Harbour Village, Northfleet

Housing development in Kent, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Harbour Village is a housing development on the site of the former Northfleet Cement Works (Northfleet Embankment West) on the south bank of the River Thames in Northfleet, Kent, England. The scheme forms part of the Ebbsfleet Garden City programme and is being built by Bellway Homes on approximately 11.6–12 hectares of former industrial land off The Creek and College Road, within a wider 31‑hectare regeneration area.

CountryUnited Kingdom
Groundbreaking2020
Websitewww.bellway.co.uk
Quick facts Northfleet Embankment West, Country ...
Harbour Village
Northfleet Embankment West
Neighbourhood
CountryUnited Kingdom
RegionSouth East England
CountyKent
DistrictGravesham
TownNorthfleet
Groundbreaking2020
Founded byBellway Homes
Part ofEbbsfleet Garden City
Government
  BodyGravesham Borough Council
Area
  Total
30 acres (12 ha)
Population
  Planned dwellings
567
Websitewww.bellway.co.uk
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History

Northfleet’s suitability for cement production derived from its combination of chalk, clay and river access. Chalk had been quarried here for lime since at least the eighteenth century, with large pits extending from the village down to the Thames.[1] In 1796 the clergyman and entrepreneur James Parker patented a natural “Roman cement” and established a works on Northfleet Creek to manufacture it.[2]

In 1846 William Aspdin, son of Portland cement patentee Joseph Aspdin, acquired Parker’s Northfleet works and converted it to manufacture an improved Portland cement in new kilns on the creek.[3] Over the mid‑nineteenth century further plants were established along the Thames between Swanscombe and Gravesend, including works operated by the firm Knight, Bevan and Sturge in the Northfleet area.[4] By 1900 there were nine cement works along this reach; Aspdin’s former works traded as Robins & Co before becoming part of Associated Portland Cement Manufacturers,[5] and Bevan’s works at Northfleet grew into the district’s single largest producer.[6]

Cement Works

The cement kilns at the works (1973)

Bevan's Works

The Hive House estate, which stretched between Northfleet High Street and the river, was sold in 1838 and later became the core of the Bevan’s cement works. Knight, Bevan and Sturge developed a substantial Portland cement plant here in the 1850s, served by chalk pits to the south and wharves on the Thames.[7] Bevan’s was absorbed into APCM in 1900 as part of the consolidation of Thames and Medway cement manufacturers. By the 1960s APCM operated a number of older works along the river. To rationalise production, the company decided to replace these with a single large integrated plant on the Bevan’s site at Northfleet.

Demolition at the works (2009)
The demolition of the chimney in 2010

Construction of the new Northfleet Works began in 1968, and clinker production started in February 1970; the plant ultimately operated six large rotary kilns with a combined output of around four million tonnes of cement per year, much of it for export markets.[8] APCM rebranded as Blue Circle Industries in 1978,[9] and in 2001 Blue Circle was acquired by the French group Lafarge,[10] which thereafter operated the Northfleet Works as Lafarge Cement UK. Chalk was supplied as slurry from major quarries at Swanscombe and Eastern Quarry; by the 2000s local chalk reserves were nearing exhaustion.[11]

Decommissioning continued over the following years, and production at Northfleet formally ended in 2008.[12]

Closure and demolition

In December 2001, the company Blue Circle announced it would close the Northfleet cement factory. Even though the factory had been a major part of the local area since 1848, experts saw the move as unavoidable because Eastern Quarry was running out of the materials needed to make cement. The company planned to move its work to a new, £200 million modern factory at Home Farm and Snodland in Medway.[13][14] While closing the Northfleet site meant 240 people lost their jobs, the new Medway factory was expected to create about 180 new positions using newer, cleaner equipment.

Work at Northfleet finally stopped in 2008.[15] The official end of cement making on the site took place on 28 March 2010, when the factory’s two 550-foot chimneys were demolished. The event was watched by hundreds of local people and run as a charity fundraiser. A competition was held to pick the person who would press the button to start the explosion, raising money for the Kent Air Ambulance and local hospices.[16] The chimneys had been a longstanding landmark on the Northfleet skyline, and their removal symbolised both the end of heavy industry on the site and the beginning of a new phase of redevelopment.[17]

Following closure, Lafarge cleared most of the plant and submitted proposals for a bulk aggregates import terminal and mixed‑use redevelopment of the former works.[18] Planning policy documents for Gravesham identified “Northfleet Embankment West” (the former cement works and adjacent riverfront land) as a key brownfield regeneration site combining housing, employment land and improved public access to the Thames.[19]

Planning and masterplanning

In 2009 Gravesham Borough Council granted outline planning permission for a scheme at Northfleet Embankment West comprising up to 532 homes, 46,000 m² of employment floorspace, retail, and public spaces.[20] The establishment of Ebbsfleet Development Corporation in 2015 transferred strategic planning responsibility for the area to the new corporation, which identified Northfleet Embankment East and West as core residential‑led “strategic development areas” within the wider Ebbsfleet Garden City.[21]

A fresh outline application to EDC for Northfleet Embankment West, covering around 11.6 hectares, was approved in June 2018. This consent allowed for up to 532 dwellings, employment floorspace and new public open spaces, together with a riverside promenade and improved links to Northfleet and Ebbsfleet rail stations.[22]

BPTW prepared a masterplan branded “Harbour Village”, covering more than 12 hectares of the former works. BPTW obtained masterplan consent in December 2020.[23]

Enabling works began on the brownfield site in 2020, including remediation, ground re‑profiling and preparation of development platforms.[24] By October 2022, construction of new homes at Harbour Village was under way on land that had been unused for over a decade.[25]

College Road

Origins and naming

College Road, formerly called One Tree Lane,[26] is a north–south street running from the A226 (Stonebridge Road/High Street) towards the riverfront, forming the western edge of the Harbour Village site and historically skirting the cement works.

Flint wall

The road where the flint wall was

For many years a long flint‑and‑brick wall ran along the eastern side of College Road at the boundary of the cement works.[27] As part of the Harbour Village scheme, engineers assessed the College Road boundary structures and found that sections of the large flint wall were structurally unsound.[28]

Rather than reconstructing the original wall, the Harbour Village design proposes to “re‑interpret” it through building frontages and landscape details. Planning announcements and news releases from Ebbsfleet Development Corporation describe how the “character of an existing flint wall will be retained through a flint frontage to the new homes along College Road, and flint will also be embedded into the ground in front of properties”.[29]

References

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