The shortlist has yet to be approved by the Lord Chancellor, Lord Irvine of Lairg, but has been recommended by the Court Service and its project manager Mouchel.
The service is understood to be hoping for a quick decision as the scheme is slightly behind schedule, and Irvine is expected to agree to the recommendations within the next week. Last Friday, he visited Manchester to inspect two potential sites for the courts.
If approved, the three practices will have three months to develop their designs. Mouchel鈥檚 Simon Daniels, the scheme鈥檚 project director, said: 鈥淲e will run a competition with the chosen design teams and they will give a presentation to a design jury in three months.鈥
It is understood that the Court Service has identified two potential developers for the 60-room complex.
We will run a competition with the chosen design teams and they will give a presentation to a jury
Simon Daniels, project director, Mouchel
The project is piloting a scheme to separate the appointment of the architect from the developer, in a bid to improve design quality.
The Court Service is also using the scheme to pioneer a system by which the shortlisted architects are offered an honorarium, or payment, while they work up their designs. The payment is expected to be about 拢50,000.
The Court Service has made the building鈥檚 design quality a priority. Last June鈥檚 advertisement in the European Union鈥檚 Official Journal said the building would be of 鈥淓uropean significance鈥.
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