Sport and leisure at the centre of footballers' planned urban regeneration scheme

Kim Megsonin Industry News

LegacyFoundation
Footballing trio Rio Ferdinand, Mark Noble and Bobby Zamora have launched an innovative urban regeneration model designed to use sport and leisure to bring new life to communities.

The Legacy Foundation was formed to build new developments in the UK with high-quality social, affordable, rented and privately-owned homes. Community and sporting facilities are central to the project and are the main hook to raise aspirations, wellbeing and quality of life for residents.

A 22-hectare site in Kingsland, north of Houghton Regis - one of most underprivileged areas in the UK - will be the first location to implement the Legacy model. Central Bedfordshire Council is helping to fund the scheme, and owns the land on a 125-year lease from the Department of Education.

Architects HawkinsBrown and KSS Design Group have designed the masterplan for the site - which includes a Legacy sports hub and leisure centre, swimming pool, football pitches, a health centre, a new education campus, a subsidised creche, open green spaces and 1,800 homes.

"Sport and leisure can be a unifying force," Zamora told Sports Management. "When we went to Central Bedfordshire we talked to a lot of kids. There's a girl there who runs for England. She drives an hour because that's the closest athletic track to where she lives in Houghton Regis. We want to provide facilities for them. Even it's 100 metres of track, we'll try to put that down.

"From a design perspective, we want to make sure there's lots of green space, because that's really important for wellbeing. We don't want it to be concrete blocks and typical 60s estates as such. We want to create the feeling of a community."

You can read the full article from Sports Management HERE

Article Tags:
Industry news