Master developer Lands Improvement has acquired Dunton Hills golf centre and is set to put enabling infrastructure on the 551-site to pave the way for a garden village of up to 3,700 homes.
The £480m village would include a market square, new primary and secondary schools, a community building, healthcare provision, a pub and take a ways. There would also be a cricket ground and football pitch plus a children’s nursery and crèche alongside an employment hub.
Lands Improvement managing director James Stone said: “We look forward to securing consents and delivering the substantial and wide-ranging infrastructure required to support this new community, from green spaces and roads to key community facilities and fostering the community management trust that will eventually take on the stewardship of the garden village for generations to come”.
The site lies between the low-lying, open Fenlands in the south and west, and the wooded Brentwood Hills at Thorndon to the north and Langdon Hills to the east. The village would be just 15-minutes walk from West Horndon train station and a half-hour ride to London’s Fenchurch Street station. It would also be well-connected to Stratford, Barking, Basildon and Southend-On-Sea stations.
Lands Improvement said it would sell serviced land to housebuilders and developers in five phases over a 12-year period.
Brokers Hank Zarihs Associates said development finance lenders would be eager to lend to housebuilders who had successfully bought parcels of land on the scheme.
Brentwood Borough Council approved outlining planning permission for the scheme, which could eventually grow to 4,000 homes, back in November 2023.
Residents at nearby West Horndon have raised concerns about the development, highlighting that 2,000 homes are also set to be built near the station there.
Both plans would amount to over half of Brentwood’s housing allocation up to 2033, totalling 7,752 new homes in the West Horndon area.
New village aims to enhance site’s blue infrastructure
Lands Improvement acquired the freehold to the site from Commercial Estates Group with an option agreement for a further 6.47 acres. Property consultants Whirledge & Nott acted as sale-side agents in the deal.
The masterplan for the village states it will enhance the natural assets of the site which include an ancient woodland, spring, wetlands and hedgerows. A sustainable drainage system of attenuation basins, new ponds, swales, rain gardens, culverts and storm water pipes to move water along slopes will be used.
The golf course lawns will be replaced by fenland meadow within the floodplain of the East lands Spring, with existing ponds being retained and enhanced through planting to promote biodiversity. Aseries of new ponds within the meadows would allow for the relocation of great crested newts and promote a wetland habitat for migrating birds.
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