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Understanding the Development West of Waterlooville

Explore the reasons behind the government policy-compliant housing development in the West of Waterlooville and its impact on the local area. Discover the factors influencing the need for new housing and the strategic planning involved.

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Understanding the Development West of Waterlooville

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  1. So Surely the Development West of Waterlooville Goes Against Government Policy? Yes it does, but there are reasons for this for the increased housing requirements in our area: • Information from the Census and patterns of migration/in-migration used to estimate future population • No. of households estimated (how people are likely to divide into houses) • Average household size is falling. Single person households on the increase • Social change (increase in divorce rate, people living longer, young people leaving home earlier) means we occupy more housing between us than we used to • Social change rather than population growth is primarily fuelling the need for more housing development

  2. Development Requirements West of Waterlooville MDA (Major Development Area) • 2000 new homes before 2011 • Reserve site for additional 1000 homes • 30ha of employment land • Provision for new schools, health care, open space, local shopping and other community facilities • Physical infrastructure: roads, sewerage, water supply, drainage Illustrative Masterplan of the new West of Waterlooville development, used with permission of Winchester City Council.

  3. Why was development at Waterlooville proposed? • 94, 290 new homes needed in Hampshire 1996 – 2011 to meet SE England’s housing needs • The Waterlooville MDA forms part of the Hampshire County Structure Plan’s housing strategy 2001 -2011 • The housing strategy makes best use of existing ‘Brownfield’ or ‘previously developed’ land in urban areas before allocating Greenfield development. • BUT some Greenfield development is needed: four MDAs are proposed at Waterlooville, Basingstoke, Eastleigh and Andover

  4. Why Build MDAs rather than Smaller Developments? • Concentrate development adjacent to existing larger settlements rather than dispersing it • Disadvantages: What do you think? • Advantages: • minimises loss/damage to wider countryside • reduces need to travel/supports public transport • supports new/existing community facilities and services • contributes to regeneration of existing urban areas • economies of scale: infrastructure investment

  5. Advantages of Waterlooville • Free from major constraint e.g. No major environmental constraint/spare transport and service infrastructure capacity • South East Hampshire in need of regeneration – new jobs and investment • Adjacent to Waterlooville Town Centre – completes fourth quadrant of the town • Close proximity to existing facilities and services in Waterlooville reducing need to travel • Adjacent to A3 public transport priority corridor to Portsmouth

  6. What do You Think? • Do you think that the Waterlooville MDA is a good thing? • Do you think that perhaps they could have redeveloped other areas first? • Where would you have built more housing? • Would you have done a number of small developments rather than one big one? • THE KEY QUESTION- WOULD YOU HAVE FAVOURED BROWNFIELD REDEVELOPMENT? • We have to be careful to manage the Rural-Urban Fringe effectively!

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