Homes and living
By 2030, the Park will be home to more than 10,000 new households, among the first to live in the brand new E20 postcode.
By 2030, the Park will be home to more than 10,000 new households, among the first to live in the brand new E20 postcode.
Our plans will see five new neighbourhoods, planned around green spaces and squares, and built to be lasting homes for those who live in them. They will include contemporary homes taking lessons from London’s traditional Georgian and Victorian squares and terraces, looking out over parklands and waterways.
Around a third of them will be affordable housing, with many of them built for long-term rent as well as to buy. Each neighbourhood provides play areas, schools, nurseries, community spaces, health centres and shops, with places to relax, play and exercise, all within easy walking distance.
With some of the best transport links in the city, including a link to Crossrail by 2019, Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park will be one of the most desirable residential locations in London.
The first of the five new neighbourhoods on the Park, Chobham Manor began welcoming its first residents in 2015.
East Wick will be one of five new communities on the Park, neighbouring Here East, a new hub for the creative and technology industries.
Sweetwater will feature a mix of up to 650 homes including apartments and family homes with private gardens and communal green space alongside the Lee Navigation canal.
Clustered around what was the heart of the Park during the Games, this vibrant neighbourhood will combine new homes with an arts, education and cultural centre featuring shops, restaurants, bars, street art and open air performance space.
A quirky, hidden new neighbourhood along the Greenway south of the Stadium, Pudding Mill will be the Park’s most varied new community. New homes along the water’s edge will sit alongside older buildings and new studios and workshops inspired by the area’s craft heritage.
The area around the Park is home to some of the most exciting residential developments in the city.
East London is one of the most diverse and exciting parts of London – and has a worldwide reputation as a hub for culture, for creativity and for innovation.
Statement on the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park Fixed Estate Charge