Eco-towns Shortlist is Revealed


03 Apr 2008
 

The shortlist of 15 sites in England for the construction of environmentally friendly eco-towns has been announced by the Government.

Among the sites shortlisted from the 57 bids to house zero-carbon new towns are Bordon in Hampshire, Rushcliffe in Nottinghamshire, Ford in West Sussex and Hanley Grange in Cambridgeshire.
Also selected were Marston Vale and New Marston in Bedfordshire, Curborough in Staffordshire, Rossington in Yorkshire and Weston Otmoor in Oxfordshire.

Up to 10 of the sites will be finally selected over the next six months. The eco-towns will then be built over the next decade, becoming the UK's first new towns since the 1960s. Each will provide up to 20,000 zero-carbon homes, between 30% and 50% of which will be affordable, with an emphasis on large family homes.

The initial plan was that just five eco-towns would be built, but this figure was doubled last September because of the strong bidding response.

Among the 42 rejected locations were Micheldever Station, Grovewood in Derbyshire national forest and Shipton Quarry. Most of the rejected sites were either on greenbelt land, posed a threat to local wildlife or had already had planning approval refused for similar projects.

Housing minister Caroline Flint said the eco-towns would eventually provide not only affordable housing but “the highest green standards we can expect for the way we want to live our lives in the future”.
A panel of experts is to be set up to vet potential developers for the eco-towns.

Flint said: “Bidders will have to meet the highest standards for sustainability, affordability and creativity. This expert panel will challenge developers to the limits.”

The Town and Country Planning Association welcomed the announcement of the shortlist. Gideon Amos, chief executive, said: “With a potential to deliver around 200,000 new homes, eco-towns are an essential part of the solution to the problem of delivering affordable homes at the highest environmental standards to families and households crying out for decent homes in a good environment.”

The eco-towns proposals have provoked controversy, however. There have been fears among local opponents that the schemes would sidestep the usual planning processes, but the Government has said that this will not happen.

Flint said: “Building in existing towns and cities alone simply cannot provide enough new homes. I understand this is an issue that can raise strong opinions, but everyone now has the opportunity to express their views before any decisions are made - because this is an issue that affects us all.”

There have also been concerns among environmentalists that the small size of most of the proposed eco-towns would increase car use as inhabitants use their cars extensively to travel to facilities in nearby towns.

The 15 eco-town sites and their promoters/developers are:
Bordon, Hampshire, East Hampshire District Council
Coltishall, Norfolk, Coltishall Group Plc
Curborough, Staffordshire, Curborough Consortium
Elsenham, Essex, The Fairfield Partnership
Ford, West Sussex, Ford Airfield Vision Group(comprising Ford Farming Group, Redrow Homes
Southern Ltd and Wates Developments Ltd)
Hanley Grange, Cambridgeshire, Jarrow Investments Ltd
Imerys, Cornwall, Imerys Minerals Ltd
Leeds City Region, West Yorkshire
Manby, Lincolnshire, East Lindsey District Council
Marston Vale and New Marston, Bedfordshire, O & H Properties Ltd
Middle Quinton, Warwickshire, St Modwen and The Bird Group of Companies
Pennbury, Leicestershire, Co-operative Estates,
part of the Co-operative Group and English Partnerships
Rossington, Yorkshire, Rossington Ecotown
Partnership (UK COAL,Persimmon, HelioSlough and Rossington Forward)
Rushcliffe, Nottinghamshire, Banks Developments
Weston Otmoor, Oxfordshire, Parkridge