Local authority
The Manchester City Council Our Manchester Strategy 2016-2025 describes the vision that in 2025 Manchester will be in the top flight of world-class cities that is:
- Thriving and sustainable – with great jobs and the businesses to create them.
- Highly skilled – full of talent both home grown and from around the world.
- Progressive and equitable – a fair city where everyone has an equal chance to contribute and to benefit.
- Liveable and low carbon – a great place to live with a good quality of life: a clean, green and safe city.
- Connected - both physically, with world class transport, and digitally, with brilliant broadband.
This provides a framework for actions by the City Council and its partners working across Manchester public sector organisations, businesses, the voluntary sector and the City's communities.
Manchester Sport & Physical Activity Strategy (2023-2028)
MCRactive is a not for profit organisation established and overseen by Manchester City Council, responsible for driving sport and physical activity across Manchester. It has produced the Manchester Sport and Physical Activity Strategy, underpinned by one of the most extensive public consultation exercises the city has ever undertaken, to develop a long-term vision for the City informed by residents. Key findings were:
- Biggest barriers were lack of time (43%), lack of money (23%) and availability/timing of sessions (22%).
- Two out of three respondents wanted to be more physically active - across all inactive and active respondents.
- Provision needs to be local, accessible and easy to find.
- Most common request for more local, regular park based running and walking activities.
The strategy vision is ‘to establish Manchester in the top-flight of sport cities, with all residents active across the life course, helping to transform their health and wellbeing’. Its eight themes are:
- Encourage residents to move more
- Positive experiences for children and young people
- Active adults increasing and sustaining activity levels
- World class sport that inspires positive change
- Active places and neighbourhoods
- Communicating with and connecting communities
- Realising the potential of the workforce
- Contributing to a Zero Carbon future
Manchester has a Playing Pitch & Outdoor Sport Strategy (PPOSS) which was completed in 2022 and published in February in 2023. The PPOSS evidences that the existing position across all pitch sports is either that demand is currently being met or there is a shortfall, including capacity shortfalls for football pitches. As such, there is a current need to protect all existing playing pitch provision.
Manchester Housing Strategy (2022)
A new Manchester Housing Strategy has been adopted, which will deliver 10,000 new social and affordable homes over the next 10 years while increasing the number of zero and low carbon homes in the City. The Strategy covers the decade up to 2032 and will oversee the creation of 36,000 new homes to meet continuing population growth and demand across all housing types and in every part of Manchester. More than a quarter of these new homes (approximately 10,000) will be social and affordable homes, with some 3,000 in the City Centre. At least 80% of new homes will be on brownfield sites, close to public transport links.
Places for Everyone
Places for Everyone is a draft long-term plan of nine Greater Manchester districts (Bolton, Bury, Manchester, Oldham, Rochdale, Salford, Tameside, Trafford and Wigan) for jobs, new homes, and sustainable growth. It has been prepared by the Greater Manchester Combined Authority (GMCA) on behalf of the nine districts, which together will deliver around 175,000 net additional dwellings over the period 2022-2039. Though there are no strategic housing allocation sites proposed within Manchester as part of Places for Everyone, it is to provide the most housing units of the nine local authorities over the course of the plan, with around 60,000 units expected to be delivered in Manchester. Adoption of the plan is anticipated in Spring 2024.
County Football Association
Manchester is covered by Manchester FA, Cheshire FA and Lancashire FA. They provide governance for, and development support to, all aspects of local football including coaches, referees, volunteers, clubs and leagues; supporting football for all. The County FAs each have a designated facilities investment lead officer who work to ensure the right facilities are located in the right locations.
Football Foundation
The Regional Delivery Manager and Regional Technical Project Manager at the Football Foundation work collaboratively with the County FA to provide pre-application support and lead on the delivery of priority projects for potential investment. The Regional Facility Planning Manager (FPM) will lead and be responsible for all aspects of strategic planning and will lead on refreshing of LFFPs.