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Site owner seeks to increase value of property ahead of LTC landgrab

By Christine Sexton - Local Democracy Reporter   6th Dec 2025

Gammels Staples Farmhouse
Gammels Staples Farmhouse

THE owner of a property earmarked for compulsory purchase to make way for the £10 billion Lower Thames Crossing has applied for permission to build two homes on the site in a bid to establish its value.

Gammon Staples Farmhouse in Orsett sits on land required for the controversial £10 billioninfrastructure project. The scheme, granted development consent in June 2024 but as yet far from fully funded despite the addition of another £891m to the build fund in last month's budget, includes a northern link road that will run directly across the site.

To determine compensation, the owner has submitted an application to Thurrock Council for a Certificate of Appropriate Alternative Development (CAAD). This identifies what development would likely have been approved if the Lower Thames Crossing did not exist, helping calculate the land's market value in a "no scheme world."

The detached home on Baker Street was sold for £500,000 in 2007 but its current market value as a single property is estimated at £812,000. according to website 'The Move Market', it is the third most expensive property in its postcode.  Other valuation sites rate its sale price as high as £927,000.

The supporting statement argues that the one-acre site on Baker Street, meets the National Planning Policy Framework's definition of "Grey Belt." It claims the land makes only a negligible contribution to green belt purposes and is free from environmental or heritage constraints.

The proposal cites Thurrock's chronic housing shortage as justification, noting the borough has one of the worst housing land supply positions in the country. Thurrock has failed to meet its housing targets in 19 of the past 22 years, delivering just 55 per cent of identified need between 2001 and 2021.

The shortfall now stands at nearly 9,744 homes, with almost 5,000 households on the housing register and average waiting times of four years.

The application states: "In the absence of the Lower Thames Crossing, the evidence supports the grant of a CAAD for two dwellings at Gammon Staples Farmhouse."

If approved, the certificate could increase the compensation payable when National Highways acquires the land under compulsory purchase powers.

     

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Iainthompson

I remember when we thought huge misplaced, badly designed road carving through the middle of Thurrock was all we had to worry about.
Now we live in a communist dictatorship.


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