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Bright future for Old Kent Road with new bridge mural as growth strategy progresses

Current day-Old Kent Road has been celebrated in a colourful new mural as plans for the area’s future growth are progressed by Southwark Council.
A Home from Home mural, Old Kent Road

Current day-Old Kent Road has been celebrated in a colourful new mural as plans for the area’s future growth are progressed by Southwark Council.

Old Kent Road bridge now proudly boasts a mural celebrating the local area’s diversity. The artwork features spaces and buildings in Old Kent Road that help connect people and give a sense of 'a home from home'. This includes places of worship, restaurants and community halls. 

The mural falls under Southwark Stands Together, the council's race equality programme. Under this work, the council is making sure all communities are represented in the built world around them.

The brief was developed with the local community including residents, businesses and the Southwark Young Advisors. The team also worked closely with children from Kender primary school on the designs, with the school’s art specialist Nicola McCaffrey playing a key role in the process.

She said: “The project offered our Year 6 children the opportunity to experience first-hand the process of taking an initial design brief through to completion and seeing their designs interpreted on the bridge. This real-life experience gave the children confidence and I am sure will have a lasting impact as they move on to secondary school”.

The project is one part of the wider transformation of Old Kent Road, which marked a major milestone yesterday (20 November). At full Council Assembly, it was agreed that the proposed growth strategy for the area (known as the Old Kent Road Area Action Plan) was ready to go to final statutory consultation before being submitted to the Planning Inspector.

Thousands of local people and businesses have fed back on different versions of the plan since the council began consulting in 2016, helping inform the final submission version. This includes:

  • the delivery of the Bakerloo line extension
  • 20,000 homes, of which at least 7,000 would be affordable 
  • 10,000 new jobs
  • a network of youth facilities at locations including 231 Old Kent Road, Leyton Square, Frensham Street Park and the Tustin estate
  • four new parks at Mandela Way, at the old gasworks, along the old Grand Surrey Canal route and at Frensham Street.

It has been full steam ahead on the housing delivery outlined in the draft plan; Old Kent Road is the busiest Opportunity Area in London in respect of new housing. Since 2018, Southwark Council has approved 9,500 homes – an average of 1,500 approvals per year. Over 3,000 homes have been built, under construction or about to start on site, of which 51% are affordable and 30% are social rent.

Cllr Helen Dennis, cabinet member for new homes and sustainable development, said:It is so fitting that Old Kent Road’s beautiful new mural centres on the theme of ‘home’. It’s part of our renewal of the area which is bringing thousands of much-needed new homes to Old Kent Road. We are greenlighting more new home planning consents in Old Kent Road than any other opportunity area in London, strengthening the case for funding of the Bakerloo line extension.

“Our Area Action Plan for Old Kent Road is about making sure local people reap all the benefits of the area’s future growth and development. It sets out how Old Kent Road will evolve with an innovative mix of new homes, parks, shops and industry, working side by side in this thriving neighbourhood. The adoption of the plan will be a huge step towards realising our ambition to make the Old Kent Road area a truly sustainable and family-friendly community, while delivering on all six Southwark 2030 goals.”

The Southwark 2030 goals are:

  • Decent homes for all
  • A healthy environment
  • A good start in life
  • Staying well
  • A strong and fair economy
  • A safe Southwark

Now approved at Council Assembly, the Old Kent Road Area Action Plan will undergo a further six-week period of consultation. Subject to there being no further significant changes following that consultation, this will be the version that undergoes an Examination in Public (EiP) by the Secretary of State’s Planning Inspectors in the summer of 2025.

Date
21 November 2024