Nottingham Post

‘A new beginning’ for the old Stanton Ironworks

PLANS APPROVED FOR REGENERATI­ON OF 200-ACRE BROWNFIELD SITE THAT COULD BE ‘BIGGEST EVER SEEN IN EREWASH’ – AND CREATE 4,000 JOBS

- By EDDIE BISKNELL Local Democracy Reporter eddie.bisknell@reachplc

A VAST brownfield industrial site to the south of Ilkeston will be brought back into use after being left derelict since 2007.

The Stanton Ironworks site has been vacant for the past 25 years after the former industrial hotbed produced its final pipes, having previously been one of the region’s largest employers.

Now plans from Verdant Regenerati­on – a partnershi­p between Ward Recycling and Trust Utilities – have been unanimousl­y approved by Erewash Borough Council to bring 200 acres of the site back to life after years of “neglect”.

The project is potentiall­y the largest the borough has ever seen, covering an area the size of 100 football pitches and creating around 2.5 million square feet of warehouse and industrial unit space.

At a borough council planning meeting on June 8, councillor­s said that while they had their concerns over traffic, they felt that an opportunit­y to bring the site back into use could not be passed up.

Councillor Paul Shelton said: “It is only when you visit this site that you appreciate how big it is and how much it is in need of redevelopm­ent.

“It has been in need of redevelopm­ent practicall­y as long as I can remember. It is the largest brownfield site in Derbyshire and seeing this brought back into use and being redevelope­d is an opportunit­y we can’t pass on.”

Councillor Kevin Miller said the applicant should try and keep the remaining shells of the exhibition and training centres, which sit close to the roadside in Lows Lane, opposite the Seven Oaks Inn. The plan put forward by Verdant is to demol- ish every remaining building on the site, with the only buildings to share some of the plot to be four houses off Lows Lane, next to Unbrako Pre-cast Concrete.

Councillor Miller said that at the very least the façade of the buildings should be retained, and also objected to the plan to fill in 400 metres of canal through the site and a historic bridge, calling these acts “a tragedy”.

Councillor Kevin Phillips said: “We cannot allow this opportunit­y to be allowed to go to waste, I do have concerns about traffic.

“This is going to be a huge project, the only benefit is that the developmen­t is going to be happening over a number of years, so we have time – but not much time. I don’t want to see it wasted, but the traffic issue is going to

be a big thing in the future.” Councillor Margaret Griffiths said: “This was probably the biggest employment site in Derbyshire, I’d imagine, and it is long past time that it is brought back into proper use. I hope traffic can be restricted in some way. It would be better if employees can be brought in by rail, and not just freight.”

At its height, the Stanton Ironworks site employed 7,000 people, but on its last day on May 24, 2007, just 185 workers were left. The site had been in use for more than 160 years, serving as a landmark industrial hub for the region. Councillor Lyn Harley, on behalf of Trowell Parish Council, told the meeting the authority had concerns about any increase in traffic, particular­ly from HGVS, on the village and surroundin­g area. Lois Partridge, on behalf of Verdant, said the project had the capability to cater for the entire of the borough’s employment site needs for the next couple of decades. She said the firm felt the “genuine weight of responsibi­lity” and that it could “give the site a new beginning”. Ms Partridge said: “The business rates from this could be highly beneficial to the area. We have already connected the site to the Midland Main Line and have had a three-train trial. “This site has been empty for many years and now has the chance to be cleaned, remediated and provide jobs for the borough.”

Seeing this brought back into use and being redevelope­d is an opportunit­y we can’t pass on.

Cllr Paul Shelton

Steve Birkinshaw, the council’s head of planning and regenerati­on, said the remaining historic exhibition and training buildings “have been described to you as functional and capable of reuse, but as you can see they are not functional and capable of reuse”.

He said the now “neglected” state of the buildings, including widespread vandalism, happened before the applicant took over the site. Mr Birkinshaw said the county archaeolog­ist has agreed that the best way forward would be to “record” the buildings and demolish them.

In response to contaminat­ion concerns raised by councillor­s, Mr Birkinshaw said that because it is to be used for industrial purposes, there is not as much of a need to treat the site before it can be used. There are said to be at least 26 mine shafts on site, not all of which have been located.

Mr Birkinshaw said: “There will not be any buildings built over the mine shafts. Some of the mine shafts have proved elusive. We fully appreciate that extensive remediatio­n work will facilitate the location of the mine shafts.

“This is not a gentle developmen­t, it is going to be handled quite roughly in order to facilitate developmen­t.

“We know contaminat­ion is a significan­t issue and is a concern to residents and the local community in general.

“So far, we are told that much of the land is at the sort of level where it will be suitable for reuse. There will be ‘voids’ on the site that have been infilled with ‘material.’

“Nobody is going to be growing carrots in this, you don’t need to get it to that level (of remediatio­n).”

The remediatio­n and demolition of the site and its buildings is expected to take 30 weeks. No warehouses can be built until reserved matters applicatio­ns are submitted and approved, but work can start on the new access points, roundabout and internal roads.

Verdant’s project will include a range of warehouse units from 15,000 square feet, up to one million square feet.

The project would also see the reintroduc­tion of the Midland Main Line rail connection through a 17-acre rail hub.

This would provide direct access for companies transporti­ng their goods to and from the site and across the UK – taking more vehicles off the roads.

The developer details that the pandemic has effectivel­y pressed fast-forward on the surge towards online shopping within a vastly increased need for distributi­on centres around the UK.

Papers submitted by the firm say the constructi­on and demolition stages of the developmen­t would create 562 jobs each year and that, when complete, this would increase to 4,000 jobs onsite and 400 elsewhere.

Planning documents detail that the main site access would be through a proposed new four-arm roundabout near the junction between Lows Lane and Oaks Road, close to the Seven Oaks Inn.

Meanwhile, the secondary road access to the site would be next to the former primary entrance off Lows Lane – close to the Saint-gobain premises and Littlewell Lane – which is currently blocked up with huge concrete pipes.

The remaining portion of the former ironworks site not taken up by this scheme, which lies south of Lows Lane, is to be earmarked for 1,000 homes by the borough council in its core strategy for the next couple of decades.

As part of an eventual scheme for that site, which has not yet been proposed, junction improvemen­ts would be made to the point where Twelve-houses on Sowbrook Lane meets Lows Lane. This would most likely involve a new roundabout, but would only be “triggered” by the housing scheme.

 ?? ?? The former main access route to the Stanton Ironworks site will be blocked up and a new entrance will be created next to it
The former main access route to the Stanton Ironworks site will be blocked up and a new entrance will be created next to it
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 ?? ?? Top, an aerial view of what the proposed scheme could look like.
Top, an aerial view of what the proposed scheme could look like.
 ?? ?? Above, the former Stanton Ironworks site once employed 7,000 people and produced huge pieces of infrastruc­ture, including the Mersey Tunnel
Above, the former Stanton Ironworks site once employed 7,000 people and produced huge pieces of infrastruc­ture, including the Mersey Tunnel
 ?? ?? The developer says the huge warehouses on the scheme would look like this
The developer says the huge warehouses on the scheme would look like this

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