Oldham plans for UK's biggest urban farm and eco-park submitted
- Published
Proposals for what could be the UK's biggest urban farm and eco-park have been submitted for planning approval.
Oldham Council hopes the 160-acre Northern Roots project at Snipe Clough will welcome 100,000 visitors a year.
The plans for the site include a visitor and learning centre, a natural amphitheatre and a swimming pond.
Councillor Abdul Jabbar said it would be "an exceptional community resource... offering a wide array of opportunities and benefits".
The Local Democracy Reporting Service said the scheme would be partly funded by the council's successful £24.4m Towns Fund bid, with an additional £1m coming from the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation and almost £600,000 from the Community Renewal Fund.
The plans for the site, which sits alongside Grade II-listed Alexandra Park, also include a forestry depot, a community allotment and a cafe.
The documents suggest it could host outdoor performances, weddings, festivals and workshops.
The project would also see two existing football pitches on the site upgraded and two others relocated to a new plot.
A car park would also be created in Nether Hey Street and a number of what developers say would be cycling and walking route improvements would be created nearby.
If approved, building work could begin later in the year.
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