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Bexley is the first subject of a borough-by-borough analysis by the Port of London Authority (PLA), highlighting strategic opportunities to increase use of the tidal Thames for communities, businesses and recreation, and enhance its natural environment.
Supporting the PLA’s delivery of the Thames Vision 2050, the Tidal Thames Masterplan will detail the potential to boost trade, travel, sport and the environment along the 95-mile course of the river, between Teddington in west London and the North Sea.
Following a six-week public consultation it launched in July 2023, the PLA has today (6 December) unveiled the first instalment of the Tidal Thames Masterplan, covering the outer-London borough of Bexley.
Among the opportunities identified is the introduction of Bexley's first River Bus station, connecting the borough with central London.
Spanning the Thames-side towns of Belvedere, Erith and Slade Green, the borough’s large river front includes seven safeguarded wharves, used for the annual transportation of around two million tonnes of cargo on the river. This is a number set to be increased through the re-activation of vacant and under-used wharves such as Standard Wharf, Erith, which recently received planning permission to restart the transportation of construction materials and other cargos.
Housing growth in the borough is set to increase Bexley’s population from 246,500 in 2021 to approximately 267,800 by 2041. At least 10,800 jobs are also expected to be created locally over this period. If adequate infrastructure is provided, the Bexley Growth Strategy (2017) indicates that a further 10,000 homes and 6,700 jobs could be added by 2050.
Key areas of focus identified in the PLA's first Masterplan are:
The potential for environmental improvements, such as living walls, litter reduction and saltmarsh restoration is outlined in the Masterplan too. Such initiatives are potential beneficiaries of the Biodiversity Net Gain scheme, to be introduced by the Environment Bill 2021 which comes into force next year. This requires developers to boost the local environment when planning construction works.
Investment to tackle the risk of flooding in the borough, associated with rising sea levels, is also highlighted. The Environment Agency’s Thames Estuary 2100 plan sets out how organisations and communities can work together to manage this.
A consultation launched 10 July 2023 by the Port of London Authority gives the public the chance to comment on plans to maximise the benefits of developments affecting the River Thames in the London Borough of Bexley.
Running till 21 August 2023, the consultation is the first in a series that will cover all 22 local authorities bordering the tidal Thames, stretching 95 miles, from Teddington in west London to the coast.
Comments on the draft plan can be made via the masterplan website, or sent to: [email protected].