Caerphilly Observer
Member Sign in Manage Membership
Become a Member - no ads
Menu
  • News
    • Senedd
    • Business
    • Newport
    • Opinion
  • Sport
    • Rugby union
    • Football
  • Membership & Subscriptions
  • Notices
  • Advertise
  • About
  • Sponsored Content
Menu

Further questions over council’s investment in market project

Newport | Nicholas Thomas - Local Democracy Reporting Service | Published: 15:22, Friday August 22nd, 2025.

Support quality, independent, local journalism…that matters

From just £1 a month you can help fund our work – and use our website without adverts. Become a member today

Newport Market
Newport Market

Further questions have been asked about Newport Council’s investment in the redevelopment of the city’s indoor market.

Cllr Miqdad Al-Nuaimi asked the local authority’s leader to set out the repayment terms for a £6 million loan provided to the market’s developer, as well as any rental income the council was due to receive under a separate agreement.

The Stow Hill independent councillor, whose ward covers the city centre, also suggested “promises” about the market’s impact on Newport had not “materialised”.

The council does not run the market, but instead signed a 250-year lease with a developer.

Newport Council’s leader, Cllr Dimitri Batrouni, defended the investment in the market and said the redevelopment had brought wider benefits to the city.

In a joint written reply with Cllr James Clarke, the cabinet member for regeneration, he said the market had “delivered space to work, entertain, get fit, eat, drink, dance and release artistic potential”.

Call for ‘transparency’ over council investment in indoor market project

Reiterating the council’s previous statements on the market’s impact, the leader and cabinet member said the project was responsible for “breathing new life into the listed building and offering residents and visitors to the city a great place to meet, socialise and work”.

“It has also helped some businesses who are at the start of their journey to establish a presence in Newport, with a number of former occupiers having taken up larger space elsewhere in the city centre,” they said.

The two councillors also said the refurbishments of two city centre arcades and the opening of the Corn Exchange music venue “shows that High Street is becoming a destination for independent retail, food, music and other leisure opportunities, for Newport residents but also people from further afield who are hearing how great facilities such as the Indoor Market are”.

New care home on Whiteheads site could create 60 jobs

Recently, the Local Democracy Reporting Service was told the city council had received money by way of interest payments” on the £6 million loan, which is due to be redeemed in February 2026.

However, no rental income payments had been made to the council, it confirmed.

Those disclosures followed calls from a Conservative councillor for more “transparency” regarding the council’s investment in the project.


Sign-up to our daily newsletter


Support quality, independent, local journalism…that matters

From just £1 a month you can help fund our work – and use our website without adverts.

Become a member today

LDRS

Latest News

  • Cllr Nigel Dix, Independent councillor for the Blackwood ward
    Formal complaint lodged over council’s decision to suspend meetings during by-electionWednesday, September 24, 2025
  • The Senedd Chamber
    Senedd reveals estimated £4.22m costs of debating chamber worksWednesday, September 24, 2025
  • Caerphilly County Borough Council's headquarters in Tredomen
    Councillors’ anger after violence against women training postponed until after by-electionWednesday, September 24, 2025
  • Meridian Tower and Victoria Quay, Swansea
    Vulnerable people ‘overlooked’ in building safety reformsWednesday, September 24, 2025
  • Dragons during their URC clash with Ulster at Rodney Parade in March 2025
    WRU two-region proposals branded ‘wrong approach’ and ‘utter madness’Wednesday, September 24, 2025
  • Commuters on the Ebbw Valley line can now pay using tap in tap out
    Call for action over confusion with TfW’s Pay As You Go schemeWednesday, September 24, 2025

Find out how the communities of Caerphilly County Borough get their names

Caerphilly

Legal & Public Notices

  • Notice of application for a variation of a premises licence: Pontygwindy Industrial EstateThursday, September 18, 2025
  • Caerphilly County Borough Council public noticesThursday, September 18, 2025
  • Caerphilly County Borough Council public noticesThursday, September 4, 2025
  • Notice of application for a variation of a premises licence: St Cenydd Road, TrecenyddTuesday, September 2, 2025
© 2009-2024 Caerphilly Media Ltd, Caerphilly Miners Centre for the Community Watford Road Caerphilly, CF83 1BJ. Incorporated in Wales No. 07604006.