This plan is an update of the 2003 Bargoed Town Centre Action Plan. It is intended to provide a context for an intense period of regeneration of the town centre over the next 3 years.
COPIES OF THE Plan can be obtained from;
The Chief Planning Officer,
Caerphilly County Borough Council
Council Offices
Pontllanfraith
Blackwood
NP12 2YW
Tel. 01495 235067
This Town Centre Action Plan was
adopted as Supplementary Planning Guidance by Caerphilly county
borough council at its meeting on . . .
1. The Need for a new Action Plan 4
2. Maintaining the Momentum 5
3. Why is Bargoed Town Centre so important? 9
4. Strategic Context and Policy Framework 10
5. Evidence Base 14
6. SWOT Analysis 17
7.
Vision and Objectives
20
8. Town centre Strategy 21
9 Proposals
22
10.
Implementation
27
Plans:
1) Upper Rhymney Valley – Settlement Roles 9
2)
LDP Spatial Strategy
13
3)
10, 20 and 30 minute drive times from
Bargoed
18
4) Themed Areas 25
5) Proposals plan 26
6) Development Brief Masterplan for the Retail Plateau 29
1. The need for a new action plan
The announcement by the Welsh Assembly Government that funding would be provided for Bargoed’s long-awaited relief road highlighted the need for an up to date action plan for the regeneration of the town centre to take advantage of the road scheme. The result was the Bargoed Town Centre Action Plan which was approved in August 2003.
Since that time events have moved rapidly on and there is now a need to update the Action Plan to take account of;
Most of the new proposals in this plan have therefore already been approved by the Council but there is a need to consolidate these decisions into an overall strategy for the town centre by updating the 2003 plan.
The Purpose of the Action Plan
This Action plan has three main purposes;
1)
To provide a comprehensive framework for the regeneration of
Bargoed town centre
2)
To provide support and a context for bids for grant aid for the
regeneration process
3)
As supplementary planning guidance to the approved Unitary
Development Plan and the emerging Local Development Plan
4) To promote Bargoed town centre as an investment opportunity for the private sector
For nearly 100 years the prosperity of Bargoed depended on the local collieries, which employed thousands of workers in their heyday. Following the closure of the last colliery in 1977, Bargoed suffered from a steady spiral of decline. Since 1994 substantial steps have taken place to reverse this trend and lay the foundations for a sustainable prosperous future for the town and the surrounding communities that depend on Bargoed for shops and services.
•
1994-2000 (in two phases) the £14 million Bargoed Colliery
Reclamation Scheme funded by the Welsh Development Agency. This
removed the colliery buildings and spoil tip and created the
landform for a relief road and new development.
•
Commercial Improvement Grants to shopfronts in the town centre.
From 1987 to 2005 113 improvement grants totalling £873,296
were implemented.
•
1998 and ongoing – Development of the Parc Coedtir country
park. - 89 hectares of country park centred on the River Rhymney
and linking the communities of Bargoed, Aberbargoed, Gilfach and
Brittania
•
1999 - the Bargoed town centre Northern Car Park scheme, which
provided a high quality enhanced 170 space car park for the town
centre incorporating a new viewing platform overlooking the
valley.
•
1999 - CCTV introduced into the town centre to help combat
anti-social behaviour.
•
2000 - Bargoed steps - a spectacular new improved pedestrian link
from the enhanced car park to the main shopping street.
Complemented by the provision of 20 disabled parking spaces and
ramped route to the town centre.
•
2000 - Bargoed northern railway station enhancement, including a
new disabled lift/bridge across the railway lines plus a taxi rank
and environmental enhancements.
•
2001 - Bargoed Northern Gateway - a vastly improved entrance to the
northern part of the town centre, opening up spectacular views of
St Gwladys Church through replacing run down and derelict
commercial premises with a landscaped car park, bus stop and
disabled ramp access to the Church.
•
In 2004 a Town Centre Development Manager was appointed for the
principal main towns in the county borough, including
Bargoed.
•
2004 onwards - Following the appointment of the Town Centre
Development Manager, a programme of annual events has been
initiated including ‘Bargoed Big Bed’ and
‘Bargoed Big Screen’. In addition a new town centre
‘brand’ was developed, ‘Bargoed’s Big
Idea’ which has been successfully rolled out across a number
of different marketing platforms including; lamppost banners,
window stickers and a ‘Windows Of Opportunity’
document.
•
Minor environmental improvements to spaces in the town centre have
been carried out ahead of the road scheme including the paved space
in front of the SPAR shop (2006) and a landscaped area in place of
the demolished 45 Hanbury Road (2007).
•
In 2005 The Council and the WDA employed consultants Camlin
Lonsdale to study the regeneration potential of the town centre.
Their proposals included a radical and spectacular proposal for
demolition of town centre properties, including the library and
their replacement by a huge multi-level mixed use development. This
aspect of the plan was subsequently approved by the Council
•
In 2006 the Council started acquiring 13 properties required to be
demolished to allow the ambitious retail redevelopment scheme to go
ahead with the help of a grant from the Heads of the Valleys
Programme.
•
In 2007 work finally commenced on the two-year construction
programme for the relief road, to be named ‘Angel Way’.
The scheme, significantly titled ‘The Greater Bargoed
Community Regeneration Scheme’ includes spectacular
structures bridging the river Rhymney and the railway line.
•
As part of the same contract, work commenced on creating the 2.2
hectare ‘Retail Plateau’ for development in the south
of the town centre.
•
Complementing the new road network has been a significant
improvement in the rail service to Bargoed in 2007. The town is now
the only major town in the Heads of the Valleys Programme Area to
have four trains an hour to Cardiff. In 2008 the carriage capacity
of trains on the Rhymney Valley line was increased from two to
four, doubling the passenger capacity of each train.
•
2007 & 2008 With support from the Heads of the Valleys
Programme, housing associations have acquired run down properties
in the town centre for renewal and new uses, including the
relocated health facilities and town library, which are being
facilitated by the United Welsh Housing Association.
•
2007 - The Council and the Welsh Assembly Government commissioned
consultants Barton Willmore to draw up a detailed brief for the
retail plateau at the southern end of the town centre and employed
Cooke and Arkwright to market the site to prospective developers.
Consultants also provided an Arts Strategy for the town
centre.
•
Thirteen development companies expressed an interest in the site as
a result of the marketing exercise and from these a short list of
five was invited to make formal bids and proposals for the site,
based on the brief.
•
In 2008 a ‘Preferred Developer’ was approved for the
scheme. The Council and its partners will work with the Preferred
Developer to deliver a high quality comprehensive retail and
leisure development by 2012.
•
In late 2008 the conversion of the former job centre into a new
home for the town’s health centre was completed and the
health facilities were able to relocate from the old library
building.
•
November 2008 also saw the opening of 90% of the Angel Way relief
road.
• Early in 2009 the first phase of the construction of the Retail Developent Plateau was completed, including the exterior earth-reinforced retaining structure and ‘town wall’.
The sum total of all these developments has been that by the end of
2009 the public authorities will have spent over £50 million
in laying the foundations for the long term, sustainable
regeneration of the town to make it a focus for the regeneration of
the whole of the Upper Rhymney Valley. This will complement a
£30 million redevelopment scheme to be implemented by the
private sector.
This plan is an update of the 2003 Town Centre Action Plan, which was the subject of extensive public consultation during its preparation. Subsequently the Camlin Lonsdale Study was produced, again following extensive consultation, both with the general public and with stakeholder groups such as the town council, the local access group and the chamber of trade.
Localised consultation exercises have taken place with residents and businesses in the vicinity of particular schemes, such as the landscaping of the No.45 Hanbury road site, resulting in significant changes from the original proposal.
Throughout this process, plans and proposals have been monitored by a town centre partnership – the Bargoed Town centre Management Group, on which sit representatives of the county borough council, the town council, the chamber of trade, the police, voluntary sector organisations and local residents.
A standing exhibition was set up in premises in Hanbury Road in 2007. Initially this showed progress on the relief road scheme but it is also being used to publicise and inform regeneration proposals, in particular the proposed retail and leisure redevelopment.
Working parties of officers from relevant council departments and public sector partners including the Welsh Assembly Government have been set up to monitor and co-ordinate the regeneration projects. Officers report regularly on progress to the Town Centre Management Group, the Council’s Regeneration scrutiny Committee, The Greater Bargoed Partnership and the Heads of the Valleys Monitoring group.
Formal consultation on the draft Action Plan took place over a six week period between September 1st and October 17th 2008.
The consultation included an exhibition in the then library
building at Hanbury Square, presentations to key stakeholder
groups, including the Chamber of Trade, the Town Council and the
Greater Bargoed Partnership and general publicity through press
releases and posters. The exhibition was manned for three days each
week for two weeks of the six week consultation period.
• Firstly, because it is the only ‘principal’ or district centre - ie the only centre which serves a wider locality than its immediate settlement - in the north of Caerphilly County Borough. It contains, for example, 156 Commercial premises, compared to 29 in the next largest centre in that area. The future prospects for the Upper Rhymney Valley are therefore bound up with the future of Bargoed and in particular its town centre.
• Secondly, in an area in which enterprise and business development is poorly developed, the centre contains over 100 independent, locally owned businesses. If an enterprise culture is to grow and thrive in the upper Rhymney Valley, Bargoed town centre is the obvious starting point.
• Thirdly, the town centre, being the most visited location in the upper Rhymney Valley, is inevitably a strong component of the overall image of the area as a whole. For regeneration to take hold in the area as a whole, there has to be change in image and confidence and the town centre has to be the focal point for this change.
• Fourthly, as the local district centre,
Bargoed is the hub of the various transportation networks serving
the area, particularly public transport and plays a crucial role in
the general accessibility of services to the catchment
population.
· Finally, the town centre is a focus of opportunity in an area of deprivation
The above factors are responsible for the increased recognition in local and sub-regional planning and regeneration strategies of the importance and potential of Bargoed.
One of the main Regeneration objectives of the Caerphilly county borough Community Plan is to “support town and village centre and other area based regeneration and develop sustainable tourism opportunities”[3] The Bargoed Town Centre Action Plan is specifically mentioned as part of the Community Plan’s Town and village centre ‘beacon’ project.
THIS ACTION PLAN IS PREPARED UNDER POLICY DC4 OF THE UDP, WHICH PROVIDES FOR SUPPLEMENTARY PLANNING GUIDANCE TO COMPLEMENT THE UDP[4].
Aberbargoed, across the valley from the town centre, and linked to it by the new road, is set to be a significant location for residential development over the next 15 years with several major housing sites totalling over 500 dwellings identified in the Deposit Local Development Plan.
This Town Centre Action Plan is intended to provide Supplementary Planning Guidance to policy CW26 of the LDP when it supersedes the UDP. In the interim it will supplement policy DC4 (above) of the UDP.
This Action Plan will give a provide a context in particular for the following LDP proposals;
HG1.20 Bargoed Retail Plateau housing site
CM1.1 Bargoed town centre retail boundary
CM4.2 Foodstore, Retail, Cinema, residential
CN5.1 Commercial Opportunity Area
CF1.10 Hanbury Road Baptist Church library proposal
TR1.5 cycle links to Bargoed town centre
TR4.2 Bargoed station Park and Ride
Detailed information on the current situation in Bargoed can be found in the Background Reports to this plan (listed on page 22) . This section of the plan contains a brief summary of the principal findings of the Background Reports.
Economic Development
Bargoed sprang into existence towards the end of the industrial revolution following the opening of local collieries in the 1880s. These collieries and in particular Bargoed colliery, formed the foundation of the economic base of the town for nearly a hundred years, until Bargoed colliery closed in 1977.
The Bowen industrial estate at Aberbargoed, developed following the closure of the colliery, is now the only significant employment location area in the locality for manufacturing and distribution businesses.
The town centre was a thriving and important retail and service centre during this period but later declined rapidly in parallel with the decline of the coal industry. The town centre remains an important location for service sector jobs however.
In 2001 the largest employment sector for Bargoed residents was manufacturing (22%) but retailing (17%) was also important. The adjacent wards of Gilfach and Aberbargoed had higher percentages in manufacturing (23% and 31%).
Socio-economic Analysis
Bargoed and the other 12 wards in the Upper
Rhymney and Sirhowy valleys in the Heads of the Valleys programme
area are all ‘Communities First’ wards. That is, they
were all classified as deprived for the purposes of the Welsh
Assembly Government’s regeneration programme. In 2005 a new
classification of deprivation was calculated, based on ‘Local
Super Output Areas (LSOAs) which are smaller units than wards.
There are 4 LSOAs in Bargoed ward, 2 in Aberbargoed and 1 in
Gilfach. Two LSOAs – Bargoed 4 (mainly the Gilfach Fargoed
estate) and Aberbargoed 2 (south of Bedwellty Road) were among the
10% most deprived areas in Wales in 2008.
In general, economic inactivity rates, the
proportion of the population without qualifications and those with
limiting long term illness are much higher than the Welsh average
in Greater Bargoed, contributing to a picture of multiple
deprivation that characterises the Upper Rhymney Valley as a
whole.
Car ownership was significantly lower than the Welsh average in 2001. 26% of Welsh households did not have access to a car in Wales but 37% do not have a car in Bargoed, 35% in Gilfach and 41% in Aberbargoed. Consequently public transport provision is particularly important in this area. Levels of home ownership were around the Welsh average of 71% except in Aberbargoed (58%).
Retail analysis
Footfall info / CACI reports and Drivetime maps
Bargoed is one of six town centres in
Caerphilly county borough that are regularly surveyed and
monitored,. A survey of town centre properties in Bargoed in 2006
identified 156 commercial properties of which 59 were shops, 65
were ‘A3’ units (pubs, cafes and takeaways) or service
premises such as banks and estate agents and 32 were vacant. The
units are generally very small however – the net floorspace
totals only 10220 square metres (2004). There are very few modern
commercial premises in the town and hardly any with rear
servicing.
In 2006 the vacancy rate was 21%
The county borough carries out triennial health checks on all six centres, involving extensive telephone and on street surveys and pedestrian flow counts. The latest survey was carried out in June 2006 and makes generally grim reading for Bargoed. The surveys show that:-
• The proportion of the catchment area buying their weekly convenience goods in Bargoed has fallen consistently from 22% in 1994 to 12% in 2000 and only 0.8% in 2006[5].
• Bargoed maintained its modest share of non-food trade (between 10 and 13%) from 1994 to 2003 but by 2006 this too, had slumped, to 8%
• The proportion of residents regarding the town centre "favourably" declined steadily from 39% in 1994 to 20% in 2000 before reviving slightly to 26 % in 2003. Even so, this was by far the lowest approval rating of the six town centres in the county borough (the next lowest was 56% whilst the highest was 80%). In the 2006 survey, however, the popularity of the town centre hit a new low of 13%.
• 49% of persons interviewed in the town centre had arrived on foot - by far the greatest proportion of any of the six centres, while the proportion arriving by car or van was 30% - low compared to other centres.
• Despite it's location on a railway line, only 2% had arrived by train, compared to 16% by bus.
Leisure facilities
Bargoed has a major park at Heolddu on the western edge of the town and a council run leisure centre also at Heolddu. Although it contains the only swimming pool in the Upper Rhymney Valley, the leisure centre is 30 years old and is part of a comprehensive school and so only available to the public outside of school hours.
Leisure facilities in the town centre are poor with only two pubs and no cinema, theatre, night club, bowling or bingo hall.
There is also the developing asset of the Parc Coedtir – a large country park located between Bargoed and Aberbargoed, criss-crossed by footpaths and cyclepaths.
Public facilities
In 2008 the town centre contained one of three principal public libraries in the county borough. The library building also housed the county borough’s local history centre and contained limited health facilities. There are public toilets at the Hanbury Square bus station.
All these facilities are proposed to relocate in the Action Plan. The health facilities have already relocated to the former job centre building, which has been completely renewed inside and out. The library has moved to temporary premises in St Gwladys Church Hall pending conversion of Bargoed Baptist Chapel as a library and Local Authority ‘Customer First’ facility. The Local History Centre has re-located temporarily to New Tredegar museum. It will eventually return to the new library in Bargoed. The public toilets will be replaced by new toilets at the new bus station at the northern end of the town centre.
•
The new relief road, Angel Way provides fast and easy access to the
town centre, and has relieved the town centre of through
traffic.
•
A new 2 hectare plateau for retail and leisure development has been
created at the southern end of the town centre. It has direct
access from Angel Way.
• Status as a district centre or ‘hub’ for shops and services in sub-regional and local plans
• large number and variety of shops and service units for a district centre.
• Four per hour train service to Cardiff and good bus links
• extensive walk-in trade from adjacent high density residential areas.
• retains a number of national chain stores.
• Town centre now overlooks an attractive country park instead of the colliery complex and tip
•
Independent retailers supported by an active Chamber of Trade
•
Town Centre Manager
• Programme of events to help promote the town
Weaknesses
• Most town centre businesses are in small, 100 year old premises
• Lack of larger units to accommodate national retailers
• lack of investment in new shopping provision whilst competing centres have grown.
• no modern food store with associated parking.
• high vacancy rate - too many commercial units overall.
• very poor and worsening image amongst both users and non-users of the town centre.
• declining patronage from the catchment population.
• narrow, congested highway
system in the town centre - the shopping streets are dominated by
through traffic with shoppers confined to narrow pavements.
• a linear, "strung out" shopping centre with no obvious "heart".
• lack of amenity space in the town centre.
• congested bus station.
• big changes in level between main car parks and shopping areas with poor links between them in the north.
• bus station and railway station located at opposite extremities of the town.
• Very poor but visible environment at rear of properties east of Hanbury Road/High Street
Fig. 3 10, 20 and 30 minute Drive times from Bargoed (pre-Angel Way)
• Demand Potential from 44.000 catchment population within 10 minute drive time, 129,000 within 20 minutes and 350,000 within 20 minutes. (see plan above)
• Accessibility from rest of Rhymney Valley through increased frequency of rail services and
capacity of
trains.
• Increased interest from the private sector attracted by £30million town centre redevelopment scheme.
•
Plans for one-way traffic system and much better shopping street
environment once relief road has removed through traffic
• Potential for business to take advantage of views over country park to the east of the town centre
• Location
of new bus station next to rail station will provide
potential transport interchange.
• Northern part of the town centre has the potential to offer a good environment for employment with excellent transport access in proximity to town centre facilities and a country park
• Competing
retail and leisure centres, at e.g. Merthyr and Blackwood.
• Threat from proposals for out of town retail development
• Internet
shopping
• The 2008-? Recession
There are numerous measures which indicate that Bargoed is the most vulnerable of the County Borough's shopping centres with local residents being attracted to other nearby retail areas. The centre still retains a wide variety of shops and services but desperately needs a modern food store and associated car parking. It has also yet to realise its potential as a centre for jobs and enterprise in the area.
Great opportunities are opening up for Bargoed, however, thanks to extensive investment in basic infrastructure over the past 15 years, with strong signs of interest by the private sector in investing in the town and surrounding area.
7. Vision and Objectives
Vision
An economically strong, accessible and vibrant town centre which provides a focus for shopping, entertainment and public services for the Upper Rhymney Valley in a spectacular and sustainable high quality environment.
Objectives
1.
To secure a major foodstore ‘anchor’ for the town
centre.
2.
To provide and support a wide range of other shops and services in
to the town centre.
3.
To begin to establish Bargoed as a major centre for leisure &
recreation
4.
To begin to establish Bargoed as a centre for office based
employment and tourism
5.
To reduce the impact of traffic and create a pedestrian dominated
town centre.
6.
To facilitate pedestrian movement within the town centre and
particularly between existing shops and car parking areas.
7.
To encourage retail, leisure and employment investment in the town
centre.
8.
To provide improved public services in the town centre
9.
To protect and enhance the town’s built heritage
10. To improve the built
environment and enhance areas of public open space in the town
centre and the approaches to it
.
11. To protect key areas
from theft and vandalism
12. To improve public
transport facilities and accessibility to them.
13. To secure a
‘balanced’ town centre, both in terms of the mix of
shops and facilities offered by the centre and in terms of the
location of new developments and improvements.
14. To ensure that any new
development is of high design quality and meets the Council’s
sustainability criteria and principles.
15. To monitor the economic health and vitality of the town centre
There is a danger that the spectacular development planned for the southern part of the town centre could exacerbate the continued decline of the northern and central areas. Therefore this plan includes significant proposals to regenerate the other areas of the town centre. Building on the investment in public transport facilities in the north of the town centre, efforts will be made to establish a Business Quarter there for office developments and small businesses and services. The move of the library and provision of a customer first centre to the Hanbury Road Baptist chapel will be a boost for the central area, as will improvements to the pedestrian environment of Hanbury Road itself and to the rear of properties overlooking Parc Coedtir.
D1 Phase 2 of the ‘Retail
Plateau’ will include the demolition and clearance of
properties, including the town library building, the creation of an
access road around the eastern perimeter of the site and the
creation of a temporary car park at the southern end of the site.
[1,2,3,7]
D2 A major retail and leisure
development will be sited on the ‘Retail Plateau’
including 500 parking spaces, which will be linked to Hanbury Road
through a pedestrian street and by escalators or lifts within the
development. It will be developed in accordance with the
development brief for the site approved by the Council. [1,2,3,
6]
D3 The Hanbury Road Baptist Chapel will be converted to house the town’s library and family history centre and a customer first centre for public access to Council Services. An area for worship will also be provided within the building. [8,9,13]
D4 Retail development is now
suggested for the former cinema site in Hanbury Square, in
accordance with the Plan’s strategy for this part of the town
centre. Although the site had planning consent for offices, it has
not been implemented and once the Bargoed Retail Plateau
development is open there should be increased demand for retail
space in this part of the town centre. Offices or other ancillary
town centre uses could be accommodated on upper floors. [
2,4,7]
D5 A ‘Business Quarter’ is designated east of High Street in which office developments and other service sector employment will be encouraged. The area is one of the best locations in the county borough for access to public transport, being close to the rail and bus stations, proposed park and ride facility and cyclepath network. It will have direct access from Angel Way. [4, 13]
D6 Public toilets will be provided in the vicinity of the new bus station in the north, replacing those to be removed from the old bus station at Hanbury Square. [8]
M1 Hanbury Road and High Street will be made one-way in a northerly direction following completion of Angel Way. This will facilitate the Plan’s public realm proposals for those streets and Hanbury Square. [5]
M2 A new bus station will be
created at the Northern end of the town centre, close to the
railway station to help create a transport interchange. Secure bike
stands, shelters, waiting areas, a taxi drop off point and public
toilets will be provided here. [12, 13]
M3 new bus stops will be created on the one-way system to improve public transport access to town centre shops and services. [12,13]
M4 A pedestrian link will be created between High Street and the new bus station culminating in a small public space. Two properties in High Street will be demolished to facilitate this. [10,12]
M5 A ‘Park & Ride’ car park will be created at Bargoed railway station to accommodate commuter parking south east of the station, as part of the comprehensive transport interchange. The car park will have direct access off the Angel Way northern roundabout [12]
M6 The town’s railway
station and bus station will be linked to the long distance
cyclepath network. A cycleway/footpath will be constructed within
the Parc Coedtir country park and, via the town centre bus and
railway stations, link with the cycle path to the Darran Valley
country park. [3, 13]
M7 A 3 metre wide ‘promenade’ will be created along the eastern edge of the retail plateau, next to the ‘town wall’ and overlooking the Valley below. It will culminate in a ‘Belvedere’ or viewpoint, overlooking Parc Coedtir and link up with the existing footpath around the Hanbury Road car park. A new footpath will link the car park to the bus station and transport interchange. A continuous walkway will thereby be created along the eastern edge of the town centre, forming part of a wider network of paths in and around Bargoed.
M8 The feasibility of road and traffic management improvements in the area north and west of High Street will be investigated. [5]
M9 Bargoed railway station and approaches will be improved and enhanced. [10, 12]
M10 Gilfach railway halt and
approaches will be improved and enhanced as a public transport
gateway to Parc Coedtir and to the south of the town centre. [10,
12]
M11 An Interim Parking strategy will be
implemented to provide alternative temporary parking provision in
the south of the town centre while existing or former car parks are
being redeveloped. Sites will include the southern part of the
retail plateau, Hanbury Square (after removal of the bus station
and before redevelopment as a new square) and the former Central
Hall site. In the north a temporary car park will be provided west
of the new bus station pending redevelopment of the proposed
Business Quarter.
PR1 Hanbury Road and High Street will be comprehensively improved through pavement widening, restrictions on traffic and parking, enhanced paving and street furniture to provide an attractive, pedestrian friendly environment. [5,6,10]
PR2 The existing bus station area at
Hanbury Square will be replaced by a public square, restoring the
area to its traditional role as the heart of the town, opposite the
entrance to the proposed new shopping development. The Square will
be fronted to the east by a bus stop and a wide pavement, which
could serve as a space for events or a small market.
[5,10]
PR3 Subject to the agreement of the
relevant owners and occupiers, the rear of properties and garden
areas on the East side of Hanbury Road/High Street, overlooking
Parc Coedtir will be improved with the help of grants and
comprehensive enhancement schemes. [10]
G1 The
town centre will be marketed to the private sector for further
investment [7]
G2 Measures will be taken to minimise crime and anti-social behaviour in the town centre. [11]
G3
The Vitality and Viability of the
town centre will be monitored through automatic footfall counters
and regular surveys. [15]
G4 The provision of tourist information in the town centre will be encouraged [4]
G5 All development approved in
the town centre will have to comply with the Council’s and
the Welsh Assembly Government’s sustainability policies.
[14]
G6 Artwork will be incorporated into key spaces, buildings and street furniture in the town centre in accordance with the Bargoed Town Centre Arts Strategy. [10]
G7 Subject to the agreement of the relevant owners and occupiers, key buildings in the town centre will be enhanced through grant aid. [9,10]
It is envisaged that the private sector will play a prominent role in implementing key proposals of this action plan, in particular the major retail and leisure redevelopment at the southern end of town but also through investment in existing premises elsewhere in the town.
Other partners will include the United Welsh Housing Association and the Heads of the Valleys Programme. The latter has provided funds for the former to acquire and refurbish key buildings in the town centre.
Funding
Further grant aid will be sought from the Heads of the Valleys programme but also from the new European Convergence Fund and, where appropriate, bodies such as Cadw or the Lottery funds. Mainstream funding will be provided by the Welsh Assembly Government’s Department of the Economy and Transport regeneration budget and the Council’s Urban Renewal budget.
Phasing
Implementation of the Action Plan’s many proposals will be dependent on funding decisions but the intention is to complete most of the proposals in the period 2009 to 2012. Some of the proposals are imminent and have been worked up in some detail while a few will be subject to further studies and assessments before they can be firmed up. The economic recession that began in 2008 is of unknown duration but is likely to affect the speed of private sector investment in the town centre.
Any phasing plan must therefore be provisional on the above but at the time of Plan approval, the most likely phasing of the Plan’s main proposals is as follows;
2009 Completion of; Angel Way; retail plateau phases 1 and 2 (proposal D1); new toilets (D6); One-way system (M1); new bus station (M2); bus station-High St link (M4); Walkway and Belvedere (M7); Interim car parks (M11). Start on; the new library (D3); Park & Ride (M5); High Street improvements (PR1);
2010 Completion of; Park &
Ride (M5); High Street improvements (PR1); Start on; Retail Plateau
shopping and Leisure complex (D2); Hanbury Road improvements
(PR1);
2011 Completion of; the new library
(D3); Hanbury Road improvements (PR1); Start on; Hanbury Square
civic space (PR2)
2012 Completion of Hanbury Square civic space (PR2) and the Retail Plateau shopping and Leisure complex (D2)
The remaining proposals will be implemented when and as the funding
and the opportunity arises.
Appendix Background reports
Fig. 6 Development Brief Masterplan for Bargoed Retail Plateau
(to be superseded by Developer’s Plans once they have planning consent)
[1] People, Places, Futures: The Wales Spatial Plan 2008 Update Consultation p.99 para 19.4
[2] ibid p. 100, para. 19.7
[3] Caerphilly county borough community plan 2004 p.7
[4] Caerphilly county borough Unitary Development Plan p.34
[5] The survey took place just after the closure of the Kwik Save store and before the opening of the foodstore that replaced it. That undoubtedly accounts for the almost complete absence of convenience trade in the town