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Blueprint for Manchester’s future will be debated this week

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City centre will be extended as many more new homes planned

Outside technology trade event DTX + UCX Manchester at Manchester Central with tram and skyline.

Manchester’s local plan includes discussion on transport infrastructure(Image: Reach plc)

A report has offered a glimpse into the major changes coming to Manchester over the next 15 years.

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Bosses at the council are creating a blueprint for the city’s future, including expanding the city centre, building more homes, and cementing Manchester’s place as a top place to visit.

The vision has been shared in a report known as the local plan, covering the changes set to take place in the city between 2022 and 2039.

It is at an ‘advanced and final stage’ and is being put before the council’s cabinet team at a public meeting this week.

‘Manchester will be an even more must-see city, with amazing things to do,’ the report claims.

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‘Our neighbourhoods will be clean and green, with good-quality affordable homes and good public services. Mancunians will feel safer indoors, outdoors and online.’

The plan includes improvements to the city centre to make it ‘more attractive’ to spend time in, as well as better transport connections.

Areas of ‘core growth’ – where major changes are planned – will see the city centre boundary get bigger.

It will stretch out to the Great Ducie Street area of Strangeways, Ancoats, New Islington, as well as south of town, towards Manchester Science Park, and the Manchester Metropolitan University campus.

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Some of the parts of the city earmarked for huge upgrades in the local plan include Sportcity in east Manchester, Strangeways, and Victoria North – an area which includes Collyhurst and some surrounding neighbourhoods.

The redevelopment of North Manchester General Hospital is another major project, which is set to be redeveloped to create a ‘modernised hospital and health facilities’.

Plans around the hospital include building new housing, office spaces, and shops.

The local plan is set to move to a six-week public consultation later this year, with adoption planned for summer 2027.

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The report states: ‘Manchester is a dynamic city, it continues to see strong population and economic growth.

‘Through a myriad of initiatives seeking to tackle inequalities and ensuring our residents benefit from our success, we have seen new homes across all tenures and new jobs in both traditional and new sectors.

‘We’ve seen many parts of the city go through physical changes, with new housing allowing more people to live here.

‘As more businesses have invested here, further jobs opportunities have been created for people across all our neighbourhoods. Our residents are better connected with improved transport and can enjoy a varied culture and leisure scene.

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‘As we move towards a zero-carbon future, we’re recycling more, and our parks have been protected and developed for all.

‘However, there remains a demand for more housing, including genuinely affordable new homes, and provision for accommodation for supported care and for students attracted to our world class universities.

‘There also remains significant levels of economic inactivity (due to poor health) which we are committed to tackle. The updated Local Plan seeks to provide those spatial policies that can address growth, inclusivity, poverty, health, housing, climate change and transport.’

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ECB payment system hit by second outage in a week

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U.S. Equities: What's Hiding Beneath The Market's Headline Returns?

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U.S. Equities: What's Hiding Beneath The Market's Headline Returns?

U.S. Equities: What's Hiding Beneath The Market's Headline Returns?

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Marta Kostyuk Beats Ashlyn Krueger 6-4, 6-4 to Reach First-Ever Wimbledon Quarterfinal in Straight Sets

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Australian James Duckworth celebrates a point in his second-round win over eighth-seeded David Goffin of Belgium in the Miami Open ATP and WTA hardcourt tennis tournament

LONDON — Marta Kostyuk defeated American Ashlyn Krueger 6-4, 6-4 on Monday to reach her first Wimbledon quarterfinal, continuing a breakout season for the Ukrainian that has now seen her advance to the fourth round or better at all four Grand Slam tournaments.

The match, played on No. 2 Court, pitted the No. 13-seeded Kostyuk against Krueger, an American ranked outside the top 100 who had been enjoying the best run of her career on grass. Kostyuk used her aggressive baseline game and sharp return of serve to overcome a confident Krueger, closing out the win in straight sets to book a spot in her first Wimbledon quarterfinal.

The victory extended what has become one of the more remarkable turnarounds on the WTA Tour this season. Kostyuk has now won 19 of her last 20 matches, a stretch that included a run to the semifinals at Roland Garros earlier this year, a tournament where she memorably ended four-time champion Iga Swiatek’s run in the earliest French Open exit of Swiatek’s career in seven years. Kostyuk entered Wimbledon with a modest 19-19 career record on grass and had previously never advanced past the third round at the All England Club, a surface she has openly said used to feel like her worst.

Kostyuk’s win over Krueger followed a hard-fought third-round victory over American Emma Navarro, whom Kostyuk beat 6-2, 4-6, 6-1 after saving four of five break points she faced. That win was particularly significant given that Navarro had beaten Kostyuk in all four of their previous meetings. Reflecting on her run to the fourth round after that match, Kostyuk said she had never expected to reach that stage of the tournament, adding that regardless of the outcome, the most important thing was to enjoy the experience fully.

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Kostyuk has also been candid about her prior struggles on grass, saying she had played what she described as horrendous tennis at Wimbledon in previous years and had never been able to find her form on the surface at any level of tournament, whether at the majors or smaller grass-court events. She noted that even in the lead-up to this year’s tournament, she had lost most of her practice sets, including matches against Serena Williams and Jessica Pegula, before turning her form around once the event began.

With Monday’s win, the 24-year-old Kostyuk moved into rarefied statistical territory. According to tournament statistics provider Opta, she became just the fourth player born in the 2000s to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal on all three major surfaces, hard court, clay and grass, joining Iga Swiatek, Amanda Anisimova and Coco Gauff as the only players born in that decade to have accomplished the feat. The result also pushed Kostyuk to the brink of a maiden top-10 ranking, with her live ranking rising to No. 11, just 194 points behind the current No. 10, Victoria Mboko, who withdrew from this year’s Wimbledon due to a knee injury sustained at the Queen’s Club tournament.

For Krueger, the loss ended what had already been the best Grand Slam result of her career. Having reached the fourth round of a major for the first time, Krueger arrived at Wimbledon on the back of a 16-1 record on grass this season, a stretch that included winning the WTA 125 title in Ilkley and reaching the semifinals in Birmingham. Her run through the tournament included straight-set wins over Mariam Bolkvadze and Daria Snigur, along with a tighter three-set victory over 2024 semifinalist Donna Vekic in her opening match.

Monday’s meeting marked the second career encounter between the two players. Krueger had won their first meeting in straight sets at a hard-court tournament in Adelaide in 2025, a result that briefly gave her the edge in their head-to-head series. Kostyuk’s win on Monday evened that record and marked a significant statement given the difference in surface and stakes between the two matchups.

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Krueger’s run through the tournament had drawn attention in part because she began the year outside the top 100 after failing to defend key ranking points from the previous season. Her performances on grass this year, capped by her deepest Grand Slam run to date, are expected to lift her ranking closer to the top 60 in the coming weeks, even after Monday’s defeat.

Kostyuk will next face the winner of a separate fourth-round match between Italy’s Jasmine Paolini, the No. 13 seed, and Filipino player Alexandra Eala, the No. 29 seed, as she continues her push toward a first Wimbledon semifinal appearance. Her run this fortnight has established her as one of the more credible outsiders remaining in a wide-open women’s draw, following her breakthrough run to the semifinals in Paris earlier this season.

The result continues a trend of deep runs for Kostyuk across each of the sport’s four majors this year, a consistency that has become a defining feature of her 2026 season. Having entered the year without a clear signature surface, she now finds herself with credible results on all three, a development that has repositioned her as a genuine contender heading into the latter stages of the year’s grass-court major.

Play at Wimbledon continues through the remainder of the week, with the men’s and women’s quarterfinals set to further narrow the field as the tournament moves toward its concluding rounds later this month.

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Buckingham Palace Withdraws Offer for Prince Harry to Stay There During This Week’s Visit to London Amid Row

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Prince Harry

LONDON — Buckingham Palace confirmed Monday that Prince Harry will not be staying at the royal residence during his visit to London this week, contradicting an earlier statement from the Duke of Sussex’s team that said he had accepted an offer to do so, in the latest episode of confusion and mutual finger-pointing between the two camps.

According to a royal source, Harry had not formally responded to King Charles’ offer of accommodation at a royal residence by the required deadline, which fell at the end of last week. The source said an initial offer for a royal residence to accommodate the wider Sussex family was turned down on Saturday, before a separate request came in for Harry to stay by himself. By that point, the source said, it was too late to arrange the appropriate hospitality and staffing needed to host him, a requirement the palace says applies to any guest staying at one of its residences.

Harry’s spokesperson offered a different account of events. In a statement, the spokesperson said that following a decision by the Royal and VIP Executive Committee, known as RAVEC, not to provide taxpayer-funded security for his family, the duke spent last week arranging alternative security measures. Once those arrangements were finalized, the spokesperson said, Harry was able to formally accept the accommodation offer over the weekend. The spokesperson called it “disappointing” that the offer had since been withdrawn, noting that Buckingham Palace had cited a Tuesday court judgment as a reason for the reversal despite having been aware of the judgment’s timing since the previous Thursday. “It is therefore unclear why, having formally accepted the accommodation offer, it has now been withdrawn at the last moment,” the spokesperson said.

Palace sources have also pointed to sensitivities surrounding the timing of a High Court judgment expected this week in a long-running legal case Harry brought against the publisher of the Daily Mail, alongside other claimants including Elton John, Sadie Frost, Elizabeth Hurley and Baroness Doreen Lawrence. Sources close to the palace have suggested concerns about Harry staying at a royal residence on the same day that judgment is handed down, saying the King cannot appear to be compromised in relation to the ongoing litigation.

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The back-and-forth has drawn attention to what several outlets have described as a pattern of poor communication and mutual distrust between the Sussex team and Buckingham Palace, a dynamic that has persisted since Harry and his wife, Meghan, stepped back from royal duties in 2020. Multiple British media outlets reported earlier Monday, citing Harry’s spokesperson, that the duke had accepted the palace’s invitation, only for palace sources to push back within hours and say the acceptance had come too late to be honored.

The dispute has also become fodder for public commentary. Royal commentator Dan Wootton wrote on the social media platform X that King Charles was “absolutely right to say no to Prince Harry (and Meghan Markle especially) staying in Buckingham Palace,” adding that “the door must now be slammed shut.” Wootton, whose remarks reflect his own characterization of the situation rather than an official palace position, further wrote that Harry and Meghan had made unfounded allegations of racism in an effort to undermine the royal family and that, in his view, their public actions have repeatedly generated controversy. Wootton’s comments represent one vocal perspective among many being expressed publicly as the story has developed, and they have not been endorsed by Buckingham Palace or any official royal spokesperson.

Harry is traveling to the United Kingdom this week to mark the one-year countdown to the 2027 Invictus Games, the Paralympic-style sporting competition for injured and ill servicemen and veterans that he founded more than a decade ago, along with a series of other charity engagements planned across London and the Midlands. It had already been confirmed, separately from the accommodation dispute, that Harry would travel without Meghan and their two children, Archie and Lilibet, following the RAVEC decision not to provide the family with police protection funded by taxpayers during their visits to the UK. It remains possible that Meghan could join Harry later in the week in Birmingham for events tied to the Invictus Games countdown, according to reporting on his travel plans.

The accommodation dispute has added further uncertainty to the question of whether Harry will meet with his father during the visit, a meeting that had reportedly been under discussion before the disagreement over lodging emerged. It also remains unclear whether King Charles will have the opportunity to see his two grandchildren, now ages seven and five, whom he has reportedly not seen in person in roughly four years, should Meghan and the children ultimately join Harry later in the trip.

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Harry and Meghan were last together in the United Kingdom in 2022 for the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II. Since stepping back from their roles as senior working royals that same year, the couple has largely resided in the United States, making periodic visits to the UK for specific engagements, court proceedings and family events, several of which have similarly been marked by public disagreements over security arrangements and other logistical matters.

As of Monday, neither Buckingham Palace nor representatives for Harry had indicated whether the dispute over accommodation would affect the broader schedule of his visit this week, including his planned charity engagements and any potential meeting with the King. Both sides have continued to offer contrasting accounts of how the accommodation offer was extended, accepted and ultimately withdrawn, with no clear indication that either party intends to publicly revise its version of events in the immediate aftermath of Monday’s statements.

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General Mills prioritizing functional, experiential innovation

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General Mills prioritizing functional, experiential innovation

Elevated investment expected to drive more consistent, profitable sales growth.

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Australian shares dip as traders await next catalyst

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Australian shares dip as traders await next catalyst

Australia’s share market has started the week lower as trading volumes plunged and investors awaited the next market-moving catalyst.

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MBX Biosciences: Weekly PTH, Monthly Obesity, Multi-Year Upside (Initiating Buy)

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MBX Biosciences: Weekly PTH, Monthly Obesity, Multi-Year Upside (Initiating Buy)

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QTREX system deployed at U.S. government quantum computing lab

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Versant to buy golf simulator company Full Swing for $530 million

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Versant to buy golf simulator company Full Swing for $530 million

Mark Lazarus, chief executive officer of Versant, at the Semafor World Economy Summit during the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Spring meetings in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday, April 15, 2026.

Aaron Schwartz | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Versant Media Group, the owner of cable networks including CNBC, MS Now and the Golf Channel, has agreed to acquire golf simulation company Full Swing from private equity firm Bruin Capital for about $530 million in cash.

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The deal follows a template CEO Mark Lazarus has outlined to investors since Versant began trading as a public company in January following its spinout from Comcast.

Versant has been investing in non-traditional media businesses that broaden the scope of the brands it already owns. Earlier this year, the company acquired StockStory, an AI-powered tech platform that provides financial analysis, market insights, and stock recommendations, for CNBC.

The company’s golf business already owns digital media platform GolfPass and tee-time reservation company GolfNow.

In May, Versant reported that revenue for its platforms business, which includes GolfNow, Fandango and some recently launched direct-to-consumer units, was up 9.5% to $192 million. The company has called out its growth in its news and sports units. Executives have said they aim to rebalance Versant’s revenue mix so that eventually 50% of it is derived from digital, platform, subscription, ad-supported and transactional businesses.

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“Full Swing is exactly the kind of strategic platform that reflects how we are building Versant:
investing in our core markets, extending the reach of our iconic brands and creating new ways to serve passionate audiences,” Lazarus said in a statement.

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Full Swing develops and sells golf and baseball simulators for consumers, sporting goods stores and athletic training facilities. Both recreational and professional athletes use the technology. Bruin Capital purchased Full Swing in 2021 for $160 million, Sportico reported at the time.

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“Joining Versant gives us the scale and distribution to bring our technology to even more golfers, athletes and fans,” Full Swing CEO Ryan Dotters said in the statement. Dotters will stay at Versant, and will report to Will McIntosh, president of digital platforms and ventures.

The transaction should close before Dec. 31, the companies said in a statement.

— CNBC’s Lillian Rizzo contributed to this article.

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Consumer Fight Back – Margaret’s phone nightmare – Is it finally over?

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Consumer Fight Back - Pensions, Holidays and AI Shopping

Available for 27 days

Linzi Lima checks back in with listener Margaret, who is nearly 90, and her daughter Martina to find out whether, after two months of disruption, Margaret’s landline and lifeline to the world – is finally back up and running.

A new Which? survey suggests that one in eight customers paid more than they were first quoted for car hire. We share practical tips to help you avoid unexpected costs when hiring a car for holidays abroad.

With the sunny weather continuing, do you need to spend more on sun cream to stay protected? We look at the best ways to protect yourself in the sun and whether higher prices really mean better protection.

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New research suggests women are increasingly acting as the financial ‘shock absorbers’ of British households when money gets tight. We take a closer look at what the findings reveal.

And it’s not just the music drawing crowds to festivals this year. With more people looking for family-friendly events and experiences that focus on health and wellbeing, we explore how the festival scene is changing.

Plus, if you have a story or experience you’d like to share with Consumer Fight Back, get in touch by emailing the team at cfb@bbc.co.uk.

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