BBC and
BBC Sport , approximately BBC staff are employed at MediaCityUK. The BBC currently occupies three buildings at MediaCityUK: Bridge House, Dock House and Quay House. The BBC North operation at MediaCityUK was brought about by relocating a significant number of staff from BBC premises in London. On 31 May 2007, the BBC Trust gave final approval for the creation of "a major new BBC centre in the North", to be completed by 2011. It was claimed that the development would create up to jobs and add £1 billion to the regional economy over five years. It was announced in July 2010 that the
BBC Breakfast programme would move to Salford Quays. In 2009, the BBC had estimated that moving to Salford would cost almost £1 billion, spread over twenty years, but in May 2011, Director-General Mark Thompson claimed that the cost of moving was much less than that originally planned. In 2017, the
Centre for Cities published a report showing the impact of the move in the five years between 2011 and 2016. It found there were 4,600 new jobs in MediaCityUK, however 2,000 of those were BBC staff relocated from elsewhere in the country, while 1,200 were from existing Greater Manchester businesses relocating (including 640 BBC staff already based in the city) for 1,400 net new jobs created at MediaCityUK by the move; there was little relocation of other businesses from elsewhere in the country, with only 145 in existing businesses moving to Greater Manchester. The number employed in media within one mile of MediaCityUK was static over the five years, as cuts in output offset new job growth (and the coverage of the 2012 London Olympics was a peak for BBC Sport). However, the economic impact outside Salford was greater, with the creation of 4,420 new jobs for existing businesses in the wider city region. Various divisions of the BBC have bases at the MediaCityUK campus, generally referred to as
BBC North. Output includes network programming (
BBC Breakfast,
BBC News at One,
BBC North West regional news); BBC children's TV (
CBBC and
CBeebies);
BBC Three;
Radio Manchester,
BBC Radio 3,
BBC Radio 4,
BBC Radio 5 Live and
5 Sports Extra,
6 Music ,
BBC Radio 1,BBC Religion & Ethics,
BBC Sport,
BBC Learning and the
BBC Philharmonic. The campus is also home to a
24/7 engineering team overseeing online and broadcast output, plus teams for other key products and services including:
BBC iPlayer,
BBC Sounds,
BBC Research & Development, Children in Need and Comic Relief. Some staff in the commercial division,
BBC Studios, also work from MediaCityUK. In November 2022, the BBC announced plans to vacate Bridge House as part of a scheme to reduce costs. Staff from BBC Children's, BBC Education, BBC Sport and operations staff will relocate to other MediaCity premises, Quay House and Dock House, by the spring of 2024. After a change of management at ITV Granada, talks resumed in January 2010 and in December the decision to move to MediaCityUK was announced. A production facility was constructed on Trafford Wharf to house the
Coronation Street sets that transferred from Granada Studios in 2013. In March 2013,
Granada Reports was broadcast from MediaCityUK signifying the completion of the initial phase of its migration from the
Granada Studios in Quay Street. The MediaCityUK site is home to approximately 750 ITV employees at ITV Granada and ITV Studios.
NEP Connect / SIS LIVE Satellite Information Services (SIS), later known as SIS LIVE, has occupied an office at The Pie Factory since 2006 and in 2010 formed a joint venture with Peel to manage the studios. In 2011 SIS announced it would move its headquarters from London and awarded a £3 million contract to S3 Satcom and SATCOM Technologies for the provision of a nine
earth station broadcast teleport on Trafford Wharf. SIS announced the launch of its teleport in July 2012 and opened offices in the Blue Tower a month later. In October 2018, SIS LIVE was taken over by
NEP Group, who rebranded the firm to 'NEP Connect' and have continued to operate their facilities at MediaCityUK.
University of Salford looking towards
Dock10, the
BBC and
Salford University The
University of Salford moved its media-related teaching and research to the MediaCityUK site in October 2011. The move will controversially cost the university more than £2.25 million in rent per annum until 2020.
dock10 dock10 is a television facility owner and media services company, located within MediaCityUK,
Salford. dock10 offers a number of services, but its two most notable is Television Studios and
post production.
Red Bee Media Red Bee has offices, playout and managed media facilities at their MediaCityUK location.
Others A diverse mix of about 40 service companies, along with small companies offering ancillary services such as casting and camera hire, occupy The Pie Factory and The Greenhouse.
Antix Productions moved into offices in The Greenhouse in 2011. In 2012 the
Rugby Football League opened an office in The Greenhouse to facilitate the administration of the
2013 Rugby League World Cup. In 2008, Hope High School in Salford was taken over by Oasis Community Learning, an evangelical Christian organisation, and renamed
Oasis Academy MediaCityUK; its new premises in Salford Quays, on the edge of the MediaCity UK site, were completed in September 2012.
UTC@MediaCityUK, a
University Technical College backed by the University of Salford,
The Lowry and the Aldridge Foundation, specialising in the creative, media and music industries opened in 2015. ==Transport==