Project-specific issues have compounded the difficulties. The council cited shortages of specialist heritage labour, strict requirements to match original Victorian materials, and ongoing discoveries of structural and construction problems hidden within the historic fabric.
These challenges range from minor quirks of the original Victorian build to significant structural issues requiring new design solutions before work can continue. The council warned that the complexity of the programme means delays to one element inevitably have knock-on effects across multiple work fronts.
Material sourcing has also become more difficult. The project’s principal stone contractor recently advised that the quarry supplying the approved stone, chosen to closely match the original construction, would no longer provide bulk orders to the construction industry, forcing the team to seek an alternative source and causing further delay.
Most external works are now substantially complete, with activity shifting to the building’s interior. The refurbishment is intended to secure the long-term future of the Grade I-listed landmark, much of which the council said was reaching the end of its natural lifespan.
Deputy Council Leader Cllr Garry Bridges acknowledged frustration over the escalating cost and extended programme. He said that without decisive investment, the Victorian building risked becoming “unusable and obsolete,” adding that the council is now on “a confident path to completion” in spring 2027, in time for the 150th anniversary of the town hall’s original opening.
Bridges said the refurbished building is expected to serve the city for the next century. The council maintains that, despite the setbacks, the project will deliver a restored civic asset and public spaces designed to meet modern standards while preserving the town hall’s historic character.