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Tesco on former Herne Bay Golf Club site in doubt as Quinn Estates changes planning application strategy

A CGI image of what the Tesco on the Herne Bay Golf Club development would have looked like if it had gone ahead
A CGI image of what the Tesco on the Herne Bay Golf Club development would have looked like if it had gone ahead

Plans for a Tesco on the outskirts of Herne Bay have been thrown into doubt after a planning application for a major development was stalled.

Developer Quinn Estates has put on hold proposals to build a sports hub and supermarket on the former golf club site, after it's understood questions were raised over Tesco’s commitment to the scheme.

The official line is that negotiations with the retail giant – the third largest in the world – are “ongoing”.

Quinn Estates managing director Mark Quinn
Quinn Estates managing director Mark Quinn

Yet the delay has been significant enough to force a rethink in strategy for Quinn Estates, which planned to build the supermarket and sports hub first before gaining planning approval for 400 homes and commerical properties.

Managing director Mark Quinn exclusively told the Gazette this would not rule out approaching other supermarkets or getting rid of a store all-together.

The company now aims to submit a planning application for all its proposals together, which it says will ensure “certainty and deliverability”.

He said: “We may consider not having a supermarket or having a small one. At the moment we are still negotiating with Tesco and we are not going to talk elsewhere until negotiations are resolved one way or the other.

“It will either have a food store or it won’t. There will be housing there instead and some other mixed houses.”

Once the outcome of negotiations with Tesco is clear, Quinn Estates aims to submit its new all-encompassing planning application iat the end of the year.

It then hopes to gain planning permission by this time next year, with work beginning from the middle of 2014.

Mr Quinn insists housing would be built after roads and the sports hub were put in place, including a state-of-the-art clubhouse and football, hockey and cricket pitches.

He said: “We have decided after much careful consideration that what’s important is delivering what we say we are going to.

“The way we answer that is master planning the entire scheme and delivering it.

Plans for a sports hub were turned down by councillors
Plans for a sports hub were turned down by councillors

“We don’t want to get planning for something and it then not to go ahead. By doing the whole scheme at once, we gain certainty and deliverability.”

This latest development indicates that fears over Tesco’s desire to come to Herne Bay may have been a long-running concern at Quinn Estates.

In February, Mr Quinn insisted to the Gazette his development was not reliant on a Tesco superstore being opened, but that having one would create jobs for local people and give them more shopping choice.

Mr Quinn added: “This development will definitely happen. What we are doing ensures that.

“All our plans are doing is evolving. They may or may not include a supermarket but we hope it does.

“We are waiting to see the outcome of these negotiations.”

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