New Signs have gone up at Henley Gate on the edge of Ipswich.
- Credit: Charlotte Bond
Further indications that work on the new Ipswich Garden Suburb on the northern fringe of the town has come with developers Crest Nicholson setting up their first banners and flags heralding the start of work on the Henley Gate phase of the development.
Meanwhile another developer, Mersea Homes, is starting public consultation on its plans to build homes on another part of the suburb - the Red House neighbourhood near Tuddenham Road.
Ipswich Garden Suburb is split into three neighbourhoods Henley Gate, north of the East Suffolk Rail Line and between Ipswich and the edge of Westerfield Village. It includes the new country park which will separate the new development from the village and which was given planning permission by Ipswich Council planners earlier this month.
New Signs have gone up at Henley Gate on the edge of Ipswich.
- Credit: Charlotte Bond
Further indications that work on the new Ipswich Garden Suburb on the northern fringe of the town has come with developers Crest Nicholson setting up their first banners and flags heralding the start of work on the Henley Gate phase of the development.
Meanwhile another developer, Mersea Homes, is starting public consultation on its plans to build homes on another part of the suburb - the Red House neighbourhood near Tuddenham Road.
Ipswich Garden Suburb is split into three neighbourhoods Henley Gate, north of the East Suffolk Rail Line and between Ipswich and the edge of Westerfield Village. It includes the new country park which will separate the new development from the village and which was given planning permission by Ipswich Council planners earlier this month.
Ipswich Borough Council leader David Ellesmere on how the authority is balancing the books during the Covid -19 pandemic and retaining free brown bin collections.
Ipswich Borough Council leader David Ellesmere on how the authority is balancing the books during the Covid -19 pandemic and retaining free brown bin collections.
The former Mulberry Tree was converted into a community centre.
- Credit: Lucy Taylor
The new Kurdish community centre in the former Mulberry Tree pub on Major s Corner in Ipswich will be able to operate around the clock after an appeal against planning rules forcing it to close during the early hours was upheld.
Planning permission for the conversion of the former pub into a community centre - including a prayer room - was granted by Ipswich Council in early 2019 but with a condition saying it could only be used between 10am and 10pm in a bid to prevent disturbance to people living nearby.