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Buckshaw Village

Buckshaw Village
Buckshaw village (2).jpg
Buckshaw Village, Chorley
Buckshaw Village is located in Lancashire
Buckshaw Village
Buckshaw Village
Buckshaw Village shown within Lancashire
Population 4,000 
OS grid reference SD562210
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town CHORLEY
Postcode district PR7
Dialling code 01772
Police Lancashire
Fire Lancashire
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Lancashire
53°40′59″N 2°39′50″W / 53.683°N 2.664°W / 53.683; -2.664Coordinates: 53°40′59″N 2°39′50″W / 53.683°N 2.664°W / 53.683; -2.664

Buckshaw Village (often shortened to Buckshaw) is a new residential and industrial area between the towns of Chorley and Leyland in Lancashire, which largely sits in the Buckshaw area of Euxton. It is one of the largest urban development sites in the North West of England with a population of about 4,000 although official population statistics mainly sit with Euxton.

The new development is taking place on the former site of the Royal Ordnance Factory (ROF) Chorley, and covers several square kilometres. The area of land was known as Buckshaw, before it was requisitioned by the War Office in the 1930s. There is also a Buckshaw Scout team, in two groups.

There are two listed buildings in this area that the ROF had a duty of care over. They are the smaller Old Worden Hall, which has recently been redeveloped by the Maysand Group, the ancestral seat of a branch of the Farrington family associated with the Worden Park historical ownership, and the other building is Buckshaw Hall, which was built in the 1650s for the Robinson family, land owners from Chorley. Both buildings are located not far from the area known as Upper Buckshaw.

The village is being developed in line with sustainable development principles and aims to transform a brownfield former munitions site. All landscaping is designed so that no earth is transported off-site with the stripped top soil now present in mounds dotted around the village. A trial scheme is in progress which uses recycled garden waste combined with sandy clay (loam) to produce compost. The compost is then spread over the mounds to produce woodland areas and green public spaces.


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