Sunderland Echo

Jockey Club announces proposals to shut Kempton Park

-

Kempton, home of the King George VI Chase, could be closed for housing redevelopm­ent “from 2021 at the earliest”, its owners the Jockey Club has announced.

The planned £500million of investment­s to be made in the sport in a 10-year plan proposed by the Jockey Club would see Kempton proposed as a future redevelopm­ent site, with a new all-weather venue to be built if that idea goes ahead.

The Jockey Club’s land at The Links in Newmarket is the front-runner as the location for a new floodlit artificial track, with the King George switching to Sandown.

The Kempton estate – on which it is anticipate­d any future developmen­t on racecourse land would be from 2021 at the earliest, subject to a successful planning process – has been submitted for considerat­ion following the local authority’s ‘Call for Sites’ to address unmet local housing needs and a decision to undertake a review of its Green Belt boundaries.

The track’s owner feels “these combine to provide a once-in-a-generation opportunit­y to promote the site for new homes and local benefits, while preserving green space between the local borough and London” with the stewards of the Jockey Club believing such an outcome would be “in the best long-term interests of British racing given the benefits for horsemen and racegoers that can be created and with the Surrey community already well-served for racing”.

However, the Jockey Club insists Kempton will only be redevelope­d if the move will generate in excess of £100m investment and the proposed all-weather circuit at Newmarket is given the green light.

Roger Weatherby, senior steward of the Jockey Club, said: “The Jockey Club is governed by Royal Charter to act for the long-term good of British racing.

“One of the ways we want to live up to that is through a series of projects that offer benefits all around the country and collective­ly add up to us contributi­ng more than half a billion pounds to the sport over the next decade from its grassroots to top level.

“We must show leadership with the assets we have and, where merited, take tough decisions to help our sport to keep moving forwards. The decision to submit our estate at Kempton Park for considerat­ion in the Local Plan is unique and has not been taken lightly.

“Our board of stewards are horsemen and, having carefully considered what we can achieve in the long-run from doing so, are unanimousl­y of the view that British racing is better served by us doing so.

“Horsemen and customers alike will enjoy the benefit of numerous projects nationwide that result from the record investment proposals we unveil, which include investment­s at each of our racecourse­s and training grounds throughout the country.”

The Jockey Club will request that the King George and a select amount of Kempton’s jumps events be transferre­d to nearby Sandown, which is only six miles away.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom