Affordable Housing in Hemel Hempstead

Affordable Housing in Hemel Hempstead

Affordable Housing in Hemel Hempstead
16 June 2025

TEP is pleased to share news of the completion and occupation of a new residential development in Hemel Hempstead, delivered in partnership with Bugler and Studio Partington Architects, on behalf of Dacorum Borough Council. The scheme provides 58 high-quality affordable homes, now fully occupied, alongside a rich and thoughtfully designed landscape that supports community wellbeing and biodiversity.


Inspired by the neighbouring Paradise Fields, the landscape vision embraces the site’s natural assets and proximity to open common land. A network of soft green spaces now envelops the development, creating a calm and welcoming environment that promotes both social interaction and quiet reflection.


Key features include a Courtyard Garden and a Habitat Garden, designed to stimulate residents’ connection with nature, while the Woodland Walk offers a gentle transition into the adjacent mature woodland. The planting palette incorporates fragrant, colourful, and pollinator-friendly native species, enhancing biodiversity and seasonal interest throughout the site. Occupants can enjoy direct access to open land for informal play and recreation, while carefully designed amenity spaces between homes provide safe, attractive places to gather, relax and play.


TEP led the landscape design for this steeply sloping site, with close coordination of external levels and drainage ensuring accessibility throughout. The landscape design wraps seamlessly around the homes, softening level changes and helping the development settle into its natural surroundings.


We’re proud to see Mountbatten View recognised through the Housing Design Awards and featured within Homes England’s Strategic Plan. Supporting the landscape design for this community-focused development has been a rewarding opportunity to help shape accessible, biodiverse outdoor spaces that connect residents with nature and the wider neighbourhood.

TEP led the landscape design for this steeply sloping site, with close coordination of external levels and drainage ensuring accessibility throughout. The landscape design wraps seamlessly around the homes, softening level changes and helping the development settle into its natural surroundings.


We’re proud to see Mountbatten View recognised through the Housing Design Awards and featured within Homes England’s Strategic Plan. Supporting the landscape design for this community-focused development has been a rewarding opportunity to help shape accessible, biodiverse outdoor spaces that connect residents with nature and the wider neighbourhood.

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22 April 2026
Delivering major infrastructure in sensitive environments requires a coordinated approach, bringing together a range of expertise to understand place, manage risk and support informed decision-making. Our work on the North Hykeham Relief Road (NHRR) in Lincolnshire is a strong example of this in practice, with teams from across TEP working together to support the delivery of this long-planned scheme. A long-planned piece of infrastructure The NHRR forms the final section of Lincoln’s ring road, a scheme that has been identified in Local Plans for around twenty years. As the project progressed, it required careful consideration of environmental constraints, historic assets and landscape character, alongside the practicalities of delivering a major new road. Working alongside Balfour Beatty and the wider project team, we provided a range of services spanning heritage and archaeology, planning, landscape, ecology and arboriculture. A coordinated programme of assessment and support underpinned the development of the scheme. Our Historic Environment team established the baseline through desk-based assessment, consultation and phased archaeological evaluation. This work identified areas of interest including sites of prehistoric activity, the important Roman road of Ermine Street, and a potential Roman villa complex, providing valuable insight into the long-term history of the site. These findings directly informed the design process, helping to shape the scheme in response to the site’s archaeological and historical context. The team also assessed potential impacts on sensitive heritage assets, including listed buildings and conservation areas, ensuring that the historic environment was fully considered as the project evolved.
20 May 2026
Explore what the Energy Independence Bill could mean for renewable energy, planning reform and UK infrastructure projects.
19 May 2026
If you are planning a development, managing land, or need advice on great crested newts or other protected species, contact us today.
20 May 2026
Explore what the Energy Independence Bill could mean for renewable energy, planning reform and UK infrastructure projects.
19 May 2026
If you are planning a development, managing land, or need advice on great crested newts or other protected species, contact us today.
22 April 2026
Delivering major infrastructure in sensitive environments requires a coordinated approach, bringing together a range of expertise to understand place, manage risk and support informed decision-making. Our work on the North Hykeham Relief Road (NHRR) in Lincolnshire is a strong example of this in practice, with teams from across TEP working together to support the delivery of this long-planned scheme. A long-planned piece of infrastructure The NHRR forms the final section of Lincoln’s ring road, a scheme that has been identified in Local Plans for around twenty years. As the project progressed, it required careful consideration of environmental constraints, historic assets and landscape character, alongside the practicalities of delivering a major new road. Working alongside Balfour Beatty and the wider project team, we provided a range of services spanning heritage and archaeology, planning, landscape, ecology and arboriculture. A coordinated programme of assessment and support underpinned the development of the scheme. Our Historic Environment team established the baseline through desk-based assessment, consultation and phased archaeological evaluation. This work identified areas of interest including sites of prehistoric activity, the important Roman road of Ermine Street, and a potential Roman villa complex, providing valuable insight into the long-term history of the site. These findings directly informed the design process, helping to shape the scheme in response to the site’s archaeological and historical context. The team also assessed potential impacts on sensitive heritage assets, including listed buildings and conservation areas, ensuring that the historic environment was fully considered as the project evolved.