THE Duke of Fife has instructed Shepherd Chartered Surveyors to invite interest from housebuilders to increase ‘significantly’ the number of homes at Chapelton.
The new community lies five miles south of Aberdeen and is being built on land partly owned by David, the Duke of Fife, a director of the Elsick Development Company which is overseeing the development.
Shepherd is now offering prime residential development sites for sale at Wester Cairnhill, Chapelton. Wester Cairnhill is a 12.60 hectares site comprising 313 dwellings across two phases.
A range of commercial development opportunities are also available within the development, including land available for retail development and a care home site.
Chris Grinyer, managing partner at Shepherd, said, “In this latest stage of development, we are seeking to simplify the design and streetscapes to make it available to a broader market.
“This means finding a compromise to accommodate housebuilders’ own range of house types to be used and built out at Chapelton with EDC continuing to control certain elements to ensure continuity across the entire development.”
Designed to follow the precedent set by neighbouring historic towns, the settlement is compact and mixed-use, with shops, parks, and schools within walking distance of all residences.
Chapelton offers a contrast to single-use suburban development, in which residences are separated from business development, shops, and schools. Instead, the masterplan creates a network of mixed-use neighbourhoods, each of which can be traversed in five minutes on foot, from centre to edge, with the larger town centre spanning a ten-minute walk.
The integrated design-led structure enables Chapelton residents to lead a less car-dependent environmentally-sustainable lifestyle, and to gain a greater sense of community through use of local facilities, Shepherd explained.
Mr Grinyer added, “Adapting the best traditions of Scottish town design for modern living, from an extensive range of new homes and schools, through to a lively town centre, Chapelton offers a variety of properties suitable for all ages, incomes, and needs.”
The Duke of Fife commented, “The architecture at Chapelton, like its urban design, is drawn from local tradition and historic precedents of patterns and details found in settlements across Aberdeenshire.
“Under the Chapelton masterplan, 820 hectares of mainly agricultural land is transformed into a town centre and seven surrounding neighbourhoods. A network of roads and open spaces weaves throughout, connecting each neighbourhood and the houses within them.
“While the scale of development is significant, the scale of design is human: each neighbourhood centre is located to be no more than five or so minutes’ walk from the edge.
“Every neighbourhood contains a mix of housing types – from flats, to terraces, to large farm steadings – to enable a rounded population from the young to the old and a range of environments from urban to rural.”
Mr Grinyer concluded, “We anticipate much interest from housebuilders to take up this opportunity to participate in this latest stage of development where the simplification of design and streetscapes will broaden its market appeal.”