Sir Howard Bernstein | |
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Howard Bernstein at MIPIM 2012.
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Chief Executive for Manchester City Council |
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Assumed office 1998 |
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Monarch | Elizabeth II |
Prime Minister | Theresa May |
Sir Howard Bernstein (born 9 April 1953) is the Chief Executive of Manchester City Council at Manchester Town Hall. Originally joining the Council as a junior clerk, he became the Chief Executive in 1998, responsible for setting development goals and encouraging investment in the city.
Before appointment as Chief Executive, Bernstein championed the Manchester Metrolink system. The system became the first light-rail network to be built in a British city for over a century when it opened in the early 1990s.
Bernstein has also supported the creation of new areas and buildings such as the Bridgewater Hall, the Manchester Velodrome, the Manchester Arena, the City of Manchester Stadium and the Sportcity district in east Manchester which is still growing. He was involved in the establishment of the Manchester Airports Group in the mid-1980s and has driven the expansion of the company. The Group is now the largest British owned airports group in the UK, owning four airports.
Bernstein's appointment followed the 1996 Manchester bombing which severely damaged much of the city centre and extensive reconstruction ensued. Following the terrorist bombing of the City Centre in 1996, he was appointed Chief Executive of Manchester Millennium Limited, the public/private sector Task Force set up by the Government and the City Council to oversee the redesign and rebuilding of the City Centre, a task which successfully delivered areas such as Piccadilly Gardens, Exchange Square, New Cathedral Street, Urbis on time and on budget.
In 2003, Manchester City Council under Bernstein's civic leadership won the RIBA Client of the Year for various projects such the City of Manchester Stadium and Urbis - the only time a local government authority has won the award.