Joint venture announced to deliver 8,500 homes on Harlow’s border
News / Wed 8th Apr 2026 at 10:10am
PLACES for People (PfP) and Barratt Redrow have today unveiled a landmark joint venture (JV) to build a pioneering 8,500 home community in East Hertfordshire, in one of the UK’s most significant placemaking projects in decades.
Work on the Stort Crossing begins in May. Work on the new homes in Gilston (Village 1) is due to begin in May 2029.
A spokesperson said: ‘Building on the success of previous partnership schemes, the joint venture brings together PfP’s master developer expertise and social enterprise mission with Barratt Redrow’s reputation as the UK’s leading homebuilder and represents a step change in how major new communities are delivered. The organisations will unlock the scale, pace and innovation required to bring forward homes, supporting infrastructure and green spaces at unprecedented speed – achieving far more than either could alone.

The joint venture will create interconnecting villages on the outskirts of Gilston which will be set within 660 hectares of public open space, restored historic parkland, meadows and woodland. The six walkable villages will deliver 8,500 homes, including at least 1,950 affordable homes contributing significantly to East Hertfordshire’s long-term housing strategy and helping to ease pressure on local families, first-time buyers and key workers.
The network of interconnected villages has been designed from the outset as a pioneering new model for 21st century intergenerational living that balances town and country living and places wellbeing and access to nature at its heart.
The recently approved Strategic Landscape Masterplan (SLMP) confirms the depth of this vision, securing 15km of heritage trails, over 410 hectares of integrated green spaces as well as orchard and allotments that make it a place where people can reconnect with nature in their daily lives.
The joint venture will deliver for future generations as well as provide much needed homes in the area to support the existing local community.
It is forecast to generate over £6 billion in economic impact, creating thousands of local jobs, apprenticeships and new opportunities for local businesses across Hertfordshire. Plans also include 29,000 sqm of commercial space, supporting a circular local economy alongside a long-term stewardship model designed to ensure the community continues to thrive for future generations. The development’s commercial space will create new opportunities for start-up businesses and nurture innovative and entrepreneurial community concepts.
The joint venture comes shortly after government launched the National Housing Bank and committed to seven new towns across the UK as part of its ambition to build 1.5 million homes by 2029.
“It also amplifies the strength of collaboration, ambition and bold rethinking on how communities can live, move and grow; and highlights how social value can reshape the future of new towns”.
Greg Reed, CEO of Places for People comments:
“The UK cannot meet its housing targets without partnerships that deliver differently. Our vision for this development is a new blueprint for modern garden towns, shaped by deep community insight and a commitment to doing things the right way from day one.
”By combining Places for People’s long-term stewardship and social value approach with Barratt Redrow’s exceptional capability to deliver homes at scale and like-minded approach to social value, we can accelerate one of the most significant new communities in the UK.
“This partnership unlocks delivery at a pace and scale that neither organisation could achieve alone and ensures we deliver the infrastructure, green space and high-quality homes that people deserve.
“They say the best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago, and with Gilston we did just that. It’s taken two decades to get to this point, and now we are ready to roll.”
David Thomas, Chief Executive at Barratt Redrow, comments:
“Working with Places for People offers the opportunity to show what large-scale, responsible, community-led development looks like.
“Our new joint venture will deliver up to 8,500 new homes, featuring our three brands, Barratt Homes, David Wilson Homes and Redrow, plus Places for People, so giving customers the best possible choice for their new home. This is a once-in-a-generation project where we can create a modern garden town, connecting people to nature, and growing with the community.”
For further information visit: Gilston Park Estate – Homepage
Note
YH has asked for a start and completion date and will update when we get a reply.
Where does Harlow figure in these plans? It reads like a wall will be erected along the county border, and these dwellings will impact only Hertfordshire.
It doesn’t. It’s all in Hertfordshire
All aboard the gravy train
It's amazing how they go out if their way to never mention Harlow or Essex. But I'm guessing a lot of the residents will want to use the M11...
Mark, Why should they as it’s wholly in Hertfordshire. But these new residents will probably be doing their shopping in Harlow. The new Eastern Crossing is due to start construction in May, that is designed to divert traffic for the M11 away from Edinburgh Way. But how the junction with the A1184 at Harlow Mill will cope is anybody’s guess
Stuart, I believe the Eastern (Stort) crossing will connect to Edinburgh Way at the Riverway roundabout eventually, which is why the eastern section of Edinburgh Way was dualled. The new crossing will reduce traffic flowing towards the station from the North notwithstanding the new estate will increase traffic. However, I believe traffic will be diverted along Riverway at some point which is way the new Beefeater junction was built. It may be chaotic!!!
I love the way building on green fields is sold as "connecting people to nature". But, I get that we need new houses
Stuart J, you did a good job of answering your own question.
I was led to believe it is 7 villages, but traffic and not enough gp ,not enough hospitals to support all these people is such a short sighted issue,nature my arse they just want to build on everything East herts and Essex project stinks ,so sad to loose farm land
More traffic chaos. Build all these new homes without roads to compensate. I live in Gilden park and there's only one way into town
David forman, the greens fought really hard to get this stopped, so did the alliance. Between us,. Over 7,000 signatures In Harlow alone. We were devastated. We done all we could to stop this. This was all done long before the plans had been agreed, so don't make things up. We all worked bloody hard to stop theses monstrosity s, that they call villages. If any one should hang there heads in shame it's Harlow council, who did not want to speak to us, or hear us. And as for heartford , frends of Latton Island wasn't allowed to sit in the meeting, we had to watch on a screen downstairs. Shocking, absolutely shocking ,how theses two council s, blocked us out. If the greens are quite on this , it's not because we have forgotten, or lost interest, we were heartbroken truth be known, because we lost the fight. And theses two council s should be ashamed of themselves . Harlow people, frends of Latton Island ,and the green party, done all they could to stop this destruction, a destruction that Harlow has never seen before . You know who to blame, councils chasing the money, with no infrastructure in place, we were told this.
I recommend all to leave harlow as soon as possible
To Kim O'Connor - I just wanted to take the opportunity to say thank you to you and your team for all your efforts in attempting to get this project blocked. Of course not the outcome we wanted (I think we are kidding ourselves if for a second we believed this wasn't a done deal from the start), but you all tried and you put up the best fight possible. Any Harlow resident not acknowledging and appreciating the work in the background of a very few to at least try to stop this town becoming a giant building site needs to have a good think!
8500 homes ,to make it simple 2 persons and 1 child under the age of 12 per home. So 25,500 person in the area. Have planning lot into the provision of school, GP and most of all the aging PAH. We need housing but we also need the support services to go with it. This large influx of people will put even more strain on the already broken service
Goodbye to the River Stort as we know it! Goodbye to five badger setts being destroyed and relocated (?) along the route! Goodbye to historical points of interest in Harlow, such as the area reported to be Queen Boudica's meeting point to rally her troops. Goodbye to the site of Harlows first open air swimming pool. Goodbye to wildlife! Goodbye to nature! Welcome wildlife injuries and wildlife deaths. Welcome to the toxic chemicals leaching into the Stort and into the atmosphere from the old landfill site being unearthed. Welcome to the noise pollution. Welcome destruction and devastation! Yes the Harlow Green Party were involved in the protest against this awful monstrosity crossing!! Friends of Latton Island carried out extensive research and our own Julie Taylor for Mark Hall compiled the most informative in depth document on the destruction and the pollution this build will cause. We marched, protested, collected signatures, and attended meetings. Did Harlow council listen? NO! Did Harlow council care? NO! So please, dont anyone accuse us of not bothering!! Yes we are quiet on the matter now because what can we do now? Everyone gave it their all and we lost the fight. The facts, figures and signatures were given to the council and the judicial review turned down. The core of the Harlow Green Party executive team at one point were made up almost entirely of main campaigners from Friends of Latton Island and the Save Our Stort campaign.
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