Existing Leisure Facilities in and Around Dacorum Borough Council
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121 Residential Properties in Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire 1 Executive Summary Milton Keynes
121 RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES IN BEDFORDSHIRE AND BUCKINGHAMSHIRE 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY MILTON KEYNES The portfolio comprises four modern freehold residential assets. Milton Keynes is a ‘new town’ built in the 1960s. The area Geographically, the properties are each connected to the major incorporates the existing towns of Bletchley, Wolverton and economic centres of Luton or Milton Keynes as well as being Stony Stratford. The population in the 2011 Census totalled commutable to Central London. 248,800. The government have pledged to double the population by 2026. Milton Keynes is one of the more successful (per capita) The current owners have invested heavily in the assets economies in the South East. It has a gross value added per during their ownership including a high specification rolling capita index 47% higher than the national average. The retail refurbishment of units, which is ongoing. sector is the largest contributor to employment. The portfolio offers an incoming investor the opportunity KEY FACTS: to acquire a quality portfolio of scale benefitting from • Britain’s fastest growing city by population. The population management efficiencies, low running costs, a low entry price has grown 18% between 2004 and 2013, the job base having point into the residential market, an attractive initial yield and expanded by 24,400 (16%) over the same period. excellent reversionary yield potential. • Milton Keynes is home to some of the largest concentrations PORTFOLIO SUMMARY AND PERFORMANCE of North American, German, Japanese and Taiwanese firms in the UK. No. of Assets 4 No. of Units 121 • Approximately 18% of the population can be found in the PRS, Floor area (sq m / sq ft) 5,068 / 54,556 with growth of 133% since 2001. -
Mad Science Summer Camp
2017 Summer Camp Schedule 10th -14th July MON TUES WED THUR FRI ELSTREE WD6 3AJ RADICAL FUR & GEOLOGY MAD INVENTION Aldenham School ROBOTS FEATHERS ROCKS MIX UP CONVENTION 17th -21st July MON TUES WED THUR FRI ELSTREE WD6 3AJ FAB FLYING OCEAN KOOKY SILLY MAGNIFICENT Aldenham School FUN ADVENTURES CHEMISTRY CIRCUITS MACHINES 24th -28th July MON TUES WED THUR FRI BUSHEY WD23 1SP RADICAL GEOLOGY EPIC SPACE FUR & MAD Bushey Heath Primary ROBOTS ROCKS SCIENCE FEATHERS MIX UP POTTERS BAR EN6 2DU RADICAL INVENTION DYNAMIC FUR & MAD MIX UP Dame Alice Owen’s School ROBOTS CONVENTION DINOSAURS FEATHERS HITCHIN SG4 7HN DYNAMIC RADICAL GEOLOGY EPIC SPACE MAD MIX UP Wymondley School DINOSAURS ROBOTS ROCKS SCIENCE BEDFORD MK41 9DQ GEOLOGY INVENTION FUR & EPIC SPACE RADICAL St John Rigby School ROCKS CONVENTION FEATHERS SCIENCE ROBOTS TRING HP23 5PD INVENTION FUR & RADICAL DYNAMIC MAD MIX UP Grove Road Primary CONVENTION FEATHERS ROBOTS DINOSAURS 31st July - 4th August MON TUES WED THUR FRI ST ALBANS AL3 5NL RADICAL GEOLOGY EPIC SPACE FUR & MAD MIX UP Aboyne Lodge School ROBOTS ROCKS SCIENCE FEATHERS SG6 3JZ RADICAL INVENTION DYNAMIC FUR & LETCHWORTH MAD MIX UP St Christopher’s School ROBOTS CONVENTION DINOSAURS FEATHERS BERKHAMPSTD HP4 3LF DYNAMIC RADICAL GEOLOGY EPIC SPACE MAD MIX UP St Thomas More Primary DINOSAURS ROBOTS ROCKS SCIENCE WATFORD WD24 5JW GEOLOGY INVENTION FUR & EPIC SPACE RADICAL Orchard Primary ROCKS CONVENTION FEATHERS SCIENCE ROBOTS MK42 9AH INVENTION FUR & RADICAL DYNAMIC BEDFORD MAD MIX UP Bedford College CONVENTION FEATHERS ROBOTS -
ITEM NO: Location: Land to Rear of Putteridge High School and Community College Putteridge Road Offley Hertfordshire
ITEM NO: Location: Land To Rear Of Putteridge High School And Community College Putteridge Road Offley Hertfordshire Applicant: Mr R Kirk Proposal: Retention of cricket wicket; fencing around pond and bunding along boundary as a variation to the approved use and landscaping (LPA refs: 08/02926/1, 12/00359/1DOC and 12/00532/1DOC). Ref. No: 18/02320/FP Officer: Kate Poyser Date of expiry of statutory period: 19.12.2018 Reason for Delay Delayed due to consultations and committee cycle. Reason for referral to committee This application has been called in for determination by the Planning Control by Cllr Barnard for the following reason: “If you intend to recommend approval with the condition that the plastic pitch is removed within 5 years, I believe that there is a clear reason for a committee debate, particularly as it contravenes planning policy.” Submitted Plan Nos 223 – FA-00-XX-DR-A-00001 rev P-0, 10000 S8 P0, 00002 S8 P0 1.0 Site History 1.1 08/02926/1 Change of use of agricultural land to playing fields and associated landscape areas were allowed at appeal, subject to conditions. 1.2 10/01497/1 and 17/01810/1 sought the variation of Condition 3 – hours of operation. The former was granted and the latter withdrawn. 1.3 12/00359/1DOC and 12/00532/1DOC Conditions 4 and 5, both relating to landscape details, were discharged. 1.4 17/02578/1 Variation of applications 12/00359/1DOC and 12/00532/1DOC pursuant to conditions 4 and 5 respectively (landscaping) of appeal decision APP/X1925/A09/2111993. -
Summer Camp 2019 Schedule
2019 SUMMER HOLIDAY CAMP SCHEDULE Bedford, Hertford, Berkhamsted & Harpenden locations coming soon! click on location to book or click on topic for more info 15-19th July Mon 15th Tues 16th Wed 17th Thurs 18th Fri 19th Aldenham School Fire Rockin’ Cracking Spy Wicked Elstree & Ice Robots Chemistry Academy Weather 22nd - 26th July Mon 22nd Tues 23rd Wed 24th Thurs 25th Fri 26th Aldenham School Move It Awesome Funky Science Eco Elstree Move It Archaeology Flyers of Magic Warriors Oaklands College Move It Funky Wicked Slimey Rockin’ St. Albans Move It Flyers Weather Science Robots South Hill Primary Awesome Slimey Science Eco Funky Hemel Hempstead Archaeology Science of Magic Warriors Flyers Bushey & Oxhey Infants Funky Science Move It Wicked Slimey Bushey Flyers of Magic Move It Weather Science Hitchin Boys School Eco Move It Slimey Funky Wicked Hitchin Warriors Move It Science Flyers Weather 29th Jul - 2nd Aug Mon 29th Tues 30th Wed 31st Thurs 1st Fri 2nd Oaklands College Move It Awesome Funky Science Eco Welwyn Garden City Move It Archaeology Flyers of Magic Warriors Beaumont School Move It Funky Wicked Slimey Science St Albans Move It Flyers Weather Science of Magic Orchard Primary Awesome Slimey Science Eco Funky Watford Archaeology Science of Magic Warriors Flyers Shuttleworth College Funky Cracking Move It Wicked Slimey Biggleswade Flyers Chemistry Move It Weather Science 5th - 9th August Mon 5th Tues 6th Wed 7th Thurs 8th Fri 9th Oaklands College Cracking Rockin’ Spy Fire Wicked Welwyn Garden City Chemistry Robots Academy & Ice Weather -
Luton & Dunstable University Hospital Annual Report and Accounts 2016
Luton & Dunstable University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust NHS Foundation Hospital University & Dunstable Luton Annual Report and Accounts for the period April 2016 to March 2017 incorporating Quality Account AnnualReport&Accounts2016-2017 Incorporating Quality Account Quality Incorporating AnnualReport &Accounts 2010-2011 Luton & Dunstable University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Lewsey Road Luton LU4 0DZ Incorporating Quality Report Telephone 01582 49 11 66 www.ldh.nhs.uk Luton and Dunstable University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Luton and Dunstable University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Annual Report & Accounts for the period April 2016 to March 2017 incorporating Quality Account Presented to Parliament pursuant to Schedule 7, paragraph 25 (4) (a) of the National Health Service Act 2006 © 2017 Luton and Dunstable University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Contents INTRODUCTION 3 FINANCIALPERFORMANCEREPORT 97 Awards and Congratulations 4 Review of Financial Performance 98 Introduction 9 Remuneration report 100 About this Report 10 Fundraising and Charitable Donations 101 Chairman’s Statement 11 ANNUALGOVERNANCESTATEMENT STRATEGY 13 ANDACCOUNTS 105 Strategic Vision 14 Statement of the Chief Executive’s Responsibilities 106 Performance against Corporate Objectives 2016/17 16 Annual Governance Statement 2016/17 107 Service Developments delivered in 2016/17 21 Independent Audit Opinion 115 2017/18 Strategic Approach 25 Foreword to the Accounts 120 Maintaining Performance 27 Statement of comprehensive income 121 Corporate Objectives 2017/18 28 Statement of financial position 122 Improving Quality 29 Statement of changes in equity 123 Service Developments planned for 2017/18 34 Statement of cash flows 124 OPERATIONALPERFORMANCEREPORT 39 APPENDIX1QUALITYACCOUNT 163 Principal activities of the Trust 40 What is a Quality Account? 164 Review of Operational Performance 42 About Our Trust 165 Regulatory Quality CQC Performance 43 1. -
LCA 10.2 Ivinghoe Foothills Landscape Character Type
Aylesbury Vale District Council & Buckinghamshire County Council Aylesbury Vale Landscape Character Assessment LCA 10.2 Ivinghoe Foothills Landscape Character Type: LCT 10 Chalk Foothills B0404200/LAND/01 Aylesbury Vale District Council & Buckinghamshire County Council Aylesbury Vale Landscape Character Assessment LCA 10.2 Ivinghoe Foothills (LCT 10) Key Characteristics Location An extensive area of land which surrounds the Ivinghoe Beacon including the chalk pit at Pitstone Hill to the west and the Hemel Hempstead • Chalk foothills Gap to the east. The eastern and western boundaries are determined by the • Steep sided dry valleys County boundary with Hertfordshire. • Chalk outliers • Large open arable fields Landscape character The LCA comprises chalk foothills including dry • Network of local roads valleys and lower slopes below the chalk scarp. Also included is part of the • Scattering of small former chalk pits at Pitstone and at Ivinghoe Aston. The landscape is one of parcels of scrub gently rounded chalk hills with scrub woodland on steeper slopes, and woodland predominantly pastoral use elsewhere with some arable on flatter slopes to • Long distance views the east. At Dagnall the A4146 follows the gap cut into the Chilterns scarp. over the vale The LCA is generally sparsely settled other than at the Dagnall Gap. The area is crossed by the Ridgeway long distance footpath (to the west). The • Smaller parcels of steep sided valley at Coombe Hole has been eroded by spring. grazing land adjacent to settlements Geology The foothills are made up of three layers of chalk. The west Melbury marly chalk overlain by a narrow layer of Melbourn Rock which in turn is overlain by Middle Chalk. -
Walks Around Radlett
Unit 2, Park Industrial Estate, Frogmore, St.Albans, Hertfordshire,AL2 2DR. Tel:01727 872021www.caprin.co.uk Published by Aldenham Parish Council by Published Designed and Printed by Caprin Printers Caprin Designed and Printedby PRICE £1.00 October 2009 PARISH COUNCIL PARISH Q The Radlett Society Society Radlett The and Green Belt Association Q UALITY Pen and Wash by DeborahRobinson by Wash and Pen PARISH COUNCIL PARISH QUALITY Q Bluebells at BerryGrove by Joan Scivyer Acknowledgements Nine Walks Around Radlett The research for the walks and preparation of the booklet was undertaken by a group of local volunteers: David Bagon, Corinne Housechild and Geoffrey Smyth, representatives from Aldenham Parish Council, Hertfordshire County Council and Countryside Management Services. 3 This booklet has been produced by Aldenham Parish Council and part-funded by grants from the Parish Paths Partnership Scheme and Aldenham Parish Council. The Parish 2 ill Paths Partnership is administered by Countryside Management Services under the ley H 9 hen direction of Hertfordshire County Council and Hertfordshire Association of Parish and Radlett S Town Councils. Financial contributions were also received from The Radlett Festival Committee and The 4 Radlett Society and Green Belt Association 1 The Ordnance Survey mapping included within this booklet is provided by Hertfordshire 8 County Council, under licence from Ordnance Survey in order to fulfil its public function ad 5 o to publicise and promote sustainable visits to the countryside in Hertfordshire. R rd 6 fo (Hertfordshire County Council, Licence No. 100019606, 2009). at W W Thanks are also due to Members of The Radlett Art Society for the illustrations, to the a t l i n photographers and to Philip Eastburn for historical information. -
Street Lighting Replacement 5 Year Programme
APPENDIX I - STREET LIGHTING REPLACEMENT 5 YEAR PROGRAMME Street Lighting Programme for 2014/15 Number Road of Ward Cost (£) columns Chequer Street 6 South 11,700 Crawley, High Town, Crawley Green Road 75 Round Green, South & 138,200 Wigmore Dallow Road 14 South 30,800 Grange Avenue 15 Leagrave 32,200 Gipsy Lane 13 South 33,800 Hatters Way 66 Dallow 167,500 Hitchin Road 28 56,000 Mayne Avenue 19 Leagrave 32,000 Midland Road 14 High Town 26,000 Northwell Drive (including roundabouts and new 57 Northwell 111,150 scheme at Lea Manor High School) Ravenhill Way 45 Lewsey 75,500 Skimpot Road 17 Challney 36,500 Station Road, Leagrave 2 Leagrave and Limbury 3,350 Wauluds Bank Drive 1 Northwell 1,950 372 Total Cost 756,650 Street Lighting Programme for 2015/16 Number Road of Ward Cost (£) columns Barton Road 70 Icknield & Bramingham 150,150 Sundon Park, Limbury & Bramingham Road 61 134,200 Northwell Burr Street 7 High Town 11,725 Coverdale 21 Leagrave 31,500 New Bedford Road 67 Barnfield & Icknield 143,750 High Town, Barnfield & Old Bedford Road 137 252,500 Icknield Wauluds Bank Drive RA 3 Northwell & Sundon Park 6,450 366 Total Cost 730,275 Street Lighting Programme for 2016/17 Number Road of Ward Cost (£) columns Abigale Close 7 Biscot 10,500 Addington Way LC 1 - 13 13 Challney 23,400 Back Street 8 High Town 12,000 Bampton Road 9 Challney 13,500 Barford Rise 6 Wigmore 9,000 Beech Road 6 Dallow 9,000 Beechwood Road 170 to Tenby Drive 60 2 Challney 3,000 Bellerby Rise 12 Leagrave 18,000 Belvedere Road 1 Limbury 1,500 9/42 Berrow Close 4 Wigmore -
Beyond the Compact City: a London Case Study – Spatial Impacts, Social Polarisation, Sustainable 1 Development and Social Justice
University of Westminster Duncan Bowie January 2017 Reflections, Issue 19 BEYOND THE COMPACT CITY: A LONDON CASE STUDY – SPATIAL IMPACTS, SOCIAL POLARISATION, SUSTAINABLE 1 DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL JUSTICE Duncan Bowie Senior Lecturer, Department of Planning and Transport, University of Westminster [email protected] Abstract: Many urbanists argue that the compact city approach to development of megacities is preferable to urban growth based on spatial expansion at low densities, which is generally given the negative description of ‘urban sprawl’. The argument is often pursued on economic grounds, supported by theories of agglomeration economics, and on environmental grounds, based on assumptions as to efficient land use, countryside preservation and reductions in transport costs, congestion and emissions. Using London as a case study, this paper critiques the continuing focus on higher density and hyper-density residential development in the city, and argues that development options beyond its core should be given more consideration. It critiques the compact city assumptions incorporated in strategic planning in London from the first London Plan of 2004, and examines how the both the plan and its implementation have failed to deliver the housing needed by Londoners and has led to the displacement of lower income households and an increase in spatial social polarisation. It reviews the alternative development options and argues that the social implications of alternative forms of growth and the role of planning in delivering spatial social justice need to be given much fuller consideration, in both planning policy and the delivery of development, if growth is to be sustainable in social terms and further spatial polarisation is to be avoided. -
Dunstable Bus Timetable
Pulloxhill Pulloxhill ◆ 79.89 162 Woburn Eversholt X31 .42 ◆ Holwell 77◆.197◆ 20 Higham 100 Woburn 138◆ 138◆ Apsley 150 20◆ Gobion 162 Abbey Eversholt 140◆ Westoning End 150◆ 139◆ 77◆ W14◆ 89 6 X31 138◆ 0 M1 4 140◆ 138◆ 2 Westoning 79 89 Dunstable Bus Timetable 1 Little 140◆ 5 Flitwick & Harlington W10◆ Brickhill 10 A F7◆ W12◆ 162 ◆ Tingrith PLUSBUS Zone Ickleford A 160◆ 138◆ 138 Barton-le-Clay Pirton 82 5 ◆ 20◆.X31◆ Windsor Parade 162 165◆ A 139 89 M2 4 M ◆ ◆ 79 A ◆ 0 Milton 140◆ 20◆ 42.77 .138 74◆ E7 1 1 74◆ 6 2 197◆ 0 th Bryan 42 Harlington 0 28 March 2011 www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk 197◆ 20◆ Barton-le-Clay ◆ ton 8 X31 W14 gh u Sharpenhoe Hexton O Great B655 Pegsdon Flying Fox Harlington S1 Hitchin 82 Brickhill 20.X31◆ Sharpenhoe B65 5 Bancroft a 140◆ 20 79 77◆ 89◆ l M1 42.77◆.138◆ Clappers King’s Wood Junction 12 74◆ Barton M1.M2.E7◆ Hills 77◆ 77◆.82.89 This booklet also covers Houghton Regis, Eaton Bray, mond Stockgrove 165◆ 160◆ Hitchin Country Park 150 Sundon Hills S1.20◆ Caddington, Whipsnade and surrounding villages 162 20.X31◆ Country Park A Toddington Streatley 74◆.79 X31 4 42.77◆ 20◆ W14◆ ◆ 0 10 77 77◆ A 1 ◆ Toddington 138◆.140◆ Heath and 5 Battlesden 2 139 W10◆ 5 Reach X31.42.77◆ 50 W14◆ M Upper 79 A 77◆ ◆ ◆ ◆ 1 165 138 .140 Sundon 70 27 160◆ 74◆ 162 A 150 S1 6 27 42◆ 20 20 20◆ 100 Leighton Buzzard 27 Tebworth X31 A 74◆ Lower 79 PLUSBUS Zone 5 B Gosmore Hockliffe 1 57 Sundon X31 2 9 0 Lilley 2 139◆ Leighton Chalton 20 Great 69◆ Offley Buzzard 10 10◆ ◆ 69◆ Wingfield 05 139 Luton A5 X31 X31 74◆ PLUSBUS Zone A ◆ 5 42 X31 -
Territorial Stigmatisation and Poor Housing at a London `Sink Estate'
Social Inclusion (ISSN: 2183–2803) 2020, Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages 20–33 DOI: 10.17645/si.v8i1.2395 Article Territorial Stigmatisation and Poor Housing at a London ‘Sink Estate’ Paul Watt Department of Geography, Birkbeck, University of London, London, WC1E 7HX, UK; E-Mail: [email protected] Submitted: 4 August 2019 | Accepted: 9 December 2019 | Published: 27 February 2020 Abstract This article offers a critical assessment of Loic Wacquant’s influential advanced marginality framework with reference to research undertaken on a London public/social housing estate. Following Wacquant, it has become the orthodoxy that one of the major vectors of advanced marginality is territorial stigmatisation and that this particularly affects social housing es- tates, for example via mass media deployment of the ‘sink estate’ label in the UK. This article is based upon a multi-method case study of the Aylesbury estate in south London—an archetypal stigmatised ‘sink estate.’ The article brings together three aspects of residents’ experiences of the Aylesbury estate: territorial stigmatisation and dissolution of place, both of which Wacquant focuses on, and housing conditions which he neglects. The article acknowledges the deprivation and various social problems the Aylesbury residents have faced. It argues, however, that rather than internalising the extensive and intensive media-fuelled territorial stigmatisation of their ‘notorious’ estate, as Wacquant’s analysis implies, residents have largely disregarded, rejected, or actively resisted the notion that they are living in an ‘estate from hell,’ while their sense of place belonging has not dissolved. By contrast, poor housing—in the form of heating breakdowns, leaks, infes- tation, inadequate repairs and maintenance—caused major distress and frustration and was a more important facet of their everyday lives than territorial stigmatisation. -
Luton and Dunstable Area Cycle Network
Luton_Cycle_Map_Side.qxp_Luton_Cycle_Map_Side 14/02/2019 10:15 Page 1 Luton and Dunstable South Bedfordshire Area Cycle Network Golf Course Keech Hospice Care Lilley Chalton Bramingham Park Wingfield Bramingham Park A Bramingham Cardinal Newman Primary School Catholic School Sundon Park Barnfield College Junior School (Enterprise Way Campus) 5 DU NST ABL E NOR T A Superstore Warden Whitefield Galley and Primary School Lea Manor Recreation Centre Hill & Marsh Farm Library Warden Hills Marsh Farm Futures House Community Halls Lea Manor High School Grasmere Nursery School Cheynes Lealands Infant School High School Woodlands Sundon Secondary Park Purley School Centre Marsh Farm Trefoil House Thornhill Health Centre Care Home Primary School Vauxhall Motors (Warehouse Operations) Butterfield Business Park D Waulud Warden Hill The Chiltern School Primary School Infant & Houghton Regis Junior Schools Academy A W Limbury RD The Academy of Central Bedfordshire Tophill Meads RD Putteridge Bury Limbury Fields Houghton Regis Community Centre Police Station Leagrave Vale Cemetery University of Bedfordshire Thorn Tithe Farm The Meads & Crematorium Park Primary School Bushmead (Putteridge Bury Campus) Neighbourhood Runfold & Putteridge Bury Bidwell Centre Parkside Neighbourhood Bushmead Conference Centre Tithe Farm Centre Community Primary School Hawthorn Park Centre IVE Pirton Hill Community Primary DR DEW IN Primary School School PH OL D Bramingham Gill Blowers Centre Nursery School 6 Icknield St Vincent's Catholic (Mossdale) Putteridge High School