Edinburgh planners have given the green light to a £60m regeneration project that which will bring more than 700 jobs to the city centre.

The Registers, an area to the south east of St Andrew Square, which will see two important heritage buildings given a new lease of life, new office accommodation and street level shops, bars and restaurants.

New life will be given to one of the most important art deco banking halls as a restaurant at the neoclassical 42 St Andrew Square and reinstating a former warehouse at 28 West Register Street into active commercial use while preserving its remarkable Venetian Gothic façade.

On completion in 2017 the development is set to deliver an annual economic boost of £71.4m for the city, alongside a significant "heritage gain" for the area.

A Chris Stewart Group development, it aims to replicate the success of Advocate’s Close in Edinburgh’s Old Town, which has won an array of national and international awards for its design.

Chris Stewart said: "I am delighted that we have the go ahead for The Registers from City of Edinburgh Council.

The Herald:

"It is an area in the city centre in desperate need of regeneration.

"The site is currently made up of a warren of neglected lanes and empty buildings falling into disrepair and we have provided robust evidence that our plans will create nearly 750 jobs and an annual economic boost to the city of over £70m as well as deliver substantial ‘heritage gain’.

“We have approached this project with the same sense of custodianship, design excellence and long term sustainability as we did for Advocate’s Close and our vision is to open up a thriving area that will appeal to both local residents and visitors to the city.”

The council approval followed an extensive consultation period.

The mixed-use scheme will create a vibrant and complementary mix of new offices, hotel, residential and serviced apartments, retail units and restaurants.

As part of the plans, 90 per cent of the listed fabric of the site will be restored, including two key historic listed buildings currently on the ‘at risk’ register.

The Herald:

Buildings along part of West Register Street will make way for c. 60,000 sq ft of offices, designed to attract new businesses to the city and essential to the rejuvenation of the area, which forms an important gateway to the new St James development.

The plan is to start work on site in early 2016.