Liverpool Baltic Triangle
Liverpool Baltic Triangle speaks 0+ languages. Your neighbourhood, researched.
residents
Age profile
A very young inner-city neighbourhood, with more than half of residents aged 20 to 34 and relatively few children or older residents.
Which community organisations operate in Liverpool Baltic Triangle?
Land at Carnegie Road battery storage project
Renewable energy projectOne of the nearest operational battery storage schemes in Liverpool and a useful local example when discussing energy infrastructure, jobs, safety, and community benefit.
Via Liverpool City Council planning records or the project operator named in planning documents.
Liverpool Energy Management Facility
Renewable energy projectA major operational battery project that can help anchor conversations about local energy resilience, industrial decarbonisation, and how residents want energy projects explained.
Via Liverpool City Council planning records or site operator details in planning documents.
Lister Drive battery storage project
Renewable energy projectA sizeable operational energy site in the wider Liverpool area that is relevant for public engagement on renewable infrastructure and local perceptions of battery developments.
Via Liverpool City Council planning records or the project operator named in planning documents.
Mercedes-Benz, Pall Mall solar array
Renewable energy projectA city-centre commercial solar scheme that can make engagement feel concrete and local, especially for businesses and tenants interested in visible low-carbon upgrades.
Via Liverpool City Council planning records.
Who lives here
The area around Liverpool Baltic Triangle is home to a compact, city-centre community of 1,286 people, with a strong young adult presence and a street life shaped by flats, converted buildings and constant movement. The 2021 Census shows this is especially a neighbourhood of people in their 20s and early 30s, with the biggest groups aged 25 to 29 and 30 to 34, alongside a sizeable 20 to 24 population too. That gives the area an energetic, transitional feel: people renting or buying their first place, working flexible hours, socialising locally and living close to the city’s creative and commercial core. The population is mixed and urban, including Asian, Asian British or Asian Welsh residents making up 7.3% of the community, with a notable Chinese population at 3.9%, alongside Black, Black British, Black Welsh, Caribbean or African residents at 2.6%. Homes are overwhelmingly apartment-led, with more than half in purpose-built blocks and another sizeable share in converted buildings such as former warehouses, which fits the Baltic Triangle’s distinctive blend of old industrial fabric and newer city living. There’s also a practical, lived-in side to the area that matters for anyone trying to engage people well. Housing is split across owned homes and social rented homes in fairly similar proportions, pointing to a neighbourhood where young professionals, longer-standing residents and people in different income brackets are living close together. Most households have the bedrooms they need, and health is generally positive, with most residents describing their health as very good or good, though nearly one in five people are disabled under the Equality Act, so accessibility and inclusive communication really matter here. Around Liverpool, the wider infrastructure story is increasingly shaped by energy projects too, with operational battery sites at Land at Carnegie Road, Lister Drive and the Liverpool Energy Management Facility, plus solar schemes at places like Mercedes-Benz, Pall Mall and Garston Shore Road moving through development. What makes this community especially distinctive for engagement is that it combines dense, younger city-centre living with a mixed social base and a strong sense of urban reinvention, so the most effective approach is one that feels immediate, visible and rooted in everyday local life.
A very young inner-city neighbourhood, with more than half of residents aged 20 to 34 and relatively few children or older residents.
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Sources
Researched 20 April 2026
Your neighbours, researched
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