Planning fast-tracked for UK Vaccines Manufacturing and Innovation Centre
Harwell, Oxfordshire: Vale of White Horse District Council has granted planning permission for the highly specialist facility that will house the UKβs Vaccines Manufacturing and Innovation Centre (VMIC).
VMIC, a not for profit organisation based at Harwell Campus, will provide the countryβs first bespoke strategic vaccine development and manufacturing capability. In an unusual move, the district council allowed construction of the facility to begin whilst simultaneously processing the planning application because of the critical nature of the facility and the role it will play in manufacturing vaccines for COVID-19 and beyond.
Under normal circumstances, planning approvalΒ and constructionΒ for a new development of this scaleΒ would take years, with construction beginning only whenΒ planningΒ permission had been granted. Due to COVID-19, and VMICβs national and international significance,Β Vale of White Horse District Council took a different approach andΒ fast-trackedΒ the application process, meaning that much of theΒ planningΒ work taking place behind the scenes was carried outΒ simultaneously to construction work.
Collaboration was key to securing the fast-tracked planning permission. Council officers significantly increased the number of meetings they would typically hold for this size of project with all the major stakeholders including VMIC, Harwell Campus Management (project managers), Carter Jonas (the planning consultant), Glencar Construction (main construction company) and the agency funding VMIC, UK Research and Innovation.Β Greater contact with statutory consultees, the local parish council and the ward councillor ensured consultation processes were adhered to and queries were responded to swiftly.
Cllr Emily Smith, Leader of Vale of White Horse District Council, said: βIβm delighted we have been able to grant planning permission for the new Vaccines Manufacturing and Innovation Centre.Β Iβm very proud that we will have a building of such national and international importance in the Vale and I am particularlyΒ pleased that as a district council weΒ have played a significant role in ensuring it can be delivered as quickly as possible.β Β Β
Dr Matthew Duchars, Chief Executive Officer of the Vaccines Manufacturing and Innovation Centre, said: βWe are extremely grateful to all the teams involved in working together to secure planning permission by moving at such a phenomenal speed. This decision by the Council gained us three critical months in our race to build a pandemic capable vaccine manufacturing facility, during which time we were able to go from a grass covered site to completion of the superstructure.β
Chris Lucas, Chief Operating Officer, VMIC, said: βBy fast tracking the planning process and allowing us to start construction of the VMIC facility early, the district council has really enabled us to accelerate the pace of this project. Their support and collaborative approach has contributed significantly towards us meeting our deadline of opening in summer 2021 β a year ahead of schedule.β
Cliff Dare, Chief Operating Officer and Head of Real Estate of Harwell Campus and Development Manager for the VMIC build,Β said:Β βWorking on the Governmentβs main effort at the forefront of our Nationβs fight against COVID-19 was always going to beΒ an exceptionally challenging project. Delivering the building almost a year earlyΒ demandedΒ a unitedΒ approach.Β The district council team has enabled construction to move quicker than we ever expectedΒ but thisΒ would also not have been possible without the positive relationships establishedΒ between the talented and dedicated people working across every part of thisΒ vitalΒ project.βΒ
Andy Jones, Medicines Manufacturing Challenge Director at UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), said: βWhen we provided start-up funding for the Vaccines Manufacturing Innovation Centre Β we recognised that we needed both innovative approaches to vaccine development and the ability to deliver vaccines at speed and in sufficient volume. The rapid approval of the centre will play a vital roleΒ in helping this become a reality so that vaccines innovators, including industry and academia, can more effectively tackle the healthcare challenges of the future.β
Steven Sensecall, Partner, Planning & Development, Carter Jonas, said: “That planning approval was achieved so rapidly, whilst development of the centre had already begun on site, demonstrates the sheer determination and hard work of the unique community of people involved in this ground-breaking project.
βThe circumstances under which we have been operating have been truly exceptional. However, working closely with the Vale of the White Horse District Council, the Harwell team, principal stakeholders and contractors, we have all embraced new technologies, strategies and process to accomplish a clear and thorough consultation process and reach a successful outcome. We are extremely proud to have played a role in supporting its delivery.β
Eddie McGillycuddy, Managing Director of Glencar Construction,Β said: βGlencar is delighted to play a central role in the realisation of this landmark project. From the outstanding approach of the Vale of White Horse and Harwell Campus to the contractors and suppliers on site, it has been a leading example of the Construction industries capabilitiesβ
βTogether, we will bring this facility to operational status in record timeβ
An additional government grant of Β£93million was awarded to VMIC in May 2020 with the purpose of expanding the facilityβs capabilities and fast tracking the build of the 7,400 mΒ² (footprint) state-of-the-art facility and bringing forward operational readiness to 2021, a year head of the original scheduled date. Alongside this, VMIC has invested in more technology to increase its manufacturing capacity 20-fold, to be capable of producing 70million pandemic vaccine doses in 4-6 months.
VMIC will occupy a prominent location on the 700-acre Harwell Campus, home to 6,000 people across ~225 organisations [with 30 universities represented onsite]. Β As a pillar organisation within the Harwell HealthTec Cluster (58 organisations, collectively employing 1,250 people), VMIC will be co-located with the UKβs open access National Laboratories, including the Diamond Light Source and The Rosalind Franklin Institute as well as innovative start-ups/ SMEs through to multinationals working in the global and UK Life Sciences sector.

















