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With trimmed lawns, well-maintained roads and stunning views of the Channel, you’d expect these four- and five-bedroom homes on the Kent coast to be in high demand.
The hilly cul-de-sac has a playground with a faded slide and a fire-engine rocker - but it has been a long time since children ran between the houses.
Every window is covered in steel shutters, front doors bolted, garages locked. The only sound is the wind in the trees, and my footsteps as they echo across the pavement.
This is Old Park Close in Dover – the former married officers’ estate for Old Park Barracks. Once home to Army families, it has been empty for years.
Indeed, walking through it is like stepping back into the 1990s, when the barracks closed.
It is all looked after, but eerily quiet – a neighbourhood without neighbours.
Unlike other abandoned estates, there is no sense of collapse. The whole place looks ready to be lived in, yet it is completely still.
While efforts have been made to keep people out, residents say Dover teenagers are often spotted there.
The houses themselves are large and typical of their era. They are the kind of family homes that would now fetch huge sums if they were on the open market.
Some are draped with ivy, with satellites rusting and tiles coming loose, but others stand almost pristine, waiting for someone to pull the shutters down and breathe life into this once-vibrant neighbourhood.
Old Park Barracks was first built in the 1930s and went on to play an important role during the Second World War.
In later decades, it became home to the Royal Corps of Signals. Old Park Close was where soldiers’ families were based – children growing up on its quiet cul-de-sacs while parents went to work at the camp across the road.
When the barracks closed in the 1990s, Army families started leaving too. Houses were shuttered, and the garages locked.
The Ministry of Defence put the 225-acre Old Park Barracks up for sale in 1991, with the caveat that the 91 acres of woodland was to be preserved.
The houses on the site were still occupied by the Argyll and Sutherland Highland Regiment and were being considered for retention.
While there were ideas of converting the site into a sports college, in 1992, the homes were included in the package of MOD houses sold to Annington Homes.
They were still empty in 1996 when the decision was taken that the families of Gurkhas, stationed in Hong Kong, were to be returned to Nepal prior to the Transfer of Sovereignty on July 1, 1997.
In a letter to The Times newspaper, Chris Barnett, the then-director of health and housing at Dover District Council, put the case for 120 Gurkhas and their families to be housed in the still-empty homes at Old Park.
But Annington Homes did not take up the idea.
Since then, it has remained in this strange suspended state. The homes are now all unoccupied, with the last family understood to have moved out five years ago.
It is surplus to requirements at the moment, though there are a lot of what-ifs and maybes to be answered.
The MOD is exploring the possibility of re-using it for military accommodation, and has also considered asking Dover District Council if it would want to take on the site.
If both schemes fall through, it will go on the open market, where a developer would surely demolish it and double the number of homes here.
Cllr James Back, whose ward includes the estate, told KentOnline it’s “almost like it’s out of sight, out of mind”.
“Could the council have done more to try and get them back or even purchase them or rent them? I think so,” said Cllr Back.
“I don't think that any properties should be standing empty wherever; it doesn't matter where they are or who they belong to, they shouldn't be standing empty.
“It wouldn't be that difficult to come up with some way of being able to use them as council properties.”
Dover is a town shaped by its military past. From the Western Heights to Fort Burgoyne, reminders of the Army are everywhere.
Old Park Close is part of that history – not a ruin, not a redevelopment site, but a perfectly preserved echo of a different era.
Standing at the top of the road, looking down at the houses, you cannot help but imagine the life that once filled it.
Soldiers’ children racing their bikes, barbecues on summer evenings, cars parked outside every garage. The shell of it all remains – the only thing missing are the people.
Old Park Close is Dover’s frozen estate. A place where time has stood still, where the lawns are neat, the houses intact, but the community long gone.