Oakgrove, Milton Keynes

Oakgrove is a district of Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire, England. As of 2010, it is undeveloped but plans for its development are pending approval.[1] The 30 hectares (74 acres) site is envisaged to accommodate 1,300 new homes and anticipated to be complete by 2017, with a large portion of the district remaining reserved as linear park to accommodate the flood plain of the river Ouzel.

Location

Oakgrove is bounded by the grid roads Brickhill St to the east, Chafron Way to the south and by the Ouzel to the west and north. Oakgrove is a small district because it is nominally in the same grid square as the Woolstones (to its west) but is separated from them by the wide flood plain of the Ouzel, which is a linear park in normal times.[2] To its east lies Middleton and Monkston is to its south.

History and archaeology

The name of the district is based on a 1685 estate map, which use the name Oak Grove for a part of this area.[3] Much of it was a quarry in historic times, providing stone for nearby Broughton.[4] and consequently, despite appearances, is treated as a brownfield site for planning purposes.

Archaeological investigations of the district revealed a Bronze Age barrow, a Saxon farm, and an Iron Age village and well.[5]

See also

References

  1. "Oakgrove planning application gives confidence boost to Milton Keynes " (Press release, Milton Keynes Partnership
  2. Flood plain layer The Environment Agency "What's in my backyard?"
  3. "Milton Keynes Heritage" (poster, 2004, no ISBN) - English Partnerships
  4. Landfill layer The Environment Agency "What's in my backyard?"
  5. "Milton Keynes Heritage" (poster, 2004, no ISBN) - English Partnerships

Coordinates: 52°02′N 0°43′W / 52.04°N 0.72°W / 52.04; -0.72

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.