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Liverpool_City_Region Latitude and Longitude:

53°24′07″N 2°58′37″W / 53.402°N 2.977°W / 53.402; -2.977
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Liverpool City Region
From the top left to bottom right, Liverpool, Runcorn, Southport, Birkenhead, St Helens and Prescot
Liverpool City Region
Liverpool City Region
Coordinates: 53°24′07″N 2°58′37″W / 53.402°N 2.977°W / 53.402; -2.977
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Country England
Region North West
Ceremonial counties
Historic counties
LEP established2010
Combined authority established1 April 2014
Administrative HQ1 Mann Island, Liverpool
Districts
Government
 • Type Combined authority
 • Body Liverpool City Region Combined Authority
 •  Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram ( L)
Area
 • Total348.50 sq mi (902.62 km2)
 • Land282.35 sq mi (731.28 km2)
Population
 (2021) [2]
 • Total1,551,722
 • Rank 4th
 • Density5,500/sq mi (2,122/km2)
DemonymLiverpolitan
Postcode areas
Dialling codes
  • 0151
  • 01704
  • 01744
  • 01925
  • 01928
  • 01942
GSS codeE47000004
ITL codeTLD7
GVA2021 estimate [2]
 • Total £35.3 billion
 • Per capita£22,778
GDP (nominal)2021 estimate [2]
 • Total£40.5 billion
 • Per capita£26,086
Website liverpoolcityregion-ca.gov.uk

Liverpool City Region is a combined authority area in North West England. It has six council areas; five Merseyside metropolitan boroughs ( Liverpool, Knowsley, St Helens, Sefton, Wirral) and the Cheshire unitary authority of Halton. [3] [4] [5] [6] The region had a population of 1,551,800 in 2021: it is the fourth largest combined authority area by population in England, outside of London. [7]

The region's mayor and combined authority (LCRCA) have a devolution deal responsible for economic development, regeneration, transport, employment and skills, tourism, culture, housing, spatial planning and physical infrastructure. [8] [9] [10]

The region's economic development was supported by the Liverpool City Region Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP), established in 2010 as the private sector-led board comprising political and business leaders from around the city region. [11] The LEP's functions were merged into the combined authority in 2023. [12]

History

In 2004, the Government of the United Kingdom launched an initiative to strengthen the economy and quality of life in Northern England. Yorkshire Forward, One NorthEast, and the Northwest Regional Development Agency, the three regional development agencies in the North of England, were invited to form a partnership, and in September 2004, they published the document Moving Forward: The Northern Way First Growth Strategy Report.

Within the document, eight city regions in the North were identified, including the Liverpool city region. It was argued that economic growth could be accelerated with the establishment of new city region governance that surpassed existing administrative boundaries to more accurately reflect travel to work areas, catchment areas, housing market areas, and labour market areas. [13] [14] [15]

On 13 March 2007, local government minister Phil Woolas announced plans to create a cabinet government including the leaders of the following six councils: Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. This decision triggered devolution for what was termed the 'Liverpool City Region'. [16] [17]

In January 2009, an agreement was made that the six local authorities would form the Liverpool City Region, in a Multi-Area Agreement (MAA). The agreement led to a transfer, from central government, greater responsibilities in more than ten areas covering employment, skills, transport, regeneration, housing and planning. Hazel Blears, the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government said: "Today's 'Liverpool city-region' Multi-Area Agreement will mean Merseyside's six councils will no longer have to work alone on their economy, they will work from the same blueprint with more devolved powers to deliver jobs, training, welfare support and economic resilience." [18] [19]

Definition

The combined authority of Liverpool City Region includes the local government districts of Liverpool, Halton, Knowsley, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral.

Some definitions of the city region include a much wider area. The now revoked North West of England Regional Spatial Strategy defined the city region for "the purposes of articulating RSS policy" as covering the six local authorities and extending "as far as Chester, Ellesmere Port and Neston and West Lancashire". [20]

A 2011 report, Liverpool City Region - Building on its Strengths, by an independent working group led by Lord Heseltine and Terry Leahy, stated that "what is now called Liverpool City Region has a population of around 1.5 million", but also referred to "an urban region that spreads from Wrexham and Flintshire to Chester, Warrington, West Lancashire and across to Southport", with a population of 2.3 million. [21] The European Union's ESPON calculated the Liverpool metropolitan area to be over 2.2 million people.

The neighbouring local authorities of Warrington Borough Council and West Lancashire are in fact Associate Members of the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority and thus co-operate (but do not vote) in the Liverpool city region meetings. [22]

Governance

Combined authority

Since the abolition of Merseyside County Council, the councils have co-operated as permitted by the Local Government Act 1972 and required by the Local Government Act 1985, for example the Merseyside Waste Disposal Authority and the Merseyside Passenger Transport Authority. Liverpool City Region's proposal to central government for a combined authority was approved by Parliamentary statutory order in late March, and it legally came into existence from 1 April 2014. Liverpool City Region Combined Authority will become the top-tier administrative body of Liverpool City Region. It will be a body corporate responsible for strategic decision making. The six local authorities in the area constituting the combined authority will pool together powers over economic development, regeneration and transport policy. The combined authority comprises seven members: the council leaders of Halton, Knowsley, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral, the Mayor of Liverpool, and the chairperson, as the representative, of the local enterprise partnership. [23] [24] [25] [26] [27] The proposed authority was known as the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority up until submission to the Department for Communities and Local Government [28] and the Greater Merseyside Combined Authority in the published scheme. The consultation preceding the creation of the combined authority showed strong support for a name including 'Liverpool' rather than 'Merseyside', in order to capitalise and build upon Liverpool’s global ‘brand’. [29] The name was changed to the Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, St Helens, Sefton and Wirral Combined Authority in the draft order presented to parliament. [30] On 21 February 2014 it was decided by the constituent councils that the authority will use the public name of Liverpool City Region Combined Authority. [31]

Local enterprise partnership

The Liverpool City Region Local Enterprise Partnership was established in 2010 and is the local enterprise partnership (LEP) for Liverpool City Region.

The LEP initiated Mersey Waters Enterprise Zone, which was set up in 2012. The enterprise zone contains two sites, Liverpool Waters and Wirral Waters. [32]

Members of Parliament

Constituency Member of Parliament Political party
Birkenhead Mick Whitley Labour Party
Bootle Peter Dowd
Garston and Halewood Maria Eagle
Halton Derek Twigg
Knowsley George Howarth
Liverpool Riverside Kim Johnson
Liverpool Walton Dan Carden
Liverpool Wavertree Paula Barker
Liverpool West Derby Ian Byrne
Sefton Central Bill Esterson
Southport Damien Moore Conservative Party
St Helens North Conor McGinn Labour Party
St Helens South and Whiston Marie Rimmer
Wallasey Angela Eagle
Weaver Vale Mike Amesbury
Wirral South Alison McGovern
Wirral West Margaret Greenwood

Geography

Demography

Population

Population density map from the 2011 census

Since its creation in 2014, the Liverpool City Region Combined Authority has a population of 1.5 million which is the 4th largest Combined Authority in England.

Population of the Liverpool City Region by district (2021) [33]
District Land area Population Density
(/km2)
(km2) (%) People (%)
Halton 79.08 11% 128,577 8% 1,626
Knowsley 86.5 12% 154,974 10% 1,792
Liverpool 111.8 15% 484,488 31% 4,332
St Helens 136.4 19% 183,391 12% 1,345
Sefton 156.6 21% 279,692 18% 1,786
Wirral 160.9 22% 320,600 21% 1,992
Liverpool City Region 731.28 100% 1,551,722 100% 2,122

Demonym

Steve Rotheram, the first ever Mayor of the Liverpool City Region acknowledges the Liverpolitan identity but has suggested that it is not 'universally accepted' across the Liverpool City Region. [34]

We speak with many accents but because we have devolution and a Metro Mayor, we can now speak with one voice.
It's not universally that we all feel that we are part of this Liverpolitan identity. I would love everybody to feel that they are part of a city region though.

Steve Rotheram,
Mayor of the Liverpool City Region,
BBC Radio Merseyside, 13 March 2024 [34]

'Liverpolitan' is the proposed adjective and demonym of the Liverpool City Region. In recent years as the city region has emerged and grown, [35] [36] the word has been used to describe a native or inhabitant of the Liverpool City Region. Its usage within this context has been conceptualised, supported and criticised. [37] [38]

In their 2011 report Rebalancing Britain: Policy or Slogan, Lord Michael Heseltine and Sir Terry Leahy considered opportunities available to grow the emerging Liverpool City Region over the following ten to twenty years. After discussions with a range of stakeholders which included Liverpool City Council, surrounding local authorities, businesses and community groups, Heseltine and Leahy recommended that “The so-called ‘Liverpolitan Diaspora’ should be provided with a formal structure and opportunity to help their home city region with investment leads, expertise, advice and intelligence.” [39]

In 2016, the Liverpool Echo revealed that the word 'Liverpolitan' was being used to refer to anyone from anywhere in the Liverpool City Region and would tap into the growing political unity of Liverpool, Halton, Knowsley, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. It was argued that adopting the phrase would temper existing tensions within the concerned localities and would negate the need to refer to those living on the outskirts of Liverpool with the pejorative term of 'wools' or 'woolybacks'. Mayor of Liverpool Joe Anderson argued against the idea suggesting that the term 'Scouser' was positive for the city's identity and was similar to nicknames associated with other cities and regions throughout the United Kingdom. Mayor Anderson argued that the 'Scousers versus Wools' narrative could be divisive, but should be viewed as harmless. [40]

In 2017, shortly after the inauguration of Steve Rotheram as the first Liverpool City Region Mayor, Jonathan Heywood at City Monitor argued that Steve Rotheram's first challenge was to address Liverpool's 'out of date' boundary issues to better integrate the city with its neighbouring communities in order to present a united front. Heywood argued that opening a 'City Region Assembly' would strengthen and secure the long term role of city region mayor and the concept of 'a shared Liverpolitan project.' [41]

In 2021, 39 elected councillors across the six districts of the Liverpool City Region were surveyed about the Liverpolitan identity. The survey revealed that most councillors in the city region did not identify with being a Liverpolitan, however, 46 percent either definitely did identify with the term or were neutral about it. Most councillors were fairly sure that their ward residents would be neutral about the subject. The survey also revealed major differences between councillors who believed the term was a positive or negative statement and those who thought it should definitely be promoted or left alone. Those who did not identify with the Liverpolitan identity were more unsure overall on how to answer the various survey questions whilst those who definitely identified as Liverpolitan were generally more confident that their position was beneficial to the city region and its people. [42] [43]

Economy

Liverpool has the largest wealth management industry in the UK outside of London. Global firms such as Pershing LLC, Investec and Rathbones have major offices in the city. [44] [45] [46] [47] [48]

The Liverpool City Region is strongly established as an important driving force in the economy of Northern England and as a strategic sea and air gateway to the European Union. It connects to North America, Ireland, the Isle of Man, Europe and beyond; serving international, national and regional markets, investors and visitors. In 2008–2010, Liverpool had the UK's fastest growing economy outside London, one of the UK's top three biomedical centres, and has the UK's second largest wealth management industry. [49] [50]

The region is largely monocentric with Liverpool as the dominant employment centre, however economic activity is widely spread across the six districts. Broadly speaking Liverpool is the commercial, cultural and transport hub of the region, with Sefton as the base of Seaforth Dock and tourist resort of Southport, Halton as the location for chemical, science, technology, logistics and distribution companies, and Knowsley, St Helens and Wirral providing key manufacturing and logistics for the area. The city of Liverpool itself has a compact travel to work area reflecting its position on the North West Atlantic Seaboard and compactness of the surrounding urban area. [51] [52]

The city region is traditionally seen as a service sector economy, with its so called knowledge economy providing one third of the local employment base and over 40% of its total economic value. According to statistics for 2008, the Life sciences sector accounts for almost 10% of the region's economy, over 71,000 people are employed in financial and professional services, over 34,000 in manufacturing, and almost 24,000 in the creative and digital industry. [53] The area is strongly connected to global markets, through its ports, airports and by its many multinational companies. World companies such as Barclays Wealth, Jaguar Land Rover, Maersk, Novartis, Santander, Sony and Unilever, all have a major base of operation in the locality. [54]

GVA and GDP by local authority district in 2021 [2]
District GVA (£ billions) GVA per capita (£) GDP (£ billions) GDP per capita (£)
Halton £4.0 £31,390 £4.5 £34,985
Knowsley £4.0 £25,927 £4.6 £29,407
Liverpool £14.3 £29,489 £15.9 £32,841
St Helens £2.8 £15,448 £3.4 £18,803
Sefton £4.6 £16,275 £5.4 £19,418
Wirral £5.6 £17,527 £6.6 £20,688
Liverpool City Region £35.3 £22,778 £40.5 £26,086

Major projects in Liverpool city region

Construction of new Everton Stadium at Bramley-Moore Dock, Liverpool Waters. At the time of construction, it was regarded as the largest single-site private sector development in the United Kingdom [55]

Since its creation, the Liverpool city region authorities have overseen and invested in some of the UK's largest and most ambitious development and infrastructure schemes which include the following:

Ongoing schemes

Completed schemes

Liverpool 2 Container Terminal built to expand the UK's largest transatlantic port based in Liverpool. [57]

Future schemes

Abandoned or schemes of unknown status

  • International Trade Centre, Wirral
  • Environmental Technology Zone, Liverpool city centre

Transport

The Liverpool City Region has a transport network that is connected locally, nationally, and internationally by road, rail, sea and air.

Road and cycling

Road, Cycling and Rail in Liverpool City Region
Motorway network around the Liverpool City Region
Liverpool One bus station for regular buses and National Express services
Typical Merseyrail train heading towards Kirkby railway station
Liverpool Lime Street railway station, one of the top ten busiest railway stations in the UK outside London [62]

The region is served by a network of six motorways ( M58 to the north, M56 to the south, M6 & M62 to the east and M53 to the west). In addition, the M57 acts as an outer ring road and bypass for the city of Liverpool itself. The area has relatively low road congestion and its central location makes it an efficient base from which to service the whole country. [63] Various parts of the region are separated by the River Mersey, and as a result, Wirral is connected to the centre of Liverpool via the Queensway Tunnel and Kingsway Tunnel, whereas Widnes and Runcorn are connected by the Silver Jubilee Bridge. A second six-lane toll bridge under the name Mersey Gateway, to relieve congestion on the ageing Silver Jubilee Bridge, opened in 2017. The bridge is designed to improve transport links between Widnes and Runcorn and other key locations in the vicinity. [64]

Major cycling routes on the National Cycle Network (such as National Cycle Route 56 and National Cycle Route 62) pass through the region too such as New Brighton and the Wirral Way. Major bus companies are Stagecoach Merseyside and Arriva North West. Liverpool One bus station serves as a terminus for national coach travel.

Rail

Liverpool Lime Street, the region's main terminal train station, is served by five train operating companies serving a wide variety of destinations, and is used by 11.8 million passengers per year. [65] Improved rail connectivity, including upgrades to the West Coast Main Line and investment in high speed Pendolino trains, means journey time to London Euston is within two hours via Avanti West Coast. [66] East Midlands Railway serves Norwich, Manchester, Sheffield and Nottingham. [67] TransPennine Express operates daily services to Leeds, Middlesbrough, Hull, York, and Newcastle. Northern operates to Huddersfield, Preston, Warrington, and Blackpool, whilst direct links to Birmingham are possible via West Midlands Trains. [68] [69]

The sub-regional rail network is operated by Merseytravel, the combined Passenger Transport Executive and integrated transport authority and public sector body responsible for the coordination of public transport across the Liverpool city region. Merseyrail is an urban rail operating almost 800 trains per day carrying over 100,000 passengers within the city region, on its network of 68 stations. The Merseyrail network includes five underground stations in Liverpool City Centre and Birkenhead centre. [70] [71]

Commuter and regional railway lines

Merseyrail commuter lines

High speed rail

The UK government has insisted that the region will benefit from Britain's new high-speed rail network, due for completion by 2032, even though the new line will not extend into the region. [72] Journey times to London from Liverpool would be cut by 32 minutes under the proposals. Pressure is being put on the government to extend high speed rail into Liverpool's city centre. [73]

Maritime

Maritime Transport in Liverpool City Region
Twelve Quays Ferry Terminal, Birkenhead for services to Belfast, Northern Ireland
Seacombe Ferry Terminal for regular Mersey Ferry commuter services and River Mersey cruises
Irish Sea ferry routes from Liverpool to Belfast, Isle of Man and Dublin

Liverpool Cruise Terminal provides long-distance passenger cruises, Fred. Olsen Cruise Lines MS Black Watch and Cruise & Maritime Voyages MS Magellan using the terminal to depart to Iceland, France, Spain and Norway. Leeds and Liverpool Canal and Manchester Ship Canal are the main canal systems.

Ferries

Prince's Landing Stage, Pier Head, Liverpool serves Isle of Man Steam Packet Company summer service to the Isle of Man (and Mersey Ferries). Twelve Quays, Birkenhead ferry port serves winter Isle of Man ferry service and Stena Line to Belfast, Northern Ireland.

The Mersey Ferry has operated since the 1200s, currently between Wirral and Liverpool City Centre at Seacombe, Woodside and Liverpool Pier Head. From 2009–2010 it had 684,000 passengers using the service . [74]

Commercial

The Port of Liverpool handles most commercial shipping, but several other ports on the Wirral peninsula, such as Great Float and Queen Elizabeth II Dock, operate too.

The Port of Liverpool is container ports that handles over 33 million tonnes of freight cargo per year and serves more than 100 global destinations including Africa, Australia, China, India, the Middle East and South America. Imports include grain and animal feed , timber, steel, coal, cocoa, crude oil, edible oils and liquid chemicals; and exports of scrap metal for recycling. [75] [76] A second container terminal, Liverpool2 at Seaforth, was designed to handle the largest Post-Panamax vessels and doubled the port's capacity when it opened in 2016. [77]

Almost three quarters of a million people[ citation needed] travel on Irish Sea ferry services from Liverpool Docks and Birkenhead's Twelve Quays to Belfast, Dublin and the Isle of Man, and there is a growing number of cruise ships making day calls at the port. [78] [79] A new terminal at Prince's Dock provides check-in, baggage drop and reclaim, as well as customs and border facilities for thousands of cruise liner passengers visiting the region, whilst Peel Ports have also planned a second cruise terminal as part of the Liverpool Waters project. [80] [81]

Air

Global air connectivity to and from the region is provided by two international airports: Liverpool John Lennon Airport (LJLA) is one of the oldest operational airports in the United Kingdom. [82] Manchester Airport is situated 29 miles from Liverpool city centre. [83]

Liverpool John Lennon Airport, situated 6.5 miles (10.5 km) south east of Liverpool city centre is a growing airport with annual passenger numbers approaching 5 million, making it one of the UK's busiest airports. [84]

Liverpool John Lennon Airport serves more than 60 direct routes which include most major European cities. This extends to over 150 destinations across five continents via a dedicated one-stop hub connection flight to Frankfurt Airport, courtesy of Lufthansa. [85] The airport is served by easyJet, Ryanair, Lufthansa, Jet2.com, Wizz Air, Play Airlines, Aer Lingus, Loganair and Widerøe. [86]

As part of LJLA's Master Plan, the airport is planning for substantial expansion between 2030 - 2050. This includes larger terminal buildings in order to handle extra passengers, extending the runway, targeting permanent direct long haul flights and creating new hotels, restaurants and commercial space. [87] The expansion plans have sparked concerns by local environmental campaign groups who suggest that expanded airport facilities will encroach on surrounding green space and agricultural land, especially at Oglet Shore. There are also concerns that growth in passenger numbers will have a negative effect on climate change. The airport has responded by saying it 'naturally recognises its wider environmental responsibilities' and has promised measures to protect the areas around the Oglet Shore, with proposals for a revitalised 50 hectare coastal reserve. The airport argues that it brings significant economic benefits to the city region by supporting its international visitor economy and providing jobs for local people. Airport bosses also plan to reach net carbon zero by 2040 through on site renewable energy generation. [88]

Television

The Liverpool City Region is covered by BBC North West and ITV Granada.

See also

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