Tag Archives: Landscape Design

Lower Cambourne Public Square & Green Spaces

Working for South Cambridge District Council and Hill (South Cambridgeshire Investment Partnership) we have designed a new public square and sequence of green spaces to support their exemplary development in Lower Cambourne, on a site adjoining South Cambridge District Council’s offices, a secondary school and a nature reserve.

The design of the square is the combination of a formal plaza and softer garden square. The plaza utilises existing mature trees to create a structured space for food vans, sheltered outdoor workspace and seasonal events. The garden square creates a more informal space with a variety of new trees, biodiverse ground cover planting, and space for informal play.

A sequence of green spaces thread through the development creating a ‘foraging route’ of edible plants and fruit trees as well as greenspaces for recreation and play. There will be footpath and cycle links to connect with the surrounding established green infrastructure and the nearby shops and facilities in Greater Cambourne. 

In collaboration with architects at Hill and planning expertise at Carter Jonas, we have prepared a comprehensive pack of design drawings and documents informed by extensive pre-application discussion with the local planning authority, and guidance from the Cambridge Design Review Panel.  The application was submitted in Dec 2022, and the outcome is eagerly awaited.

Landscape Design, Lower Cambourne

Levelling Up Funding Success

In January 2023, the Government announced the names and locations of the UK projects which had been successful in being awarded a Levelling Up Grant following the most recent round of bidding for the Funding.

TEP was delighted to hear that three of our multidisciplinary projects have received substantial Levelling Up Funding, which will enable these schemes to be brought to life.

Eden Project Morecambe:
Eden Project North secured the full £50m of Levelling Up Funding for Eden Project Morecambe in Lancashire, a proposed 360-degree visitor attraction that is certain to boost economic and social prospects across the region, promote environmental awareness and reimagine the town’s sea front.  TEP provided integral support to the Eden Project team preparing the landscape design proposals, ecological surveys and technical expertise, and landscape and visual impact assessment.

The Northern Roots Learning Centre:
The Northern Roots Learning Centre is an educational facility located within Northern Roots, the UK’s largest urban farm and eco-park at Snipe Clough, Oldham, Greater Manchester.  The Centre will provide training and vocational courses focussed around environmental and sustainable skills.  In support of the project, TEP produced a green and blue infrastructure strategy, and more recently completed arboricultural impact assessments and ecological surveys & assessments, which informed the hybrid planning application for the development.

Oldham Greenway:
Oldham Greenway will be a new multi-user pathway linking the Green Shoots Centre at Rhodes Bank in Oldham with Northern Roots urban farm and a new town centre green space, Jubilee Park.  The Greenway will be an accessible and safe route for the community to get across town, reaching the new venues by bike or on foot.  TEP supported the project by identifying opportunities for urban greening along the length of the route such as living walls and bioswales.

We are proud to have been involved with these inspiring initiatives, all of which will drive much needed economic, social and environmental enhancements.

Snibston Country Park & Century Theatre

TEP played a leading role in supporting Leicestershire County Council (LCC) in the £3m regeneration of Snibston Colliery Park in the centre of Coalville, North West Leicestershire.

The former mining site is a Scheduled Monument and considered one of the nation’s best surviving examples of a mining complex, dating from the British coal industry’s period of peak production. Once out of bounds to the public, it is now a popular 40-hectare country park and visitor attraction celebrating the area’s history of mining, and contains a café, play area and bike pump track, a 4km mountain bike trail, and Heritage Trail, focused around the former colliery headstocks which are a Scheduled Ancient Monument.

TEP developed the vision document and masterplan for the site, and working closely with LCC, North West Leicestershire District Council and English Heritage, further developed the detailed landscape design to discharge planning conditions and secure the design and build contractor for the café and park. TEP led on town planning, masterplanning and landscape design, and also carried out ecological, arboriculture and heritage assessments which pro-actively informed the masterplanning and environmental appraisal of the scheme, supported by Buttress Architects, Curtins Transport, BE Group and BWB during planning and up to RIBA Stage 3. TEP continued work on the project supporting A+G Architects and the contractor Fortem to RIBA Stage 4 and 5 detailed design and construction.

TEP’s Heritage team was also employed to provide archaeological and heritage services including historic building recording the Century Theatre, a rare 1950s mobile theatre (in fact Britain’s oldest travelling theatre) which has been located at the country park since 1996 and remains in use as an entertainment venue.

The creation of mobile theatres became popular following the end of the second world war when many theatres had been damaged or possessed inadequate facilities. In addition to creating a performance space, the theatres also provided mobile living quarters, offices and stores for the actors and their community.

The Century Theatre was built in Hinckley between 1948 and 1952, with funding coming from household names such as Laurence Olivier, John Mills, Enid Blyton and Agatha Christie. Following its opening performance in Hinckley on 29th September 1952, the theatre toured for two decades before changes to traffic regulations effectively prevented the theatre from being able to travel. Century Theatre made its final journey in 1996 to take up residence at Snibston Country Park, where its doors remain open to this day, playing host to a wide variety of shows and activities, including music, comedy, art, dance and film.

Redevelopment of Northampton University Campus to Provide 140 New Homes

Following the University of Northampton’s move to its new town-centre Waterside Campus in summer 2018, the Avenue Campus site was released for redevelopment. The development will provide 140 new houses and flats to be built and managed by Northampton Partnership Homes. Throughout the planning process, the scheme had critical input from TEP’s heritage and landscape consultants, who have shaped the design to create a place that will be unique, safe and attractive to live in with habitats retained, incorporated and managed to ensure long term, on-site biodiversity enhancement. Sustainable urban drainage has also been an integral part of the design, and which manifests itself in the form of swales, retention ponds and a wetland meadow.

The campus is located approximately one mile from the town centre and sits opposite the 120 acres of public open space, known as The Racecourse. The site is 5.8 hectares with a mix of buildings, some of which will be retained and converted into flats. The development retains the best landscape and architecture features of the site to create a new space for accessible homes in the town.

After Outline Planning was approved in March 2021, TEP worked on the Reserved Matters Application. Landscape Architects Anna Miroslaw, Yixing Luo, Landscape Manager Sam Marshall and Heritage Consultant Amir Bassir provided specialist design advice, preparing the landscape design drawings, landscape management plan and a listed building recording report.

TEP collaborated with MCW Architects, BKAL and Greengage, as well as our own in-house ecologists and arboriculturists, to retain the existing habitats, creating attenuation ponds with wildflower meadows, residential streets and play spaces. 

The Reserved Matters Application was submitted in November 2021, and granted planning permission in October 2022 with unanimous approval.

Avenue Campus

Ynysangharad Park

Construction work is progressing well at Ynysangharad War Memorial Park in Pontypridd. This is a restoration and regeneration project scheme that we have been working on since 2017, helping Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council secure Parks for People funding from the NLHF (National Lottery Heritage Fund) and obtaining Planning Consents.


Ynysangharad War Memorial Park is a 13 hectare public park, bordered by the River Taff, that represents a highly valued green resource in the centre of Pontypridd. The park opened in 1923 to provide important leisure and green space for the locals, including coal miners and workers at the nearby Brown Lenox Chainworks and their families. It is now a Grade II Registered park that forms part of the Town Centre Conservation Area. The park caters for wide a range of active and passive pursuits, and includes a Grade II listed Lido, cricket field, tennis courts, bowling greens, football pitches, play area, bandstand, sunken garden, mock rock outcrop and tree lined avenues.


Much of the £1.4m scheme is focused on the ‘Heritage and Horticultural Zone’ of the park and includes the restoration of the bandstand and surrounding landscape; repairs to the sunken garden and a new planting scheme; repair and conversion of a vacant 1930s Art-Deco style building to provide welfare facilities for parks staff; and the transformation of the former plant nursery into a Learning Centre. The Learning Centre will provide a valuable facility for all ages and backgrounds within the community to benefit from, improving health, well-being and learning through activities and training courses linked to the outdoor environment, horticulture and creative skills. To help support learning opportunities the design of the centre features a courtyard garden with raised beds for growing plants, a greenhouse, potting shed and covered area for outdoor demonstrations.


GKR Maintenance are the appointed contractor. TEP are leading the consultancy team, which includes Alwyn Jones Architects; Mann Williams; Cleaver & Co; Howard Doolan Associates; and Waterco.


Graeme Atherton, TEP’s Design Director said: “It is fantastic to see the work progressing on site. The new facilities combined with restoration of the existing built form and landscape will ensure that the park continues to meet the needs of the local community, bringing people closer to nature and providing opportunities to learn new skills. The project also complements other regeneration projects within Pontypridd, including the recently completed Taff Vale riverside development. We are proud to play our part in the transformation of the town and are grateful for the support that the NLHF has provided to the scheme”.

TEP Sponsorship Update: PLACED Academy

In summer of this year, The PLACED Academy opened its doors to its fifth annual cohort of summer school attendees. Sponsored by a number of consultancies and organisations, including TEP, PLACED offers a free-to-access innovative programme for 14-18 year olds across the northwest of England, and provides an introduction into a career in the built environment. The programme is designed to encourage creativity, increase self-esteem and develop a broad range of interpersonal skills. The content of the course centres around the built and natural environment, and how design and management can positively respond to the effects of climate change.

PLACED runs from July to the following May and comprises both online and face to face workshops, site visits, model-making and youth led engagements. It also gives the young attendees the chance to work alongside professionals such as architects, town planners and TEP’s very own landscape and urban designer Tim Johns, who volunteers at the academy.

This July, 36 young people from diverse backgrounds throughout the  north west arrived at the University of Liverpool School of Management to partake in a four-day programme during which the attendees were tasked with designing a unique neighbourhood for one of six sites across the region.

PLACED Academy

Working in groups and mentored by volunteering professionals, the cohort discussed and developed designs inspired by the Liverpool City Region’s Spatial Development Strategy (SDS). This strategy effectively lays out a blueprint for the region, detailing policies for use of land and adopting sustainable placemaking principles to ensure developments are connected and coherent, and prioritise the interests, desires and needs of the local community. Particular focus was given to the concept of the ‘15-minute neighbourhood’ model, which focusses on pedestrian accessibility from homes to nearby services and green spaces. The young cohort were particularly passionate about the impact developments would have on the environment and were keen to discuss and promote the use of renewable energy sources such as solar, wind and water.

The summer school culminated in a celebratory exhibit of final designs and a graduation ceremony, attended by proud parents, care-givers and Liverpool City Region Metro Mayor Steve Rotheram. Feedback from the attendees was overwhelmingly positive, with the vast majority stating that they had gained a good understanding about built environment careers and prospective career paths, that they felt proud of what they had achieved, and had thoroughly enjoyed meeting new people and making new friends.

For more information about The Placed Academy’s future programmes, please visit https://placed-academy.com.

Green Light for Eden Project Morecambe

Eden Project Morecambe, the £125m installation in Lancashire, was recently granted planning permission by Lancaster City Council. The scheme, on the waterfront adjacent to the iconic Midland Hotel, has a beautiful and sustainable design, led by Grimshaw Architects.

TEP has provided ecological and landscape design support to the project during its evolution over the past 3 years. Starting with ornithological surveys and consultations, TEP’s ecologists advised on the Habitats Regulations and provided advice on maximising environmental net gain.

Morecambe’s motto during its tourism heyday was ‘Beauty Surrounds and Health Abounds’. The Eden Project team took inspiration from this to focus on reimagining health and wellbeing, wonder and entertainment for the 21st century. It brings together:

  • Above the Bay & Bay Glade: an environment filled with plants, art and exhibits, showcasing the rhythms of life linked to the sun and seasons.
  • Below the Bay: with immersive experiences that bring to life lunar rhythms and tides.
  • The Natural Observatory: highlighting the nature of Morecambe Bay and the home of Eden Project Morecambe’s research and education programmes.

Within every space, there will be ground-breaking immersive experiences that encourage visitors to be curious about the natural world. Art, science, adventure, play and performance will all play a role. Eden Project seeks to celebrate its location in a place of internationally-recognised scientific importance.

These spaces, and others, will be connected within a beautiful and sustainable architectural design.

TEP’s landscape designers and ecologists collaborated in the design of the Bayscape, the external spaces that connect the architectural spaces with each other and link the venue sensitively to the landscapes of Morecambe Bay and to the town.

The Bayscape comprises a series of defined and characterful spaces, whose design references natural coastal forms and shapes, created through the processes of erosion and deposition, as well as representing the plant communities found in these environments. 

Using this approach and working with TEP’s Ecology Team to develop the planting strategy, a positive Biodiversity Net Gain score (+40%) has been achieved. 

The Bayscape features the following spaces:

  • The Tide Garden, which has a cove-like shape to create a sheltered garden for basking and relaxation.  The space is centred on a tidal pool and water features that explore the movement of the tides and the form of intertidal habitats. 
  • The Rhythm Garden, which also takes on a cove-like form, will support health and well-being, as well as being designed to cater for outdoor events. 
  • The Northern Coastal Edge, which provides an opportunity for visitors to experience panoramic views of the bay from an elevated boardwalk. 
  • The Energy Field defines the southern approach to the main entrance and will incorporate children’s play within dunescape mounds.  The space will also tell the energy story behind the visitor attraction, featuring renewable technologies showcased within a sea foam canopy shelter. 
  • The Coastal Lawn and Shingle Plaza offer flexible social spaces that complement the setting of the Midland Hotel and the requirements of the neighbouring RNLI lifeboat station. 

Now that the scheme has received planning permission, the Eden Project is moving towards realising the development, with an intensive programme of detailed design and fundraising.

Nurturing Sustainable Transport Through Design

Sustainable transport should be accessible, safe, convenient, affordable, easy to use and available for a diverse user base. However, the problem of over-reliance on the personal motor vehicle is an issue that means not only are other methods of transport marginalised, but the whole design of our public spaces is dominated by the needs of car users (an issue that will not be solved by the electric vehicle, and in fact will proliferate the problems present in our public realm). This reliance and subsequent provision of priority to the car becomes an unsustainable cycle where users can feel unsafe as a pedestrian, cyclist or other road user in this car-dominated environment.

A recent study in Greater Manchester suggests that 200 million car journeys within the region are of less than 1km. The study reported that one of the main reasons for these short journeys was anxiety regarding crossing roads. The solution proposed pedestrian-focused interventions, namely ‘stripped down’ zebra crossings specifically located on routes to schools. But why stop there, as well as schools, safe multi-user routes could provide improvements to biodiversity, drainage, access to green spaces and provide recreation opportunities, if, combined with improved Green Infrastructure (GI) assets. This, in turn, could assist in providing links to and reinvigorating our ailing town centres. During the pandemic, pop-up cycle lanes appeared and some roads were given over to pedestrians, which you can read more about in this TEP Article. If these design interventions are to be continued and combined with the unprecedented demand for hybrid working, people may, during their lunches walk to their local centre for that coffee. But only if those local centres are safe, attractive, and convenient to travel to without the use of a car.

Nurturing Sustainable Transport Through Design

This is one potential example of breaking the cycle of car dominance and building on lessons learnt during the pandemic. For some time, Active Travel has been on the current agenda, with the pandemic bringing this into greater focus.

But, how as designers can we understand issues in a particular street or local centre? The recently published (September 2021)  Healthy Streets Design Check England is a tool that focuses on embedding public health into built environment design (through the application of LTN 1/20 Cycle infrastructure design) and is based on a human-centred framework.

The assessment tool has 10 indicators, including ‘Everyone feels welcome’, ‘People feel relaxed’ and ‘People feel safe’ and focuses on identifying and subsequently providing incremental changes and improvements to streets. Crucially, the tools and resources are configured for a variety of users to undertake assessments on the quality of streets and are not only used on existing conditions but ultimately on proposals as well.

The metric calculates scores based on both issues with the highway and public realm including Green Infrastructure. Public realm and GI design can provide numerous benefits to all users. For example, street trees not only improve the aesthetics of a street, but they can also reduce airborne pollution, can be incorporated into Sustainable Urban Drainage Systems, provide shade, boost biodiversity, along with design functions such as separation of different user groups. This multifunctional simultaneous benefit of GI assets, in combination with good design of the public realm, can produce streets that are comfortable spaces that people want to use, rather than jumping for the car.

Princess Avenue, Liverpool

Healthy Streets Scorecard is another example (focused on Greater London) where individual streets have been scored by a coalition of safety campaigns and bodies such as Sustrans, to identify issues and convince London Boroughs to implement 5 key measures, from low traffic neighbourhoods to 20mph speed limits and protected cycle lanes.

Stamford Brook Public Footpath

As Landscape Architects, we are well placed to use these tools and to understand in greater detail issues faced by the local populous of a public realm. Working with fellow professionals in transport planning, we focus efforts on resolving these issues through targeted design interventions that provide enhanced active travel and multifunctional Green Infrastructure, as well as a safer more comfortable public realm. Crucially these proposals can then be tested to ensure the desired outcomes are achieved.

Why is this important? Sustainable transport, active travel and improved Green Infrastructure can –

  • Improve air quality
  • Reduce car usage
  • Improve road safety
  • Reduce carbon emissions
  • Enhance habitats and biodiversity, and
  • Promote healthy lifestyles.

Author
Andy Gibson
Senior Landscape Architect

The Eden Project Has Invited TEP to Re-imagine Morecambe’s Seaside

TEP (The Environment Partnership) has completed landscape designs to support the planning application for the Eden Project’s new venture: Eden Project North in Morecambe, Lancashire. TEP has been working alongside a talented multi-disciplinary design team, including the Eden Project’s own designers, Grimshaw, Buro Happold and WSP.

The Eden Project has a truly holistic vision for its £125 million regenerative Eden Project North in Morecambe, which was submitted for planning at the end of August and is due to open in 2024.  The project will showcase sustainable design, reimagining the British seaside resort for the 21st century, and is expected to attract around one million visitors a year, directly employing more than 400 people and bringing an estimated visitor spend of more than £200m per year to the region. 

At the heart of the project’s regenerative vision are the landscape proposals for a Bayscape, which will delight and intrigue visitors.  The Bayscape will envelop the building, connecting with its dunescape roof that runs around the iconic shell-like domes, and will flow seamlessly across the visitor attraction’s pay barrier.  The Bayscape concept is borne out of the natural beauty and awe-inspiring wonder to be found in the distinctive and varied land and seascapes surrounding Morecambe Bay.  The Bayscape celebrates this and looks to encourage visitors to explore the wider area, maximising dwell time.

The Bayscape comprises a series of defined and characterful spaces, whose design references natural coastal forms and shapes, created through the processes of erosion and deposition, as well as representing the plant communities found in these environments.  Using this approach and working with TEP’s Ecology Team to develop the planting strategy, a positive Biodiversity Net Gain score (+40%) has been achieved. 

The Bayscape features the following spaces:

  • The Tide Garden, which has a cove-like shape to create a sheltered garden for basking and relaxation.  The space is centred on a tidal pool and water features that explore the movement of the tides and the form of intertidal habitats. 
  • The Rhythm Garden, which also takes on a cove-like form, will support health and well-being, as well as being designed to cater for outdoor events. 
  • The Northern Coastal Edge, which provides an opportunity for visitors to experience panoramic views of the bay from an elevated boardwalk. 
  • The Energy Field defines the southern approach to the main entrance and will incorporate children’s play within dunescape mounds.  The space will also tell the energy story behind the visitor attraction, featuring renewable technologies showcased within a sea foam canopy shelter. 
  • The Coastal Lawn and Shingle Plaza offer flexible social spaces that complement the setting of the Midland Hotel and the requirements of the neighbouring RNLI lifeboat station. 

TEP has also completed a Townscape and Seascape Visual Impact Assessment, Ecological Assessment, Verified Photomontage and Arboricultural Implications Assessment to support the application.

TEP Director, Graeme Atherton, commented: “I am extremely proud of the contribution that TEP has made to this project, which is the culmination of many years of landscape design and implementation experience working on museum and visitor attraction landscapes.  Designing a landscape scheme for a 360-degree visitor attraction on an exposed and compact site, with neighbouring listed buildings and uses, is not without its challenges, and we have had to carefully balance all these considerations in reaching a strong, innovative and sustainable design response.”

Image Credit Grimshaw

Putting Nature at the Heart of Development

TEP has assisted one of its housebuilder clients to obtain a Building with Nature Design Award for its residential development of 600 homes in Kidderminster.

The accolade recognises the developer’s efforts to put nature at the heart of the development by designing and delivering a great living environment for both people and wildlife.  The Building with Nature framework is designed to encourage sustainable solutions throughout the design, by assessing in detail the approach to green infrastructure, including the proposals for health and wellbeing, water management and improvements to habitats and biodiversity.

Throughout the design process, sustainability has led the way for the site in Kidderminster, with the retention and enhancement of extensive areas of woodland alongside the creation of new spaces for play and recreation and of new habitats such as acid-rich grassland, wildflower meadows and plant species specifically favoured by dormouse. 

TEP’s Senior Landscape Architect, and qualified Building with Nature assessor, Anna Miroslaw, worked with the design team to ensure that the landscape design reflected the unique and special character of this site, whilst also creating an environment in which the new community can flourish.  The open spaces, play features and active trails have been designed for all to enjoy; sustainable drainage features allow rainwater to replenish the natural water table and carefully selected planting will enrich biodiversity.

The Building with Nature standards, which were developed in partnership with local authorities, private sector developers, people and communities, provide built environment specialists with evidence-based, how-to guidance on delivering high-quality green infrastructure.  The award recognises the development at a National level and has assisted the scheme through planning and in meeting a contractual obligation with Homes England.

More information on the Building with Nature Standards can be found here. Alternatively, you can get in touch with us to discuss the Award process in more detail or to learn more from our design team click here.

Supporting London’s Leisure Sector

Success for TEP as our Planning and Landscape Design Team secures planning permission for a new leisure facility in the Borough of Havering.

TEP worked alongside clients Total Swimming and Havering Council to provide a range of environmental services for the new Leisure Centre and Community Park in Rainham, East London. The chosen site, following community consultation, is in a central location and within an existing recreation ground. It is also adjacent to a Conservation Area.

TEP oversaw the preparation and submission of the planning application, coordinating consultant inputs and assessing the proposals against the London Plan and local policy.  TEP’s Planning Team also prepared other key elements of the planning application, including the Statement of Community Involvement, a Health Impact Assessment and Construction Management Plan, as well as preparing the calculations and liaising with the Council on the Community Infrastructure Levy and Section 106 contributions.   

In partnership with Box Architects, TEP also provided landscape design services on the project, which became a key part of the proposals to address the loss of greenspace as a result of the proposed scheme.  Whilst the proposals would result in a loss of 15% of the greenspace to built-form, TEP’s landscape design improves the quality of the remaining 85%.  This was achieved through a range of landscape proposals, themed around health and well-being, which works with the existing features of the site and complements neighbouring land uses, such as the adjacent primary school.  Landscape elements included a re-designed play area, sensory planting, wildflower meadows, community orchard, raised beds for vegetable growing, grassed events space, outdoor seating areas, as well as circular path routes to support health and fitness.  A key feature of the landscape design is the creation of a striking green frontage to the new Leisure Centre and park when viewed from Viking Way which facilitates walking and cycling connections to other parts of the town.  This work was supported by an Urban Greening Factor calculation carried out by TEP, which showed that even with the loss of green space the existing Urban Greening Factor of the site would be retained through the landscape improvements put forward and would exceed the London Mayor’s target for commercial developments.  

TEP also carried out arboriculture and ecology surveys and reporting (including a BREEAM assessment) to support the planning application and inform the landscape design proposals for the site. The project was successful and granted planning consent in March 2021.

To learn more about our projects in the Leisure and Parks sector click here.

CGI by Attic Agency Ltd

TEP to Design New Park in the Erewash Valley

TEP is delighted to be working for Nottinghamshire County Council, on behalf of East Midlands partners including Broxtowe and Erewash Borough Councils, preparing detailed design proposals for a new regional park in the Erewash Valley between Long Eaton and Toton.  The proposed park centres on Toton railway sidings and the proposals for the HS2 East Midlands Hub, and is borne out of an early concept to create a ‘station in the park’.   

TEP’s commission also includes consideration of and proposals for wider Green Infrastructure (GI) connections along the valley, between the M1 motorway to the north, and Attenborough Nature Reserve and River Trent to the south.

This part of the Erewash Valley has an interesting and rich history, particularly through its role as a transport corridor from the industrial revolution onwards.  The valley already benefits from a number of Natural Capital and Green Infrastructure Assets, including the river, Erewash Canal, and a number of local nature reserves.  TEP’s role will be to strengthen and further develop this valuable resource, drawing upon in-house expertise in landscape design, landscape management, ecology, arboriculture and the historic environment.  TEP’s project team also includes representatives from EPG, who are providing expertise in hydrology and flood risk management, as the project looks at the potential for improved flood attenuation within the valley. 

TEP is working alongside Arup who is putting together a masterplan framework for new mixed-use development in the Toton and Chetwynd Barracks areas, and Mott MacDonald who is working on a local connectivity study, both supporting the wider HS2 Growth strategy for the region. 

TEP’s commission began in September last year and extends through to May 2021 and will culminate in the production of a preferred park masterplan proposal and wider GI framework for the client to take forward.

For more news from our landscape designers click here.

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