The vision for the development includes adhering to the city council’s policy of offering a minimum 40 per cent affordable housing on site, with the other homes being made for the open market, housing for the university and college staff, specialist housing for the elderly, and student accommodation.
The group told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that it is proposing “a range of densities across the site”. At this stage it is looking at between 47 and 52 homes per hectare.
Artist impression of the South West Cambridge proposal north of Barton Road, South West Meadows section.
- Credit: David Lock Associates
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Subscriber only Gympie region and south east Queensland battled its biggest drug problem in nearly two decades when lockdown lifted in May, with a new generation of pushers who are using Instagram as their dial-a-dealer platform of choice. Many turned their homes into major drug mail order operations or grow houses and meth labs, with the problem now so widespread professional chemical cleaning companies have warned tenants moving into a rental to get their property tested for drug contamination. Despite all of this, reports of drug offences in the Gympie region have slightly dipped in the past 12 months, with 1200 reported drug offences investigated by the Gympie police in the past two years, and 554 in the past year.
Greenfield Fire Department responds to fire at Leydon Road duplex
Updated Feb 03, 2021;
Posted Feb 03, 2021
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Details of the fire are not available.
Greenfield firefighters and other departments from the area responded under mutual aid.
Traffic on Leydon Road was closed between Barton Road and Leyden Woods Lane
The fire believed to be out. Photos from the scene show that the exterior of the building appears to be intact, but there is evidence of interior damage.
This is a developing story and more information will be posted as it is known.
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An Anglo-Saxon burial ground has been discovered on a plot of land earmarked to become University of Cambridge accommodation.
Excavations at the site revealed more than 60 graves which date back to a similar period as the famed Sutton Hoo site, around 400-650AD.
Many of the newly-discovered burials contain grave goods such as bronze brooches, bead necklaces, glass flasks, weapons, and pottery.
Experts claim the haul of artefacts is one of British archaeology s mos significant finds since the Sutton Hoo burial ship was found in 1938.
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Picured, a drone shot of the 60 graves found at the Cambridge site. it is said to be the biggest archaeology find since the famed Sutton Hoo dig
Thrilling discovery as vast medieval cemetery underneath Cambridge uncovered
The dig confirmed the long-suspected presence of a burial ground on the site
14:26, 1 FEB 2021
Updated
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Archaeologists have uncovered a huge medieval burial ground containing more than 700 items at a site in Cambridge.