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Northstowe

Coordinates:52°16′50″N0°03′40″E / 52.28056°N 0.06111°E /52.28056; 0.06111
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Town in Cambridgeshire, England

Human settlement in England
Northstowe
Map showing the site of Northstowe and the route of theCambridgeshire Guided Busway
Northstowe is located in Cambridgeshire
Northstowe
Northstowe
Location withinCambridgeshire
Population2,356 (2021)[1]
OS grid referenceTL412645
Civil parish
  • Northstowe
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townCAMBRIDGE
Postcode districtCB24
PoliceCambridgeshire
FireCambridgeshire
AmbulanceEast of England
UK Parliament
52°16′50″N0°03′40″E / 52.28056°N 0.06111°E /52.28056; 0.06111

Northstowe is anew town inCambridgeshire, England, forecast to have 24,400 residents in 10,000 homes. On 1 April 2021 Northstowe became acivil parish formed fromLongstanton andOakington and Westwick, with the first town council elected on 6 May of that year.[2]

Northstowe has been in development for around 15 years and through varying political administrations. Originally proposed to be "an exemplar of sustainability in the use of renewable energy resources and reducing carbon emissions",[3] Northstowe incorporates sustainable features including drainage and access to theCambridgeshire Guided Busway. The development is being led byHomes England, the successor body to the Homes and Communities Agency, and the developers Gallagher Estates (part ofL&Q).[4]

Planning milestones

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South Cambridgeshire District Council (SCDC) produced an Area Action Plan in the mid-2000s to guide the development. In March 2007planning inspectors recommended that Northstowe should consist of 10,000 homes rather than the 8,000 originally planned, and ruled that a country park need not be incorporated. The news was greeted with concern by many in the area who feared further expansion in the future.[5]

A planning application for the new town was submitted to SCDC on 19 December 2007. Plans included the construction of around 9,500 homes, a town centre area, schools and employment areas.

In February 2012 a Development Framework Document was adopted by the planning authority to progress the town. The plan envisages a maximum of 10,000 new homes created in phases building services and facilities along with homes piece by piece, the first being to the north adjoining the existing Longstanton park-and-ride site owned by Gallagher and the second on the former Government-owned barracks. In October 2012, SCDC approved the first phase including 1500 homes, a primary school, road improvements and a local centre,[6] with completion of the whole town envisaged after about 25 years.[7]

In 2015 outline consent was also agreed in principle to build a further 3,500 homes, a town centre, 3 more schools including a secondary school education campus and a link road to the A14, plus a road linking the town to the Guided Busway. The homes in phase two could not be occupied until a majorA14 upgrade is completed which started in 2016 and was completed in early 2020.

In May 2020 the outline planning applications for the third and final phase were submitted for 5,000 homes, consisting of 4,000 homes onphase 3a and 1,000 homes onphase 3b.

History

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A lake on the Northstowe development site.

The site covers Oakington Barracks on the formerRAF Oakington, aWorld War II airfield which was used forShort Stirling bomber forces and other assorted units. It was used for flight training until the 1970s.

From 2000 to 2010[8] the barracks was leased to theHome Office for use as theOakington Immigration Reception Centre.

In 2007 ministerYvette Cooper announced that Northstowe would be designed with energy and water efficiency standards up to 50% above conventional buildings.[9] In January 2008, however, Cooper confirmed in Parliament that Northstowe had not been adopted as an eco-town because the planning application "predate[s] the eco-towns programme",[3] and because it would not be zero-carbon.[10]

In the phase one Local Management Study, published in February 2006 it was suggested that a community-based energy company might be formed, owning assets such aswind turbines orcombined heat and power plants for the benefit of the town, perhaps based on the models of theVauban district of Freiburg, Germany, and thecooperative energy companies ofDenmark andSweden.Car clubs, cycling and walking were also envisaged.[11] In March 2006 the site was acquired byEnglish Partnerships who subsequently became the Homes and Communities Agency and nowHomes England.[12]

First houses built byBloor Homes

In 2015 outline consent was also agreed in principle to build a further 3,500 homes, a town centre, 3 more schools including a secondary school education campus and a link road to the A14, plus a road linking the town to the Guided Busway. Planning permission was granted in January 2017. The homes in phase two could not be occupied until a majorA14 upgrade was completed.[citation needed]

In April 2016,Bloor Homes was named as the first housebuilder for the site with 92 new homes planned in a range of types and sizes up to five bedrooms.[13]

Northstowe was announced as an NHS Healthy New Town[14] in March 2016. A Healthy Living Strategy for Northstowe was commended at the Landscape Institute awards 2018.[15]

In the spring of 2018, Homes England invested £55 million to provide a new road linking the town to the upgraded A14 and other essential infrastructure to allow more homes to be built.

In the spring of 2019Homes England built their new regional office at Northstowe, designed and built off site usingmodern methods of construction (MMC) to help pioneer new techniques in the construction sector.

In February 2020 a planning application was submitted to build a new heritage centre[16] adjacent to the Homes England offices to showcase the historical artefacts found on site and more importantly during the construction of the nearby upgraded A14.

As of May 2020 approximately 550 homes in Northstowe were occupied, with theBloor Homes site completed and 5 active housebuilding sites:Bovis Homes with some marketed and sold by Domovo Homes (a subsidy of bpha),Linden Homes,Taylor Wimpey andBarratt Homes as both Barratt and David Wilson Homes brands. Playing fields, allotments, and public spaces were under development.

In 2020Urban Splash in partnership with the Japanese construction companySekesui started building the first of 406 homes in phase 2 viamodular building techniques.[17] House by Urban Splash fell intoadministration in May 2022,[18] leaving a handful of homes in the scheme incomplete.[19]

By summer 2025, 1750 homes were occupied, of the planned eventual total of 9500.

Amenities

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Pathfinder primary school opened in September 2017. The buildings were initially used by Hatton Park Primary School from Longstanton for the 2016/17 school year to allow renovation of their school. TheNorthstowe Secondary College opened in 2019 and is operated by Cambridge Meridian Academies Trust. As of 2024 academic year the education campus comprised a nursery, additional primary school, an SEN school, the secondary school and a sixth form.

In 2020 Homes England submitted a Town Centre Strategy, setting out the principles for a new town centre to be developed for the town. The Strategy proposes a shift away from a reliance on retail on its high street, and instead focuses on the potential of creative industries, leisure, education, high-quality food and small-scale manufacturing.[citation needed]

The temporary combined community centre and NHS facility, which opened in 2023

A temporary combined community centre and NHS facility, built out of nine portacabins, was opened in 2023, with a permanent centre due to open in 2026. The town's sports pavilion was completed in October 2023,[20] and opened in January 2024, with many users of the secondary school facilities on weekday evenings for a range of sports and activities. "Northstowe Tap & Social"—a bar, cafe, bakery and events space—opened in April 2024.[21]

A Parkrun started around the first of the new lakes in June 2024[22]

The Unity Centre under construction in August 2025

As of August 2025, a permanent community centre named "Unity Centre" is under construction and scheduled for completion in early 2026.[23] It will offer meeting rooms, a cafe, a multi-use hall, a "messy" play room, a room for NHS services, and a landscaped courtyard.

Public transport

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Northstowe is linked to Cambridge andSt Ives by theCambridgeshire Guided Busway which opened in 2011.[24] There is a stop at Longstanton Park & Ride, with a further busway loop through the town under construction.

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Nomis - Official Census and Labour Market Statistics".Office for National Statistics. Retrieved3 November 2023.
  2. ^"The South Cambridgeshire District Council (Reorganisation of Community Governance) Order 2021"(PDF).Local Government Boundary Commission for England. Retrieved3 July 2021.
  3. ^abHansard, 21 Jan 2008: Column 1536W,Sustainable Development: Northstowe
  4. ^| Northstowe || HomeArchived 6 May 2007 at theWayback Machine
  5. ^"Villagers quake as plans for town grow".Cambridge Evening News. 2 March 2007. Retrieved15 May 2007.{{cite news}}:|archive-url= is malformed: timestamp (help)CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^"Northstowe: Councillors approve first phase of new town".BBC News. 24 October 2012.
  7. ^"Planning application for Northstowe submitted".Cambridge News. 28 February 2012. Archived fromthe original on 29 February 2012. Retrieved28 February 2012.
  8. ^"Oakington immigration centre's future plans", BBC News, 2010-11-11, accessed 14 July 2011
  9. ^"Government Sets Vision for Carbon Neutral Development". Government News Network. May 2007. Archived fromthe original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved15 May 2007.
  10. ^Meikle, James (16 April 2008)."Clash over Cambridgeshire green town plans".The Guardian. London. Retrieved8 January 2010.
  11. ^Marilyn Taylor Associates (2 February 2006).Who Runs This Place? Northstowe Local Management Study – Phase One Report. Archived fromthe original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved15 May 2007.
  12. ^Government land deal will ease Cambridgeshire housing pressureArchived 9 June 2007 at theWayback Machine,English Partnerships, published 2006-03-27, accessed 15 May 2007
  13. ^"Bloor Homes to build 92 properties at Northstowe after company named town's first housebuilder".Cambridge News. 11 April 2016. Retrieved27 April 2016.[permanent dead link]
  14. ^"NHS England » Healthy New Towns".www.england.nhs.uk. Retrieved23 June 2020.
  15. ^"Finalists announced in prestigious Landscape Institute Awards | Landscape Institute". Retrieved23 June 2020.
  16. ^"Local heritage centre moves a step closer".Cambridgeshire County Council. Retrieved23 June 2020.
  17. ^"Second phase of Northstowe and one of the UK's largest modular neighbourhoods gets the green light".GOV.UK. Retrieved23 June 2020.
  18. ^Prior, Grant (12 May 2022)."Administration confirmed at House by Urban Splash".Construction Enquirer. Retrieved29 October 2023.
  19. ^"Problems at modular factory caused collapse of Urban Splash House".Building.co.uk. 13 July 2022. Retrieved29 October 2023.
  20. ^Gardner, Gemma (22 October 2023)."New Northstowe sports pavilion is finished".Cambridge Independent. Illiffe Media. Retrieved29 October 2023.
  21. ^Middleton, Siobhan (11 April 2024)."Cambridgeshire town's first bar with on-site bakery set to open".CambridgeshireLive. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  22. ^"Bug Hunter Waters Parkrun".www.parkrun.org.uk. Retrieved12 September 2025.
  23. ^"Unity Centre, Northstowe". South Cambridgeshire District Council. Retrieved26 August 2025.
  24. ^"Cambridgeshire Guided busway opens to passengers". BBC. 7 August 2011. Retrieved2 March 2018.

External links

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In the media

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