The £5.1 million Queen's Gate Housing
project at Cart Street, Clydebank provides the first "eco-friendly"
homes in Clydebank.
The people of Clydebank rightly have a strong sense of identity
and heritage. The development of the waterfront as an
attractive residential location, in no short measure,
will build on this. As improved and new
housing opportunities are realised, more local people will
stay in the area and new people will be attracted into the
town.
It is estimated that in the first five to seven years of the
Clydebank plan delivery, a total of 1200 new homes could be
accommodated on development sites along the river. Clydebank Re-built, the local
regeneration agency, is keen to encourage a mix of house type and
tenure and is working closely with the private landowners on the
riverside and the local housing associations to ensure that there
is a good mix of housing for local people as well as new
residents.
The sheltered housing project which has now been completed
at Rashielee South in Erskine is likely to be the first
of many residential development projects to be
featured in this area.
Clydebank & Erskine / Housing