Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

£40m estate looking to stimulate suburb

Developers behind one of the biggest housing schemes Canterbury has ever seen believe they can regenerate the outskirts of the city. reports ....

-

A £40 million housing estate in Thanington will breathe new life into the city suburb and combat traffic woes, developers claim.

Pentland Homes is currently building the first phase of an ambitious project to deliver 750 properties on farmland behind Cockering Road.

The developmen­t - named Saxon Fields - will include a new primary school, restaurant­s and sports pitches, as well as a bespoke base for the relocation of the city’s Pilgrims Hospice.

Also part of the deal will be a longawaite­d A2 off-slip at Wincheap, with Pentland picking up the £8.8 million price.

But the new coastbound slip-road envisaged to alleviate constant traffic problems on the A28 - does not legally need to be completed until the 450th house at Saxon Fields is occupied. The entire project, which is Pentland’s biggest to date, is set to be finished within the next eight years. All of the homes - of which a handful are almost complete - will have an art deco design and boast underfloor heating systems. The first phase of developmen­t, which includes 27 properties, is due to be finished by December, with seven of the homes already sold.

Buyers will be moving in throughout the year as each house is completed. Martin Hart, managing director at Pentland, is pleased with how the developmen­t is taking shape. “There’s a real focus for a big regenerati­on of Wincheap - it’s the next big thing for Canterbury,” he said.

“And with this developmen­t we’re kickstarti­ng that change.

“We could have built 1,000 homes on this land but we didn’t want to cram them in. Instead, each house has a lot of space and we have large areas of greenery and sports facilities.

“With other companies you’ll see the same brick being used for homes in Scotland and in Kent, with little thought going into the specific area.

“But everything we do is different. It’s probably not the best approach economical­ly as our team are always working on new designs, but we care about the quality.”

Prices of the homes will range from £350,000 to £540,000 - with the government’s Help to Buy scheme for first-time buyers available, and 30% of the stock being affordable homes.

The undulating farmland land was snapped up by the Folkestone-based firm in the 1970s and plans were originally drawn up for a golf course - before focus shifted to opening a club in Boughton. A vision to build a new housing complex was then hatched in 2005, before Canterbury City Council - which earmarked the 111-acre site in its Local Plan - approved the 750-home scheme in 2016. New parkland, meadows and wetlands will be created along with a cricket pitch and pavilion, with talks ongoing with Sturry Cricket Club about taking on the facilities.

Karrina Oki, sales and marketing director at Pentland, said: “We are delivering all the elements needed to support a new community, from new homes to support services such as a doctor’s surgery, primary school, shops and plenty of open space for families to enjoy. “There is something for everyone, from first-time buyers, profession­als, growing families up to empty-nesters and downsizers.”

As well as funding a new coastbound off-slip, Pentland will also be paying for

 ??  ?? How the housing estate could look
How the housing estate could look
 ??  ?? Constructi­on work will continue for years
Constructi­on work will continue for years
 ??  ?? Martin Hart, Pentland Homes managing director
A number of homes are almost complete
Martin Hart, Pentland Homes managing director A number of homes are almost complete

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom