COATE WATER COUNTRY PARK

The concrete diving board at Coate, built 1935

'Coate Water' () is a country park in the south-east of Swindon, near Junction 15 of the M4. It takes its name from the main feature, a reservoir originally built to provide water for the Wilts and Berks Canal.
Coate is the site of a 70-acre lake, built in 1822 and formed by diverting the River Cole. Its primary purpose was to provide water for the Canals and it remained outside the borough until expansion in 1928.[1]
In 1914, with the canal abandoned, Coate became a Pleasure Park. Changing rooms and a wooden diving board were added, the board since replaced with today's 33ft concrete one in 1935.
Now named officially named ''Coate Water Country Park'', it is both a leisure facility and a nature reserve. Coate Farm, with the Richard Jefferies museum, is contained within its environs.
Primarily for its breeding bird populations, an area of 51.1 hectares of the lake and its margins has been notified as a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest, notification originally taking place in 1971.[2]

Contents
Development
References
External links

Development


In 2004, Swindon Borough Council and the University of Bath published plans to develop land within the park and its environs as a new campus. Swindon Civic Trust opposed this move and local residents began a ''Save Coate'' campaign with the support of Friends of the Earth. The proposal would see The Swindon Gateway Partnership creating a university campus, expand Great Western Hospital and build hundreds of new homes on land on the site.[3][4]
The campaigners note that -
"Coate boasts a host of Bronze Age, Romano-British and Medieval history that spans a period of up to about 3000 years. The oldest known ancient monuments at Coate are the Neolithic Stone Circle and the Bronze age burial mound along Day House Lane. However, no less than six Stone Circles have been recorded in the Coate area linked up, in part, by avenues of large Sarsen stones. The remains of one of the stone circles probably still lies at the bottom of the lake at Coate Water whilst other ancient finds are dotted around the area that include evidence of Medieval settlements."[5]
and point out that is in conflict with several of Swindon Borough Council's own environmental policies.[6]
A buffer zone around the park was proposed in late 2006,[4] although campaigners and local residents do not think this is enough -
"In a poll, just 20 per cent of readers said they believed that the new plans would help to protect Coate Water." ''Swindon Advertiser''[4]
The issue was further compounded when Coate Water was voted "Swindon's Favourite Place" by the local population,[9] in a competition organised by the Swindon Civic Trust.
Protests, including the 2004 "Hands around Coate Water" event,[10] have heightened awareness of the Trust's campaign. Revised plans for the development are to be submitted in the first quarter of 2007.[11]

References


1. Swindon : An Illustrated History, Mark Child, , , Breedon Books Publishing, , ISBN 1-85983-322-5
2. SSSI citation sheet at English Nature's website
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External links



English Nature (SSSI information)

SSSI boundary at English Nature's "Nature on the Map" website

Coate Water — Swindon Council's guide to the country park.

Richard Jefferies Museum — Dedicated to the memory of one of England's most individual writers on nature and the countryside, this small museum is a short walk from Coate Water.

Save Coate - Campaign website

Swindon Gateway - Developer proposals

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