Plan proposes more affordable family homes, new jobs, infrastructure for growing city, climate action and protection for green space.
Milton Keynes City Council has today published the first draft of MK City Plan 2050.
It sets out a preferred blueprint for the city’s development until 2050, at which point Milton Keynes is expected to be larger than Cardiff with a population of around 400,000 people.
The Plan describes the type of homes, jobs and facilities needed to meet that growth and put local people’s needs first, including that no development should happen without the health facilities, schools, shops and community facilities the city needs.
This common sense ‘Infrastructure First’ approach includes allocating space for seven new care homes, 33 dentists, 30 new schools, around 4,000sqm of land for GP surgeries and health care, and other facilities.
The draft Plan also describes how:
- An additional 30,000 homes will be built in addition to those that are already planned for, based on a government formula. Previously undeveloped sites must have at least 40% affordable homes.
- Growth in rural areas where local infrastructure could not support development is ruled out.
- A new mass rapid-transit system could connect the city’s highest growth areas with the city centre through efficient, reliable and eco-friendly public transport.
- A city centre would be transformed with facilities including an undergraduate university, state of the art events arena, and space for an expected 30,000 new jobs with a focus on tech. Around one in three jobs in MK is now in technology or a related business.
- Bold ideas will help tackle climate change and protect green spaces.
MK City Plan 2050 is an important planning document that will be submitted to the Secretary of State next year. The full draft plan can be read here and local people can make comments and propose alternatives until 9 October. The City Council will use the feedback it receives from local residents and businesses to refine the draft Plan before it is submitted to the Secretary of State next year.