

1
2
9
5
3
8
North of The Boulevard
County Buildings
Parkside Car Park
Opportunity Sites
6/ Crawley Museum:
Opening early
2017, the new Crawley Museum will be
situated in the town centre’s oldest
building, The Tree. The Grade II listed
building, originating in 1280, is undergoing
major renovation and will provide more
space for the museum society within a
town centre location.
7/ Former Sussex House site:
Completed at the end of 2013, this
major redevelopment comprises a new
Travelodge, Morrisons supermarket,
Caribbean restaurant Turtle Bay and
dessert outlet, Creams.
8/ Decathlon:
Crawley town centre is now
home to Europe’s largest sports retailer,
Decathlon. The store opened in October
2016, transforming a large, central unit
and offering around 30 new jobs.
9/ Queens Square:
Now underway, this
£3.2m regeneration project will see the
heart of the town centre transformed.
Featuring new paving, lighting, landscaping,
seating and a water feature, work should
be complete by autumn 2017.
County Buildings:
1.05 hectares of
20th century office-administrative
buildings. Redevelopment should
strive toward creating a vibrant
and independent, mixed-use town
centre quarter.
North of the Boulevard:
At 2.9
hectares, The Boulevard is one of the
town centre’s key east-west vehicle
arteries via a wide tree-lined road.
Regeneration should establish the
area as Crawley’s grand axis in the
true sense of the word boulevard –
mixed use.
Parkside car park:
0.12 hectares
of very central land – currently used
as a surface car park. Regenerate
the underutilised car park with a
mixed-use development, strengthening
links to Memorial Gardens and the
retail centre.
Cross Keys, Church Walk, The
Broadway:
0.09 hectares – very
central. Regeneration should create
a vibrant area, activating unused
areas, increased permeability and
strengthening of perimeter sites.
Key component to development will
be creating intrigue and interest.
Traders Market and Brittingham
House:
0.09 hectares of former
lock-up market stalls. Regeneration
should complement the High Street
conservation area with a sympathetic
mixed-use in-fill development.