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Britain's ‘trendiest' beach town is set for biggest transformation in a DECADE as fresh plans unveiled

Britain's ‘trendiest' beach town is set for biggest transformation in a DECADE as fresh plans unveiled

Scottish Sun10-06-2025
Luxury beachfront properties have already been built at the site
FIRST GLIMPSE Britain's 'trendiest' beach town is set for biggest transformation in a DECADE as fresh plans unveiled
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NEW plans have been revealed for a seaside development project - months after the council blocked proposals.
The seaside town was named Time Out's top place to visit in the UK in 2025, as stats suggest it is one of the world's most 'up and coming' beach destinations.
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The plans were narrowly rejected by the local council in January of this year
Credit: Folkestone Harbour & Seafront Development Company
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A total of 84 luxury beachfront properties have already been built at the site
Credit: Folkestone Harbour & Seafront Development Company
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The revised proposals could bring significant change the seaside town
Credit: Folkestone Harbour & Seafront Development Company
Folkestone harbour and seafront could undergo a significant transformation if development plans are approved.
While Sir Roger De Haan's Folkestone Harbour and Seafront Development Company has already made significant changes to the area - they are still awaiting approval for the eastern section of the seafront.
The company previously submitted development plans in January which were narrowly refused.
Councillors voted 5-4 to reject the application, expressing concerns about the design, heritage impacts and housing affordability.
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Public response was less favourable, with 96% of comments on the council's planning portal objecting to the proposals.
After making revisions to the plans that address the councillors' concerns, FHSDC is hoping the new proposal will be approved at a planning committee meeting on June 17.
One of the most drastic changes between the proposals is a 50 per cent increase in public parking provisions.
The increase correlates to 323 proposed public spaces, up from 215 in the original proposal - as well as a car club that should reduce pressure on residential parking.
They have also made alterations for the proposed plan to build 410 homes and 54 commercial units.
This will include 53 affordable homes, intended for shared ownership in order to meet affordability needs - as the original proposal faced backlash for failing to address local social issues.
The up-and-coming English seaside town with cheap booze and huge beaches
The new proposal includes more three-bedroom homes, as well as moving one of the proposed buildings away from the harbour station to "better respect" its historic setting.
84 beachfront properties have already been built, with prices ranging from £430,000 to £2.1 million.
FHSDC released a statement clarifying the restrictions they faced under the council's Local Plan.
The statement from FHSDC reads: 'The original permission dictated, for example, the maximum and minimum height of the buildings, and a maximum and minimum number of homes we can build, and these cannot be changed through a Reserved Matters Application.
'Any revised plans must remain within these, and other, parameters.'
Local residents had previously expressed concern about the project's design, as well as the lack of affordable housing.
One particularly outspoken resident, Georgina Baker, campaigned against the development as she believed it was "not the right development for the harbour" and that the "community deserves more."
However, FHSDC consultants believe the development would do more good for the area, with an emphasis on social benefit.
The proposal includes a new Section 106 agreement to contribute £5.19 million to local services including children's play areas, GPs, schools, social care, libraries and youth services.
This is in addition to the amount promised in the original proposal, bringing the total contribution to £8.72 million.
It is estimated that the development could generate 760 long-term jobs, boost the local economy by £21 million each year, and generate £148 million during construction.
With the luxury accommodation expected to attract wealthy residents, it is estimated to bring £9.4 million in annual spending, with almost £1 million in further tax revenue.
FHSDC told Kent Online that they hoped to correct the misinformation about the historic buildings on the development site.
A spokesperson said: "Ten years ago, the original outline planning permission provided for the demolition of the station, Customs House and Signal Box.
"At the time, these buildings were dangerous and inaccessible to the public.
"Sir Roger De Haan decided to restore and retain the station rather than demolish it and to prioritise its place in the development."
In addition to the residential properties, the development would create 7,489 square metres of commercial space used for leisure facilities, restaurants, bars and retail outlets.
The upcoming planning meeting will decide the fate of the remaining section of the project.
It comes as other areas of Folkestone are undergoing their own redevelopment.
A £20 million revamp is set to turn the bus station into a central park - complete with a plaza area, fountains and surrounding gardens.
The town's Lower Leas funicular is also undergoing a £6.6 million restoration - with the hopes it will be reopened by early 2026 after it closed nearly 10 years ago.
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Smoke and mirrors surround so-called pilot scheme allowing alcohol at Scottish football
Smoke and mirrors surround so-called pilot scheme allowing alcohol at Scottish football

Scotsman

time9 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Smoke and mirrors surround so-called pilot scheme allowing alcohol at Scottish football

Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... It has been billed as a potential step change in the matchday experience for Scottish football fans, marking the beginning of the end for a ban on alcohol that has been in place across the nation's stadiums for nearly 45 years. But amid a flurry of headlines surrounding the so-called 'wet run' that will see a handful of clubs allow a limited number of supporters to drink in designated areas at a series of upcoming fixtures, experts have cast doubt on the initiative, describing it as 'misleading' and questioning how it will be evaluated. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The widely publicised venture began yesterday at two Premier Sports Club ties, with both Arbroath and Stirling Albion allowing fans to purchase alcoholic drinks in special fan zones and a concourse area out of sight of the pitch. They will soon be followed by up to five other clubs, including Ayr United, Partick Thistle, and Queen of the South. Amid similar moves to allow alcohol trials in the English game, the apparent development has been welcomed by many supporters in Scotland, many of whom have long bemoaned the lack of parity with other sports, such as rugby, where alcohol is available for purchase and consumption. The sale of alcohol within football grounds has long been prohibited, save for hospitality sections. Picture: Stock Adobe | zef art - Even so, there is uncertainty surrounding the scope of the so-called pilot scheme, and at a time when Scotland continues to suffer from a toxic relationship with alcohol, with First Minister John Swinney's administration treating its harms as a public health emergency, others stressed the folly of undermining efforts in aid of that goal. 'Presenting it as a pilot is misleading' The Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL) has said that with 'close oversight' from licensing boards, local authorities, and Police Scotland, the offering by the clubs was a 'welcome step' in its aim to improve the experience of football supporters who turn up week in, week out, to follow their teams. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad It said feedback would be gathered from fans, as part of a 'welcome step' in its aim to ensure they 'receive parity' with other sporting, social and cultural events across the country, where alcohol can be consumed. Unsurprisingly, such comments have led to reporting that a ban on alcohol in Scottish football stadiums is being 'lifted'. That is, for the moment at least, not the case. Alcohol has been sold in the hospitality sections of stadiums for years, and records maintained by local authority licensing boards show that several of the clubs involved in the latest initiative, including Arbroath and Ayr, have successfully applied for what is known as occasional licences, which allow for the sale of temporary alcohol in other areas. The routine mechanism has been in place for years, and has been widely utilised by clubs up and down the country, including a recent Old Firm tie hosted by Rangers. Tellingly, at no point has the SPFL itself referred to the latest plans as a 'pilot scheme' - that tag has been assigned by the media, commentators, and fans. Indeed, for those who have closely studied Scottish football's fraught relationship with alcohol, such as Dr Richard Purves, a senior research fellow at the University of Stirling's institute for social marketing and health, the depiction of the upcoming games as an historic moment is wide of the mark. Dr Richard Purves | Contributed 'The first thing to understand about these 'pilots' is that they're mainly focused on two areas - special fan zones set up outside the stadiums, and expanded hospitality options inside the stadiums, where alcohol is served as part of a higher-priced ticket package,' he explained. 'Importantly, neither of these approaches actually requires a change in the law - they just need the approval of local licensing boards. So, while it might seem like a major shift, it's not quite as big as it appears.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Laura Mahon, deputy chief executive of Alcohol Focus Scotland, also said it was wrong to characterise what is on offer as 'the lifting of Scotland's alcohol ban at football,' explaining: 'It's standard match day hospitality using an existing legislation. Presenting it as a pilot is misleading.' Even so, the publicity surrounding the drinks sales at the cluster of cup ties continues to resonate, particularly among those old enough to recall the dark days which presaged a crackdown on boozing inside stadiums. The game that changed it all In one of the most infamous games in Scottish football history, Celtic secured a 1-0 extra time victory over Rangers in the 1980 Scottish Cup final, but few recall the score. The fixture came a week after Aberdeen saw off the Glasgow giants to claim the league title, and with Dundee United having earlier claimed the League Cup, tensions were running high ahead of a tie in which losers would end the season empty handed. Come full time, that pent up aggression led to hundreds of fans invading the pitch, with bricks, bottles and cans hurled as mounted police attempted to quell the violent clashes. One eyewitness in attendance, the veteran football commentator, Archie MacPherson, infamously described it as 'like a scene out of Apocalypse Now.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Mounted police face the fans before crowd trouble broke out after the Old Firm Scottish Cup Final at Hampden in May 1980, which Celtic won 1-0. While there were criticisms of the policing operation and the barriers at Scotland's national stadium, the cursed drink was singled out by George Younger, the then Scottish secretary, as the main contributing factor. The ignominious events at Hampden that day led to more than 200 arrests and £20,000 fines for both clubs. The riot did not spark calls to ban alcohol at football matches - that was proposed under the McElhone Report three years earlier - but it undoubtedly expedited provisions under Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act, which eliminated the consumption of alcohol at grounds, including drink bought outside and brought into games. 'The world has changed' Supporters groups have consistently pointed to significant evolution in the matchday experience over the past four decades that ought to render the ban null and void. Modern stadia, for one thing, are largely unrecognisable from the dank, cramped terraces of the pre Taylor report era - some of the flashpoints in the 1980 final involved fans using rubble from Hampden's crumbling infrastructure as missiles - with seating, improved safety measures, and CCTV in abundance in the game's upper tiers. But so too, the way in which fans engage with the game has changed, with families and children among a more diverse make-up, and supporters more generally less focused on the consumption of alcohol as part of their matchday experience. Dr Geoff Pearson, a law professor at the University of Manchester, who is regarded as one of the UK's leading experts on football-related disorder, told Scotland on Sunday that while the legislation brought in in the 1980s was probably needed at the time, the norms of fan behaviour had changed 'radically' since then. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad He said that the evidence of the effectiveness of alcohol restrictions in terms of reducing drunkenness and disorder around football was 'mixed,' with some studies even suggesting that prohibitions could be counterproductive by encouraging binge drinking prior to games. 'I think it is time to revisit the criminalisation of the consumption of alcohol in stadia, and investigating different ways of permitting alcohol consumption at matches, without increasing risks to public order or safety, seems a sensible move,' he said. Ayr United have been granted alcohol licences for the matches against Arbroath and Forfar Athletic. | SNS Group It is clear that a growing groundswell of fans also want change. Research published this year by the Scottish Football Supporters Association (SFSA), which found that nearly three quarters of fans (74 per cent) agreed that, in principle, all fans should be able to buy alcohol at grounds during match days Stuart Murphy, CEO of the SFSA, said the advent of the pilot was a 'significant' step, and expressed hope that it would ultimately lead to more fans being allowed to have a drink at stadiums when cheering on their teams. 'It's looked unlikely for a long time, and in all the conversations I've had with the Scottish Government, they've been really reluctant to go down this road, but I think we're long overdue to give this a go,' he said. 'It is pretty unfair that Scottish football fans are treated differently to fans of other sports, and the world has changed.' Money, undoubtedly, is also a factor in the latest alcohol sales push, with a growing number of clubs looking to new revenue streams in order to make ends meet, let alone turn a profit. Indeed, several of the sides involved in the pilot reported losses in their most recent annual accounts. Alcohol sales would never come close to rivalling other valuable income sources, such as SPFL payments, especially when costs such as mitigation measures and infrastructural improvements are factored in, but every little would help. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Public health concerns remain Many, however, will ask at what cost? Ms Mahon said the amount of drink that will be on offer to fans at the games - five pints - almost met the weekly low-risk alcohol limit, and described it as an 'excessive' amount that raised serious concerns about responsible practice. 'Scotland is in the grip of an alcohol crisis, with deaths at a 15-year high and alcohol consumption 50 per cent above the chief medical officer's low-risk guidelines,' she insisted. 'This is not the moment to start chipping away the protective measures we have in place. Even without alcohol in stadiums we still see violent disorder during or immediately after football matches in Scotland, as well as spikes in domestic violence. Increasing the availability of alcohol would only add fuel to those fires.' Alcohol deaths in Scotland are the highest in the UK 'Meanwhile, allowing alcohol sales inside grounds would further entrench the role of alcohol sponsors in football. 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Ruabon: 'Characterful' Wynnstay Hall estate home up for sale
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Ruabon: 'Characterful' Wynnstay Hall estate home up for sale

The five-bed property in Ruabon has been listed at a guide price of £900,000 by estate agents Savills. The home overlooks its own mature and enchanting gardens designed by Lancelot 'Capability' Brown, a famous English gardener and landscape architect. In all, more than 140 estates were designed by him across the UK, and Wynnstay Hall Estate was his last. 'Temple Dairy', as it is known, has been occupied by its current owners for the past 23 years. It is described by Savills as a 'charming country house situated within the grounds of Wynnstay Hall Estate, occupying an unrivalled position within the Capability Brown Grade 1 listed pleasure garden'. Believed to date from 1783, the house is listed and was designed as an ornamental dairy, which has been extended over time. Of note, is the 19th century front section addition and kitchen extension. The front door opens into a welcoming entrance hall that is currently utilised as a dining room. The feature drawing room has an original stone fireplace, a groined ceiling that is 14ft high, and double doors that open onto the doric temple terrace area with original porticoe, overlooking the enchanting garden. There is an additional good sized sitting room and the kitchen/dining room was added in 2001. The principal bedroom suite enjoys a dressing area, bathroom and fine views of the garden. There are two double bedrooms with en suite bathrooms, as well as two further bedrooms and a family bathroom. Read more Wynnstay Hall enjoys a delightful tree-lined approach over a long private driveway with parkland to either side. The property is set in approximately 4.5 acres, the gardens being beautifully designed and include a selection of mature trees, woodland and a pond extending to approximately 0.4 acre, all of which attracts a variety of wildlife. The garage, having a barrelled ceiling, was the original subway that the cattle came through. The Estate includes a tennis court for use of the residents. Wynnstay Hall was once the principal seat to one of the most powerful families in Welsh History, the Watkin Williams Wynns. The family were major landowners and had great political and social influence in Wales. The first recorded property on the estate known as Watsay and was built in 1616. Over the coming centuries, Wynnstay Hall was enlarged and developed by the family. In 1944, the hall and 150 acres were sold to Lindisfarne College, a public school. For further information, call Savills on 01244 988117.

Hampshire areas among most expensive seaside spots for 2025
Hampshire areas among most expensive seaside spots for 2025

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time12 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Hampshire areas among most expensive seaside spots for 2025

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