As well as new buildings and projects in the city centre, a number of new train stations are also expected to open across the city next year.
Not all projects will see new structures being built, with some buildings which have been a part of the city's history set to be transformed.
Here is a look at how the city could change and the future place for familiar parts of Birmingham.
1. Queensgate House
Plans to build 125 new apartments next to the Mailbox in Birmingham have were approved in October 2023, with construction work set to get underway in 2024. Two new apartment blocks will be built next to and at the rear of Queensgate House off Suffolk Street Queensway.
As part of the project, Queensgate House will also be converted into 67 boutique apartments.
2. The first stage of the Perry Barr residential scheme has now been completed
The first stage of the Perry Barr residential scheme has now been completed
3. New train stations in Moseley, Kings Heath and Stirchley
The Moseley Village Railway Station will be one of three to open along the Camp Hill line in 2024, alongside Kings Heath and Pineapple Road in Stirchley. The stations, costing a combined £61m, have been more than 10 years in the making to help ease congestion along the busy Alcester Road in and out of Birmingham city centre.
4. Witton Station revamp
Mayor of the West Midlands, Mr Street revealed in September that plans to revamp Witton station - which is next to Aston Villa's Villa Park stadium - are well underway, with a specialist team of expert transport consultants currently drawing up an action plan to develop the ‘ageing and overcrowded’ station into one that’s ‘suitable, modern and spacious’. The millions of pounds needed to redevelop Witton station, which first opened in 1876, will come via the Government-funded West Midlands Combined Authority who’ll seek support from the Department for Transport.