News RSS Feed


Email us your story, call 01793 501806 or text 80360, starting your message with 'SWINDON NEWS'


Housing project work kicks off


A TELEVISION star was in Swindon to mark the start of his innovative and controversial housing project.

Grand Designs presenter Kevin McCloud was joined in town by new Housing Minister Grant Shapps for the turning of the sod at The Triangle development, off Northern Road.

The Rodbourne site, a former caravan park and plant nursery, will have 42 homes specifically designed to create sustainable living and should be completed by May 2011.

Permission was given for the site in October last year despite some residents’ objections.

Mr McCloud said: “It’s great to be on site and see it happening in the current climate.

“Swindon has signed up to One Planet Living.

“We’re looking forward to creating One Planet Swindon.”

All homes will meet code four standards for the Code for Sustainable Homes.

Builders will use carbon negative materials such as hemcrete, a mixture of lime and hemp, which locks carbon into its structure, as opposed to more traditional heavy building materials.

The houses will then be lime washed.

Other designs for the complex include a car sharing schemes, which Mr McCloud hopes will also involve local residents, use of public realm spaces, edible hedgerows and kitchen gardens.

The project is being run by Hab Oakus, a joint venture between Mr McCloud’s company Hab and housing group GreenSquare.

It has been supported with a £2.5m grant from the Homes and Communities Agency’s National Affordable Housing Programme and the houses will be available to rent and buy.

Mr McCloud said the key to this project was to balance innovative ideas for sustainability with the practical needs of Swindon people.

Although the design was not at the most environmentally ambitious level he could have chosen, this would make it possible to bring these houses into standard housing association budgets.

“Right now it’s fundamental that we make houses affordable as much as we make them ambitious,” he said.

“There’s every point in producing exemplar schemes that use exemplar technology because they serve as real models for the wider world.

“We’re not about building exemplar schemes, we’re about building larger, long-term projects.

Mr McCloud’s proposal was passed by a planning committee in October 2009, despite 16 people submitting written objections ahead of the meeting.

Ward councillors also said it was not an appropriate use for the site and parking provision was inadequate.

Mr McCloud’s larger plan for 200 homes at Pickards Fields, Gorse Hill, has been put on hold after residents launched plans to make the site a village green.

But he said he had by no means given up on the idea, which he began three years ago.

Mr Shapps added that sites like this were very important in the government aim to reduce emissions by 2050.

He said: “They lead the way and show possibilities – you are showing the way providing leadership, I know this is going to be an enormous success.”

Comments(13)

fedupagain says...
9:45am Fri 28 May 10

Lets hope Mr McCloud is still around once he has taken all the glory for this idea, to see the problems it will cause in the surrounding area with parking and increased traffic problems. But never mind, at least the houses will be eco-friendly even if the problems they cause are not!

Bobfm says...
9:53am Fri 28 May 10

So 2.5 million grant from another Government quango, shortly to disappear, to make houses affordable. That's probably the entire build cost at £62500/house. Be interesting to see how much they sell for.

Meanwhile a local business person was told not to apply to build 14 homes, designed exactly to Swindon Council Specification with eco friendly provision, spending his own money, agreeing to upgrade local facilities and improve on those already existing. Not costing the tax payer a penny.

I guess his one fault was he wasn't a TV star.

fedupagain says...
10:00am Fri 28 May 10

So Money and Fame talks - what a surprise!

Bobfm says...
10:31am Fri 28 May 10

Or in the case of Mr Mr McCloud, no money.

And he's to get a new series out of it.

Home Boy says...
10:53am Fri 28 May 10

Or that he put forward a scheme that offered 42 homes rather than 14!

fedupagain says...
11:18am Fri 28 May 10

42 homes may be but on a piece of land that would comfortably hold 14?

I am sure residents would have been much happier with 14!

Bobfm says...
12:14pm Fri 28 May 10

HB, I'm sure this business man would have crammed in 42 houses were he to be offered £2.5 million of tax payers money.

The 14 houses were to be built on a hectare, which I am given to believe is very low density. What is the area of McCloud's development. The community was to get a brand new road, cycleway, sports pavilion, with a possibility of tennis courts for free use of the community.

fedupagain says...
12:38pm Fri 28 May 10

If only a new road and cycle way and leisure facilities were available here. Even a few working lights on the cycletrack into town that Kevin McCloud is so keen to promote would be nice!

Synergie says...
4:08pm Fri 28 May 10

This has got to be one of the stupidest in-fill developments ever. The only access is along the narrow 'backs' behind Ferndale. It will only take one badly parked vehicle to prevent anybody getting in or out of that new estate. That will include fire-engines, furniture vans and re-cycling trucks.

McCloud must he having a laugh when he speaks of 'kitchen gardens', you'll be lucky to have room for a window box with 42 houses on that tiny plot.

Bobfm says...
5:04pm Fri 28 May 10

Perhaps SBC would like to say how many hectares these houses occupy, as I believe there is a Swindon Standard on density.

Bobfm says...
5:19pm Fri 28 May 10

Just found this. http://www.bdonline.
co.uk/news/swindon-g
o-ahead-for-hab/3151
053.article

'The 0.84ha scheme has been partly funded by the Homes & Communities Agency and is due to start on site early next year with completion due in December 2010.'

So there we have it, McCloud gets £2.5 million of tax payers money to cram in 42 houses on a site smaller than a locally funded project of 14 houses, that appear to exceed the eco standards of McClouds and we are supposed to believe that it ticked all the boxes. I think perhaps this is another one for the Ombudsmen.

Bobfm says...
5:43pm Fri 28 May 10

And what's this bit about. 'Swindon Council will now work with Hab Oakus to develop connected projects including a car club and local food network.'

I Too says...
10:41pm Fri 28 May 10

I just don't believe it!
Kevin McCloud, a star??
This is not an eco-friendly development. Developers seem to have rewritten the meaning of "sustainable".
And what on earth does "“Swindon has signed up to One Planet Living" mean.
Surely SBC don't expect us all to join them, on whatever planet they're on.
"
Mr McCloud’s larger plan for 200 homes at Pickards Fields, Gorse Hill, has been put on hold after residents launched plans to make the site a village green.
"
Let's face facts. This guy is NOT an eco warrior, or a star, he's just a greedy developers puppet


Housing minister Grant Shapps with Kevin McCloud Housing minister Grant Shapps with Kevin McCloud

Most popular


Local Information

Enter your postcode, town or place name

House prices »   Schools »   Crime »   Hospitals »

Local Businesses