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.

25 June 2026
Well known Invasive-Non-Native Species (INNS) are widely understood, however the threat of new and emerging INNS across the UK is real.
25 June 2026
INNS compliance should be integrated into project planning at the earliest stage, as well as site management, and delivery. We discuss key measures for the management of floral INNS.
12 June 2026
On behalf of Cheshire East Council, TEP has secured consent for the expansion of the Environmental Services Hub site. The expansion will facilitate a weekly food waste collection service for every property in the borough, helping Cheshire East Council prepare for a new statutory requirement from central government due to come into force from 2026-2027. To achieve this, we prepared and managed three planning applications: A full application for 84 new employee parking spaces, a bin storage area and a security lodge; A non-material amendment application for the reconfiguration of the existing site layout; and A variation of condition application to increase the limit on vehicle movements. The project began with a pre-application advice request, followed by discussions with the local planning authority to confirm the applications and supporting information required for submission. A key element of the project was the preparation of a planning needs case. This justified the development remaining at the Environmental Services Hub site, rather than a 'preferred site' identified within the council's Waste Plan. The case also identified the benefits of increasing recycling rates and supporting sustainable waste management across the borough. To support the applications, traffic surveys were commissioned and a Transport Statement was prepared, demonstrating that the proposals would have no negative impact on the local highway network. A Transport Note was also produced to establish the number of vehicle movements that should be permitted through the variation of condition application. Air quality and noise assessments were also undertaken to demonstrate that impacts would be limited and acceptable. 
25 June 2026
Well known Invasive-Non-Native Species (INNS) are widely understood, however the threat of new and emerging INNS across the UK is real.
25 June 2026
INNS compliance should be integrated into project planning at the earliest stage, as well as site management, and delivery. We discuss key measures for the management of floral INNS.
25 June 2026
Well known Invasive-Non-Native Species (INNS) are widely understood, however the threat of new and emerging INNS across the UK is real.
25 June 2026
INNS compliance should be integrated into project planning at the earliest stage, as well as site management, and delivery. We discuss key measures for the management of floral INNS.
12 June 2026
On behalf of Cheshire East Council, TEP has secured consent for the expansion of the Environmental Services Hub site. The expansion will facilitate a weekly food waste collection service for every property in the borough, helping Cheshire East Council prepare for a new statutory requirement from central government due to come into force from 2026-2027. To achieve this, we prepared and managed three planning applications: A full application for 84 new employee parking spaces, a bin storage area and a security lodge; A non-material amendment application for the reconfiguration of the existing site layout; and A variation of condition application to increase the limit on vehicle movements. The project began with a pre-application advice request, followed by discussions with the local planning authority to confirm the applications and supporting information required for submission. A key element of the project was the preparation of a planning needs case. This justified the development remaining at the Environmental Services Hub site, rather than a 'preferred site' identified within the council's Waste Plan. The case also identified the benefits of increasing recycling rates and supporting sustainable waste management across the borough. To support the applications, traffic surveys were commissioned and a Transport Statement was prepared, demonstrating that the proposals would have no negative impact on the local highway network. A Transport Note was also produced to establish the number of vehicle movements that should be permitted through the variation of condition application. Air quality and noise assessments were also undertaken to demonstrate that impacts would be limited and acceptable.