New Stadium Plans - The Triangle - Planning

Keep an eye on the portal for his comment

View attachment 19081

Sounds like the Lib Dems are in a bit of a panic all of a sudden.

In fairness to Gareth Epps he has at least engaged in conversation over the issue, however he is saying one thing whilst his LibDem colleagues Cllr Levy and Cllr Gant are saying another, they are openly opposed to the stadium, we have all seen their objection comments on the planning portal.

I have brought up the issue of Cllr Levy’s link to Stockport County (ex Director) on this forum and the conflict of interest. Remember Stockport County are a rival club, both OUFC and SCFC are likely to be in the same league next season. Any decision that Cllr Levy makes that negatively affects OUFC benefits rival clubs. It is a conflict of interest.

Gareth Epps does himself a disservice by claiming that it’s all a Tory plot. I can assure him I am not a Tory, in fact I have voted LibDem in the past. But I cannot vote for a party (LibDem or Green) who have Councillors on OCC who are openly not supportive of the stadium plans.

Head of Terms still haven’t been signed. Delays are very damaging to the club and its future. Time is running out, we are homeless in 2 years time.
 
i have to question if fosb actually read the planning application

fosb comment on the planning app

". Even though the woodland to the south of the site is not formally designated as Ancient Woodland, it requires more protection than is currently planned, including a substantial buffer zone between the woodland and the development"

and ours
"The FoSB stated within their response that the woodland to the south of the Site should be classified as DWS status and considered/treated as ancient woodland. It is agreed that the woodland should be (and will be) treated as a DWS;"
it was recommended by the Woodland Trust that creating a suitable buffer (e.g. a hedgerow) between the development and woodland would be sufficient to prevent potential impacts on this habitat

fosb comment
There is doubt around the bat and reptile surveys which took place from August 2022 to October 2022. These surveys are therefore unreliable and must be repeated. Ecology Solutions’ approach of using their professional judgement in an attempt to justify not repeating surveys is unacceptable, particularly in respect of bats, a protected species
and our
Reptile ‘tins’ were placed on site on 24th August 2022. Where these ‘tins’were observed to be missing upon a visit these would be replaced and allowed to bed in again prior to further checks. One period when some ‘tins’ were observed to be missing coincides with when the tenant had removed two of the four static bat detectors that were left on site to monitor bat activity. The replacement of missing ‘tins’ was also a reason why checks were continued into October 2022 (albeit the weather conditions were such that reptiles remain active until late into the year in any event). 8.2.51 As such, it can be confirmed that a robust set of reptile surveys were conducted, albeit were subject to some delays as a result of the above. 8.2.52 Whilst the tenant removed two of the four static detectors that were left out in August 2022, the remainder of the bat surveys continued as normal throughout the rest of the year, and the results of these do not indicate that an assessment would be materially affected by the reduction in detectors in that month. Indeed, as alluded to above, there has been a recent publication of new bat survey guidance and this clearly endorses an approach whereby survey effort is an iterative process dictated by the findings of survey work as it is completed at the professional judgement of an appropriately qualified ecologist, i.e. do findings justify a greater survey effort or not (in the same way whether the failure of detectors/missing detectors would warrant additional survey effort or not – in this case deemed not)
 
Absolutely not. It's not even a quarter of our season ticket holders.
Less than
How old do you have to be to comment on the planning portal?

20,000 of that 33,000 will be daytrippers who don't care.

10,000 of that 33,000 will be under 18 as well as daytrippers.

I think really we should have had 3,500 positive responses. Apathy is a big issue.
Completely agree.

I was waiting to today to add my comments and now have done. I hope to get 2 family to sign today, and will continue to nudge some other friends who are big football fans.
 
Plans are in place to make Garden City a Controlled Parking Zone. This has been the aim well before a stadium was being considered.
You try telling the residents of Kidlington that and I’m sure Middleton has said somewhere similar even though he was advocating them before OUFC were looking at Kidlington.
 
Nothing about the stadium but how childish is this from a councillor View attachment 19084

How is this clown a councillor? How are other councillors even taking him seriously?

His extremely dodgy comments about a young child actress should of put paid to him, it’s sickening that other local politicians didn’t see fit to distance themselves after that came to light.
 

How refreshing to see a CC actually supporting its main Football Club!

Here is another example of a council being absolute wankers though.


The council who own the ground are refusing to give Gateshead a 10 years lease (requirement from the EFL to any promoted teams) so they can't compete in the national league play offs.
 

Ah but this is the rub.

Miller is on the doorstep and I’m sure is talking about things like the Tories record in Power,the NHS, cost of living etc.

If the person on the doorstep says I’m concerned about the stadium he will say he’s against it to get their vote, if the person on the doorstep says I think the stadium is a good thing he will agree to get that vote.

That my friends is the nature of the Liberal Democrat Party. Trying to please all of the people all of the time.
 
Ah but this is the rub.

Miller is on the doorstep and I’m sure is talking about things like the Tories record in Power,the NHS, cost of living etc.

If the person on the doorstep says I’m concerned about the stadium he will say he’s against it to get their vote, if the person on the doorstep says I think the stadium is a good thing he will agree to get that vote.

That my friends is the nature of the Liberal Democrat Party. Trying to please all of the people all of the time.

100%
 
She might not care too much, but perhaps Layla Moran should check out the planning portal for the stadium, she will see dozens and dozens of supportive comments from OUFC fans in Abingdon and other areas of her constituency.

Gant and Levy’s anti OUFC stance will affect her vote for sure come the GE.
Sorry but you’ve got two hopes with Layla Bob and No.
I have emailed Layla about her support for the stadium and the poor Libdem Councillors Levy and Gant and their public opposition and how my vote this time for the LibDem’s has now gone, all got back was I need to prove I live in her ward so she’s not interested in the wider population over the stadium which of course is in her ward.
 
My parents have just sent me a message to say they have sent in positive comments on the planning portal.

My dad was watching the club from the fifties although isn’t well enough to go up these days.

He's still keen for the move though as he wants future generations, whether Oxford fans or not, to benefit from the new stadium.
 
My submission.

Re. Planning Application 24/00539/F Land to the East of Stratfield Brake and West of Oxford Parkway Railway Station, Oxford Road, Kidlington.


Please find my submission in support of this application.


I have lived in Oxfordshire my whole life and have been an Oxford United supporter for most of this time having first attended a game in 1983. I was taken to my first game by my father and attended many others with my auntie and wider family. I have since taken my own children to watch games and hope that in time they will continue this tradition by taking their families too.

Oxford United is a true family club at the centre of our county and our community. I have been supporting the club as a matchday volunteer this season and have met hundreds of young families attending their first games, as well as more elderly supporters who have been following the club since the Headington United years. I have also seen how the club is a safe and welcoming environment for supporters from all backgrounds, all ethnic, cultural and international groups, those with visible and non-visible disabilities, those who have mental health and neurodiversity needs, the introduction of the Proud Yellows to support the LGBT+ communities, as well as the continued growth of the womens and girls teams. Oxford United is a truly diverse and inclusive centre for our community to come together, and their very future is at stake within this application to find a new home.

Whilst this is important to me and thousands of others, I respect that the planning application must meet certain conditions in order to be granted and would like t address some of the key points.

Travel and Access to the Stadium

I currently live in Bicester and as a result of the disjointed and frequently inadequate public transport system, I find myself driving to games and parking in allocated spaces on the Grenoble Road. On a Saturday I will leave my house at 12pm and rarely get home before 6pm. This is a long day for my children and is often made worse by any adverse weather conditions in a football stadium barely fit for purpose.

The proposed new stadium is situated across the road from an existing public transport hub which I will use to attend. The train from Bicester takes 5 minutes, on 10 minutes on the bus. This will make travel significantly easier and allow for greater flexibility to arrive later to use the associated facilities before or after a game if I choose. It will also mean that I will not be using my car, and all the surveys conducted by the football club indicates that thousands of others will also use public transport. Collectively this will reduce unnecessary car journeys, reduce traffic, and improve the air quality – everything that we would all want.

The reduced dependency on car usage will also allay fears regarding parking in and around Kidlington, especially with shuttle services provided from the under used park and ride sites around the county. We will also see increased provisions for public transport. Chiltern Railways operate the line which services Wembley Stadium and rail stock is frequently added to meet demand for big events. Equally additional carriages are already added to the same trains on the same line to meet peek demand for Bicester Village. It makes simple economic sense for bus and train providers to capatilise on increased demand.

As for access to the stadium, I have been to sporting events all over the world, many with significantly greater capacity than this proposed stadium, and all with worse public transport links. All have a variety of traffic management plans in place that effectively manage movement of tens of thousands of people in and out with minimal disruption. Whether this is through designated road crossings, temporary road diversions or the use of a bridge or underpass, the results are the same and thousands of people can safely enter and exit much bigger venues without issue.

Green Belt Special Circumstances

I have a young family and the environment is very important to me. I want to see progress and development, but I also want to see publicly accessible green spaces preserved and protected.

But the site, known as the Triangle, has no public access and is situated between major roads. It was previously used as a motorcross track and was recently described as “contaminated scrubland” by a local environmental lobby group. Prior to this application, few would have even known that this land existed or given it a second thought.

The stadium proposal will not damage this site but bring it to life. All developments are legally bound to increase biodiversity and the football club is aiming to go beyond the minimum requirements, not because they must but because they want to. Ancient woodland around the site will remain protected, as will natural habitats through the introduction of biodiverse roof spaces and nature corridors throughout the site. Nature has a fantastic way of adapting and will flourish in the unique environment, and this will become publicly accessible for generations to enjoy as intended rather than being hidden behind fences.

Also, the stadium will be the first all-electric stadium in the country and will be at the forefront of environmental technology. It will embrace solar paneling; water harvesting and will achieve net zero specifications. This will be a stadium that is the benchmark for ecological development for the future.

Economic and Social Development

There have been numerous studies that show that a new football stadium not only leads to improved success on the pitch but also increase local economies and enhances social cohesion and community development. Football generates hundreds of million pounds of revenue throughout the country, both directly and indirectly across the wide area. There will also be an increase in employment opportunities, and whilst unemployment is not a huge issue locally, there are many people who have struggled throughout the recent cost of living crisis. Matchday work will be evenings and weekends and will therefore support those who require flexible working conditions to work around childcare, or those in fulltime education. There are also those who, like me, will gain a huge satisfaction from doing voluntary roles around the football club. There will also be other full time employment opportunities directly linked to the football stadium and associated businesses, but also an increase in employment throughout the wider community for businesses that develop of the back of the increased footfall through the area.

There will also be educational and training opportunities provided plus additional community links. Oxford United has already committed to supporting local projects that reach out in to the community through Oxford United in the Community, and the new stadium will provide an opportunity to do so much more. And football provides an avenue for people of all social economic and diverse backgrounds to come together and Stand United. This provides an opportunity to support mental and physical wellbeing and to provide support in a way that is hard to replicate elsewhere.

Summary

Oxford United will become homeless in the summer of 2026. The license to play at the Kassam Stadium runs out at the end of June 2026, and there is not right to extend. Mr Kassam has shown evidenced that the current site is open for immediate development now and the rest from late 2026 which further proves that Oxford United will have no where to play football in 2 years. The club have searched throughout Oxford to find a suitable site and the only other suitable site was at Stratfield Brake next to the Triangle, but OCC were unable to relinquish their lease to use this site and the Triangle became the only suitable alternative. This is also established facts despite some looking to muddy the waters.

Without a stadium to play in there is no football club and a 130-year-old institution that brings joy to tens of thousands of people every week will die. The football club that supports youth development throughout the county, has embraced girls and women’s football and made it accessible to all, that has supported a Down Syndrome team and reaches out to other disability groups, that has a Walking football team for more mature players, that touches the lives of so many people through football or beyond, all of this will be gone.

Oxford United has been part of my life for over 40 years and has been there for me through some incredible times and also some very difficult periods in my life. The very future of this fantastic club is at risk, and I urge the Planning Committee to support this application to enable to football club to not only survive but to grow and thrive alongside the local community.

 
My submission.

Re. Planning Application 24/00539/F Land to the East of Stratfield Brake and West of Oxford Parkway Railway Station, Oxford Road, Kidlington.


Please find my submission in support of this application.


I have lived in Oxfordshire my whole life and have been an Oxford United supporter for most of this time having first attended a game in 1983. I was taken to my first game by my father and attended many others with my auntie and wider family. I have since taken my own children to watch games and hope that in time they will continue this tradition by taking their families too.

Oxford United is a true family club at the centre of our county and our community. I have been supporting the club as a matchday volunteer this season and have met hundreds of young families attending their first games, as well as more elderly supporters who have been following the club since the Headington United years. I have also seen how the club is a safe and welcoming environment for supporters from all backgrounds, all ethnic, cultural and international groups, those with visible and non-visible disabilities, those who have mental health and neurodiversity needs, the introduction of the Proud Yellows to support the LGBT+ communities, as well as the continued growth of the womens and girls teams. Oxford United is a truly diverse and inclusive centre for our community to come together, and their very future is at stake within this application to find a new home.

Whilst this is important to me and thousands of others, I respect that the planning application must meet certain conditions in order to be granted and would like t address some of the key points.

Travel and Access to the Stadium

I currently live in Bicester and as a result of the disjointed and frequently inadequate public transport system, I find myself driving to games and parking in allocated spaces on the Grenoble Road. On a Saturday I will leave my house at 12pm and rarely get home before 6pm. This is a long day for my children and is often made worse by any adverse weather conditions in a football stadium barely fit for purpose.

The proposed new stadium is situated across the road from an existing public transport hub which I will use to attend. The train from Bicester takes 5 minutes, on 10 minutes on the bus. This will make travel significantly easier and allow for greater flexibility to arrive later to use the associated facilities before or after a game if I choose. It will also mean that I will not be using my car, and all the surveys conducted by the football club indicates that thousands of others will also use public transport. Collectively this will reduce unnecessary car journeys, reduce traffic, and improve the air quality – everything that we would all want.

The reduced dependency on car usage will also allay fears regarding parking in and around Kidlington, especially with shuttle services provided from the under used park and ride sites around the county. We will also see increased provisions for public transport. Chiltern Railways operate the line which services Wembley Stadium and rail stock is frequently added to meet demand for big events. Equally additional carriages are already added to the same trains on the same line to meet peek demand for Bicester Village. It makes simple economic sense for bus and train providers to capatilise on increased demand.

As for access to the stadium, I have been to sporting events all over the world, many with significantly greater capacity than this proposed stadium, and all with worse public transport links. All have a variety of traffic management plans in place that effectively manage movement of tens of thousands of people in and out with minimal disruption. Whether this is through designated road crossings, temporary road diversions or the use of a bridge or underpass, the results are the same and thousands of people can safely enter and exit much bigger venues without issue.

Green Belt Special Circumstances

I have a young family and the environment is very important to me. I want to see progress and development, but I also want to see publicly accessible green spaces preserved and protected.

But the site, known as the Triangle, has no public access and is situated between major roads. It was previously used as a motorcross track and was recently described as “contaminated scrubland” by a local environmental lobby group. Prior to this application, few would have even known that this land existed or given it a second thought.

The stadium proposal will not damage this site but bring it to life. All developments are legally bound to increase biodiversity and the football club is aiming to go beyond the minimum requirements, not because they must but because they want to. Ancient woodland around the site will remain protected, as will natural habitats through the introduction of biodiverse roof spaces and nature corridors throughout the site. Nature has a fantastic way of adapting and will flourish in the unique environment, and this will become publicly accessible for generations to enjoy as intended rather than being hidden behind fences.

Also, the stadium will be the first all-electric stadium in the country and will be at the forefront of environmental technology. It will embrace solar paneling; water harvesting and will achieve net zero specifications. This will be a stadium that is the benchmark for ecological development for the future.

Economic and Social Development

There have been numerous studies that show that a new football stadium not only leads to improved success on the pitch but also increase local economies and enhances social cohesion and community development. Football generates hundreds of million pounds of revenue throughout the country, both directly and indirectly across the wide area. There will also be an increase in employment opportunities, and whilst unemployment is not a huge issue locally, there are many people who have struggled throughout the recent cost of living crisis. Matchday work will be evenings and weekends and will therefore support those who require flexible working conditions to work around childcare, or those in fulltime education. There are also those who, like me, will gain a huge satisfaction from doing voluntary roles around the football club. There will also be other full time employment opportunities directly linked to the football stadium and associated businesses, but also an increase in employment throughout the wider community for businesses that develop of the back of the increased footfall through the area.

There will also be educational and training opportunities provided plus additional community links. Oxford United has already committed to supporting local projects that reach out in to the community through Oxford United in the Community, and the new stadium will provide an opportunity to do so much more. And football provides an avenue for people of all social economic and diverse backgrounds to come together and Stand United. This provides an opportunity to support mental and physical wellbeing and to provide support in a way that is hard to replicate elsewhere.

Summary

Oxford United will become homeless in the summer of 2026. The license to play at the Kassam Stadium runs out at the end of June 2026, and there is not right to extend. Mr Kassam has shown evidenced that the current site is open for immediate development now and the rest from late 2026 which further proves that Oxford United will have no where to play football in 2 years. The club have searched throughout Oxford to find a suitable site and the only other suitable site was at Stratfield Brake next to the Triangle, but OCC were unable to relinquish their lease to use this site and the Triangle became the only suitable alternative. This is also established facts despite some looking to muddy the waters.

Without a stadium to play in there is no football club and a 130-year-old institution that brings joy to tens of thousands of people every week will die. The football club that supports youth development throughout the county, has embraced girls and women’s football and made it accessible to all, that has supported a Down Syndrome team and reaches out to other disability groups, that has a Walking football team for more mature players, that touches the lives of so many people through football or beyond, all of this will be gone.

Oxford United has been part of my life for over 40 years and has been there for me through some incredible times and also some very difficult periods in my life. The very future of this fantastic club is at risk, and I urge the Planning Committee to support this application to enable to football club to not only survive but to grow and thrive alongside the local community.
Fantastic!
 
My submission.

Re. Planning Application 24/00539/F Land to the East of Stratfield Brake and West of Oxford Parkway Railway Station, Oxford Road, Kidlington.


Please find my submission in support of this application.


I have lived in Oxfordshire my whole life and have been an Oxford United supporter for most of this time having first attended a game in 1983. I was taken to my first game by my father and attended many others with my auntie and wider family. I have since taken my own children to watch games and hope that in time they will continue this tradition by taking their families too.

Oxford United is a true family club at the centre of our county and our community. I have been supporting the club as a matchday volunteer this season and have met hundreds of young families attending their first games, as well as more elderly supporters who have been following the club since the Headington United years. I have also seen how the club is a safe and welcoming environment for supporters from all backgrounds, all ethnic, cultural and international groups, those with visible and non-visible disabilities, those who have mental health and neurodiversity needs, the introduction of the Proud Yellows to support the LGBT+ communities, as well as the continued growth of the womens and girls teams. Oxford United is a truly diverse and inclusive centre for our community to come together, and their very future is at stake within this application to find a new home.

Whilst this is important to me and thousands of others, I respect that the planning application must meet certain conditions in order to be granted and would like t address some of the key points.

Travel and Access to the Stadium

I currently live in Bicester and as a result of the disjointed and frequently inadequate public transport system, I find myself driving to games and parking in allocated spaces on the Grenoble Road. On a Saturday I will leave my house at 12pm and rarely get home before 6pm. This is a long day for my children and is often made worse by any adverse weather conditions in a football stadium barely fit for purpose.

The proposed new stadium is situated across the road from an existing public transport hub which I will use to attend. The train from Bicester takes 5 minutes, on 10 minutes on the bus. This will make travel significantly easier and allow for greater flexibility to arrive later to use the associated facilities before or after a game if I choose. It will also mean that I will not be using my car, and all the surveys conducted by the football club indicates that thousands of others will also use public transport. Collectively this will reduce unnecessary car journeys, reduce traffic, and improve the air quality – everything that we would all want.

The reduced dependency on car usage will also allay fears regarding parking in and around Kidlington, especially with shuttle services provided from the under used park and ride sites around the county. We will also see increased provisions for public transport. Chiltern Railways operate the line which services Wembley Stadium and rail stock is frequently added to meet demand for big events. Equally additional carriages are already added to the same trains on the same line to meet peek demand for Bicester Village. It makes simple economic sense for bus and train providers to capatilise on increased demand.

As for access to the stadium, I have been to sporting events all over the world, many with significantly greater capacity than this proposed stadium, and all with worse public transport links. All have a variety of traffic management plans in place that effectively manage movement of tens of thousands of people in and out with minimal disruption. Whether this is through designated road crossings, temporary road diversions or the use of a bridge or underpass, the results are the same and thousands of people can safely enter and exit much bigger venues without issue.

Green Belt Special Circumstances

I have a young family and the environment is very important to me. I want to see progress and development, but I also want to see publicly accessible green spaces preserved and protected.

But the site, known as the Triangle, has no public access and is situated between major roads. It was previously used as a motorcross track and was recently described as “contaminated scrubland” by a local environmental lobby group. Prior to this application, few would have even known that this land existed or given it a second thought.

The stadium proposal will not damage this site but bring it to life. All developments are legally bound to increase biodiversity and the football club is aiming to go beyond the minimum requirements, not because they must but because they want to. Ancient woodland around the site will remain protected, as will natural habitats through the introduction of biodiverse roof spaces and nature corridors throughout the site. Nature has a fantastic way of adapting and will flourish in the unique environment, and this will become publicly accessible for generations to enjoy as intended rather than being hidden behind fences.

Also, the stadium will be the first all-electric stadium in the country and will be at the forefront of environmental technology. It will embrace solar paneling; water harvesting and will achieve net zero specifications. This will be a stadium that is the benchmark for ecological development for the future.

Economic and Social Development

There have been numerous studies that show that a new football stadium not only leads to improved success on the pitch but also increase local economies and enhances social cohesion and community development. Football generates hundreds of million pounds of revenue throughout the country, both directly and indirectly across the wide area. There will also be an increase in employment opportunities, and whilst unemployment is not a huge issue locally, there are many people who have struggled throughout the recent cost of living crisis. Matchday work will be evenings and weekends and will therefore support those who require flexible working conditions to work around childcare, or those in fulltime education. There are also those who, like me, will gain a huge satisfaction from doing voluntary roles around the football club. There will also be other full time employment opportunities directly linked to the football stadium and associated businesses, but also an increase in employment throughout the wider community for businesses that develop of the back of the increased footfall through the area.

There will also be educational and training opportunities provided plus additional community links. Oxford United has already committed to supporting local projects that reach out in to the community through Oxford United in the Community, and the new stadium will provide an opportunity to do so much more. And football provides an avenue for people of all social economic and diverse backgrounds to come together and Stand United. This provides an opportunity to support mental and physical wellbeing and to provide support in a way that is hard to replicate elsewhere.

Summary

Oxford United will become homeless in the summer of 2026. The license to play at the Kassam Stadium runs out at the end of June 2026, and there is not right to extend. Mr Kassam has shown evidenced that the current site is open for immediate development now and the rest from late 2026 which further proves that Oxford United will have no where to play football in 2 years. The club have searched throughout Oxford to find a suitable site and the only other suitable site was at Stratfield Brake next to the Triangle, but OCC were unable to relinquish their lease to use this site and the Triangle became the only suitable alternative. This is also established facts despite some looking to muddy the waters.

Without a stadium to play in there is no football club and a 130-year-old institution that brings joy to tens of thousands of people every week will die. The football club that supports youth development throughout the county, has embraced girls and women’s football and made it accessible to all, that has supported a Down Syndrome team and reaches out to other disability groups, that has a Walking football team for more mature players, that touches the lives of so many people through football or beyond, all of this will be gone.

Oxford United has been part of my life for over 40 years and has been there for me through some incredible times and also some very difficult periods in my life. The very future of this fantastic club is at risk, and I urge the Planning Committee to support this application to enable to football club to not only survive but to grow and thrive alongside the local community.

Excellent summary- well done
 
Nothing about the stadium but how childish is this from a councillor View attachment 19084
I try and be calm these days but this man really gets under my skin. His smugness, arrogance and bitterness on X is different level. Such a truly unpleasant human. What I've come to expect from the several narcissists involved in local politics.
 
My submission.

Re. Planning Application 24/00539/F Land to the East of Stratfield Brake and West of Oxford Parkway Railway Station, Oxford Road, Kidlington.


Please find my submission in support of this application.


I have lived in Oxfordshire my whole life and have been an Oxford United supporter for most of this time having first attended a game in 1983. I was taken to my first game by my father and attended many others with my auntie and wider family. I have since taken my own children to watch games and hope that in time they will continue this tradition by taking their families too.

Oxford United is a true family club at the centre of our county and our community. I have been supporting the club as a matchday volunteer this season and have met hundreds of young families attending their first games, as well as more elderly supporters who have been following the club since the Headington United years. I have also seen how the club is a safe and welcoming environment for supporters from all backgrounds, all ethnic, cultural and international groups, those with visible and non-visible disabilities, those who have mental health and neurodiversity needs, the introduction of the Proud Yellows to support the LGBT+ communities, as well as the continued growth of the womens and girls teams. Oxford United is a truly diverse and inclusive centre for our community to come together, and their very future is at stake within this application to find a new home.

Whilst this is important to me and thousands of others, I respect that the planning application must meet certain conditions in order to be granted and would like t address some of the key points.

Travel and Access to the Stadium

I currently live in Bicester and as a result of the disjointed and frequently inadequate public transport system, I find myself driving to games and parking in allocated spaces on the Grenoble Road. On a Saturday I will leave my house at 12pm and rarely get home before 6pm. This is a long day for my children and is often made worse by any adverse weather conditions in a football stadium barely fit for purpose.

The proposed new stadium is situated across the road from an existing public transport hub which I will use to attend. The train from Bicester takes 5 minutes, on 10 minutes on the bus. This will make travel significantly easier and allow for greater flexibility to arrive later to use the associated facilities before or after a game if I choose. It will also mean that I will not be using my car, and all the surveys conducted by the football club indicates that thousands of others will also use public transport. Collectively this will reduce unnecessary car journeys, reduce traffic, and improve the air quality – everything that we would all want.

The reduced dependency on car usage will also allay fears regarding parking in and around Kidlington, especially with shuttle services provided from the under used park and ride sites around the county. We will also see increased provisions for public transport. Chiltern Railways operate the line which services Wembley Stadium and rail stock is frequently added to meet demand for big events. Equally additional carriages are already added to the same trains on the same line to meet peek demand for Bicester Village. It makes simple economic sense for bus and train providers to capatilise on increased demand.

As for access to the stadium, I have been to sporting events all over the world, many with significantly greater capacity than this proposed stadium, and all with worse public transport links. All have a variety of traffic management plans in place that effectively manage movement of tens of thousands of people in and out with minimal disruption. Whether this is through designated road crossings, temporary road diversions or the use of a bridge or underpass, the results are the same and thousands of people can safely enter and exit much bigger venues without issue.

Green Belt Special Circumstances

I have a young family and the environment is very important to me. I want to see progress and development, but I also want to see publicly accessible green spaces preserved and protected.

But the site, known as the Triangle, has no public access and is situated between major roads. It was previously used as a motorcross track and was recently described as “contaminated scrubland” by a local environmental lobby group. Prior to this application, few would have even known that this land existed or given it a second thought.

The stadium proposal will not damage this site but bring it to life. All developments are legally bound to increase biodiversity and the football club is aiming to go beyond the minimum requirements, not because they must but because they want to. Ancient woodland around the site will remain protected, as will natural habitats through the introduction of biodiverse roof spaces and nature corridors throughout the site. Nature has a fantastic way of adapting and will flourish in the unique environment, and this will become publicly accessible for generations to enjoy as intended rather than being hidden behind fences.

Also, the stadium will be the first all-electric stadium in the country and will be at the forefront of environmental technology. It will embrace solar paneling; water harvesting and will achieve net zero specifications. This will be a stadium that is the benchmark for ecological development for the future.

Economic and Social Development

There have been numerous studies that show that a new football stadium not only leads to improved success on the pitch but also increase local economies and enhances social cohesion and community development. Football generates hundreds of million pounds of revenue throughout the country, both directly and indirectly across the wide area. There will also be an increase in employment opportunities, and whilst unemployment is not a huge issue locally, there are many people who have struggled throughout the recent cost of living crisis. Matchday work will be evenings and weekends and will therefore support those who require flexible working conditions to work around childcare, or those in fulltime education. There are also those who, like me, will gain a huge satisfaction from doing voluntary roles around the football club. There will also be other full time employment opportunities directly linked to the football stadium and associated businesses, but also an increase in employment throughout the wider community for businesses that develop of the back of the increased footfall through the area.

There will also be educational and training opportunities provided plus additional community links. Oxford United has already committed to supporting local projects that reach out in to the community through Oxford United in the Community, and the new stadium will provide an opportunity to do so much more. And football provides an avenue for people of all social economic and diverse backgrounds to come together and Stand United. This provides an opportunity to support mental and physical wellbeing and to provide support in a way that is hard to replicate elsewhere.

Summary

Oxford United will become homeless in the summer of 2026. The license to play at the Kassam Stadium runs out at the end of June 2026, and there is not right to extend. Mr Kassam has shown evidenced that the current site is open for immediate development now and the rest from late 2026 which further proves that Oxford United will have no where to play football in 2 years. The club have searched throughout Oxford to find a suitable site and the only other suitable site was at Stratfield Brake next to the Triangle, but OCC were unable to relinquish their lease to use this site and the Triangle became the only suitable alternative. This is also established facts despite some looking to muddy the waters.

Without a stadium to play in there is no football club and a 130-year-old institution that brings joy to tens of thousands of people every week will die. The football club that supports youth development throughout the county, has embraced girls and women’s football and made it accessible to all, that has supported a Down Syndrome team and reaches out to other disability groups, that has a Walking football team for more mature players, that touches the lives of so many people through football or beyond, all of this will be gone.

Oxford United has been part of my life for over 40 years and has been there for me through some incredible times and also some very difficult periods in my life. The very future of this fantastic club is at risk, and I urge the Planning Committee to support this application to enable to football club to not only survive but to grow and thrive alongside the local community.
Very similar in sentiment and logistical acknowledgement to my message of support.

Superb Scotchers 👏
 
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