Locals previously blasted the plans are ‘ridiculous’ as protests were held in the area
A ‘new town’ proposals for Adlington in Cheshire have been scrapped in a new decision made by the Government. The generation of new towns, which were revealed on Sunday (March 22) are tipped to see thousands of new homes built and ‘create well-connected communities’ through jobs, transport links and green spaces.
However the news may come as a relief to those living in the Cheshire East village close to Greater Manchester, who previously blasted the plans that could have seen up to 20,000 new homes built in the area.
The proposed £8 billion scheme would have seen 2,400 acres of greenbelt land in Adlington developed into Adlington New Town. Angry locals previously dubbed the plans as ‘ridiculous‘ and said they would ‘basically join Stockport and Macclesfield into one big housing estate.’
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Many of the 1,000 residents in the area also feared the development will spoil the character of the village and destroy wildlife and farmland, raising concerns about loss of livelihoods.
The proposals last year also prompted politicians in Stockport to warn that local services there could have been left ‘overstretched.’ The site was under four miles from Woodford in Stockport. Developers said the project would have included schools and health centres as they also vowed to reopen the Grade I-listed Adlington Hall.
It prompted a number of protests to take place last year, as signs appeared in and around village including on the busy A523 London Road.
The New Towns Project, championed by former deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner, last year saw a dozen areas selected for construction. In a fresh announcement, the Department for Housing, Communities and Local Government revealed the seven locations that had been selected for the new town developments.
Adlington, among five others, were areas that were assessed by the Government before a decision was made that the proposals were not to be taken forward. The seven locations that have been earmarked are Tempsford, Leeds South Bank, Crews Hill and Chase Park, Thamesmead, Brabazon and West Innovation Arc, Milton Keynes and Manchester Victoria North, which is already well underway in the Collyhurst area.
Victoria North, which will see 15,000 homes built across 390-acres of land, is already well underway, with plans having first emerged seven years ago. Last year it reached a major milestone as the first tenants finally moved into their brand new council homes in Collyhurst.
Described as the ‘most ambitious housebuilding programme in more than half a century’, it has received Government backing in the newly-released list of other ‘new towns’.
However the Government has decided not to pursue five other locations as well as Adlington, which are Heyford Park, Marlcombe, Plymouth, South Barking and Wychavon Town.
The proposed names the Government is considering include Elizabethtown (after the Queen), Pankhurst (after suffragette Emmeline), Attleeton (after ex-PM), Athelstan (first King of England) and Seacole (after nurse Mary), the Times reported.
In its manifesto, Labour pledged to begin work on 1.5 million new homes over the course of the Parliament, to expand homeownership to more Britons. According to the Government, the new towns will create ‘affordable and balanced communities’ with the schools, health facilities and community infrastructure neighbourhoods need, as well as improved public transport, walking and cycling infrastructure.
A public consultation on proposed locations and draft planning policy is open until May 18. The final locations will be confirmed later this year.
Housing Secretary Steve Reed said: “People want real change – homes they can afford, local infrastructure that works, and good jobs in thriving communities. Our next generation of new towns marks a turning point in how we build for the future.
“From the ground up, we’re planning whole communities with homes, jobs, transport links and green spaces designed together — so we can give families the security and opportunities they deserve.”



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