| Nansledan | |
|---|---|
Nansledan housing (2019) | |
Location withinCornwall | |
| OS grid reference | SW839614 |
| Civil parish |
|
| Unitary authority | |
| Ceremonial county | |
| Region | |
| Country | England |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | Newquay |
| Postcode district | TR7 |
| Dialling code | 01637 |
| Police | Devon and Cornwall |
| Fire | Cornwall |
| Ambulance | South Western |
| UK Parliament | |
| 50°24′47″N5°02′24″W / 50.413°N 5.040°W /50.413; -5.040 | |
Nansledan is a major new suburb ofNewquay inCornwall, England. Nansledan has been developed by the estate of theDuchy of Cornwall since 2013, with residents first occupying their homes in 2015. The development, officially described as 'an extension of Newquay', had the endorsement ofKing Charles III during his time asDuke of Cornwall.[1]
Nansledan is expected to have up to 4,400 homes once completed.
The project was started in 2013 and initially attracted the nicknameSurfbury, a mix ofPoundbury, created by the Duchy of Cornwall in the 1990s, and the fact that Newquay is regarded as the British 'capital' of surfing.[2] The development was named Nansledan, inspired by the area in which it is built. Nansledan meansBroad Valley inCornish, a theme which continues in the street names and the school (Skol Nansledan – which meansSchool Nansledan.)[3]
Nansledan will have aMarket Street with shops, while Nansledan school opened in September 2019.[note 1] It will cater for 420 pupils, and had 152 when it opened.[5]
Building materials have come mainly from three Cornish quarries:[6]
The first residents moved into Nansledan in 2015.
In his 2018 report on Nansledan, "A Place to Call Home",Nicholas Boys Smith listed the main reasons for its success as 'the long and genuinely consultative co-design approach with local residents and the local council with consequent much higher levels of confidence, the patient capital nature of the consortium agreement between the landowner and the developers, the popular traditional design, variety and urban form of homes, conventional streets and blocks in walkable streets and the popular focus on sustainability of design, sourcing and green infrastructure.'[7]
In February 2024,Prince William, Duke of Cornwall, in partnership with Cornish charity St Petrocs, announced plans for building 24 homes onDuchy of Cornwall land in Nansledan to provide temporary accommodation for people experiencing homelessness in the area.[8] The homes' development was set to begin in September 2024, with the first homes being completed by autumn 2025.[9]
