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Thamesmead Waterfront new town proposal is backed by London politicians
Summary
A proposal to build 15,000 homes at Thamesmead Waterfront on a roughly 100-hectare brownfield site has been shortlisted as one of 12 new towns and is awaiting formal government approval after transport backing for a DLR extension.
Content
Plans to build 15,000 homes at Thamesmead Waterfront in south-east London are awaiting formal government approval. The development would be built on about 100 hectares of brownfield land and has been shortlisted as one of 12 new towns proposed nationally. Transport backing, including a government-supported Docklands Light Railway extension, has been cited by officials as improving delivery prospects. Peabody, the housing association behind the plan, says it is ready to start work once approval is granted.
Key points:
- Proposal for about 15,000 homes on a roughly 100-hectare brownfield site at Thamesmead Waterfront.
- Shortlisted as one of 12 new towns intended to help meet national and London house-building targets.
- A Docklands Light Railway extension has government backing but the overall scheme still requires formal approval.
- Peabody, the housing association, says it is ready to begin development once approval is given.
- London is required to deliver about 88,000 homes a year for the next decade, as noted in reporting.
- A London Assembly committee chair said the project could reduce council housing waiting lists and highlighted the importance of transport infrastructure.
Summary:
If approved, officials and developers say the project would add a large number of homes and new transport links that they say could help lower council housing waiting lists. Formal government approval is pending. Undetermined at this time.
