GROWTH OF THE NEW TOWN.
The master
plan provided for 4,000 a. of the designated 5,920 a.;
the rest was to be kept in reserve and as green belt
land. (fn. 39) Much of the land was already covered by
Crawley town, Ifield village, and outlying settlements. The new town would have a new centre and
nine residential neighbourhoods, separated by radial
roads. Industry was to be concentrated in the northeast. Four of the neighbourhoods were to be within
a ring road, the western half of which already existed.
Each neighbourhood would be socially balanced,
with a wide range of house types, (fn. 40) and its own shopping centre, primary school, church or chapel, and
social facilities, grouped near a central green. Although the recommended population of neighbourhoods in new towns was then 10,000, those planned
for Crawley were much smaller. The proposed
population varied from 4,300 to 7,800, but only one
was to exceed 6,600 and that was to have two neighbourhood centres. Almost all houses would thus be
less than ½ mile from a neighbourhood centre and
within 1¼ miles of the town centre. The road pattern
was designed to discourage through traffic in the
neighbourhoods. To meet the actual and expected
increases in population, the development corporation in 1958 adopted a new plan by Minoprio. It was
suspended until West Sussex county council completed its town map for Crawley in 1961; that retained from Minoprio's proposals extensions to two
existing neighbourhoods and the addition of two
new neighbourhoods. (fn. 41) One of those neighbourhoods was built up in the 1960s and the other, with
a third additional neighbourhood, in the 1970s. The
last two were planned on a much larger scale than
the others; the new neighbourhoods used much of
the planned green belt, which was further affected
by the unexpected growth of Gatwick airport from
the mid 1950s. (fn. 42)
Although many different house plans were
adopted, (fn. 43) most of the houses of the new town are
characteristic of public housing of the 1950s. They
include terraces and semidetached pairs in pale red
brick, sometimes rendered or clad, with pitched and
tiled roofs, concrete lintels and door-hoods, and
metal window frames. Most houses were provided
with private gardens and were set at varying angles
to the roads, from which they were separated by
grass verges. Many of the verges were later converted to hard standings for motor cars. Existing
trees were preserved as far as possible. In the 1960s
roofs of lower pitch were adopted, and in the 1970s
and 1980s a greater variety of brick colours including
buff and dark red was used; houses were often built
round courts facing away from roads. (fn. 44) Tower blocks
were eschewed. By 1958, besides the development
corporation's own architects, 12 firms of architects
had been commissioned for the design of houses, 25
for factories, 15 for shops, 5 for schools, and 13 for
churches; some firms, such as Goodhart-Rendel
Broadbent and Curtis, designed more than one type
of building. (fn. 45)

Crawley: Boundary changes 1933-1983
Development of the town centre was delayed by
repeated changes of plan, by the fact that the existing
Crawley High Street could provide shopping facilities in the early years, and by the need to attend to
mains services, housing, and industrial employment
first. A plan of 1948 provided for 100 a. within an
inner ring road extending west of Crawley High
Street and closing it on the south; the ring road was
to enclose a larger area east of High Street. In the
southern half of that area would be shops, flanking a
crossroads and enclosing car parks, and separated by
a boulevard from public buildings to the north. At
its eastern end the boulevard was to fork, each fork
leading to a roundabout on the ring road. South of
the ring road a large area was reserved for service
industry and a railway goods yard. (fn. 46) After repeated
alterations (fn. 47) a revised plan designed by the development corporation's chief architect A. G. Sheppard
was published in 1952. It omitted the ring road and
the goods yard, preserved the existing Northgate
Road to the north-west and war memorial recreation
ground to the south-east, and extended the centre
less far to the east than its predecessor. The enclosed car parks and several proposed buildings including a market, a county college, a swimming bath,
and an arts centre were abandoned. (fn. 48) The new plan
was followed with only minor changes. Broadwalk
pedestrian way linking High Street with the shopping centre to the east was opened in 1954. (fn. 49) The
main roads in the northern half of the town centre
had been finished by 1958, as had the central Queens
Square, where the development corporation provided a bandstand brought from Gatwick racecourse, a fountain, a kiosk, and mosaic paving; many
shops there were already open. Queen Elizabeth II
formally named the square in 1958. (fn. 50) The new centre
soon became congested with traffic. The corporation
introduced a one-way traffic system and sought extra
spaces for car parks, (fn. 51) which in the early 1980s were
scattered round the fringes of the town centre,
occupying space originally intended for other purposes. Queensway, the east-west road through the
square, was closed to traffic experimentally in 1967
and permanently in 1971, and was paved in 1974-5.
In 1965 the Commission for the New Towns gave
an ornamental clock which was removed in 1973. (fn. 52)
The space north of the Boulevard as far as Kilnmead
was filled with public buildings and office blocks in
the late 1950s and the 1960s; the college of further
education east of the town centre was begun in 1956,
and county buildings beyond Exchange Road to the
north-east were opened in 1963. (fn. 53) The shopping
centre was extended eastwards in the late 1960s and
again in the late 1970s and early 1980s. (fn. 54)
The industrial area north-east of the town was
begun early, and 50 a. of sites had been set out by
1951. (fn. 55) The main carriageway, Manor Royal, running east from London Road, was opened in 1950, (fn. 56)
factories being built eastwards along it in the 1950s. (fn. 57)
Crompton Way to the south was laid out about the
same time and several factories had been built by
1951. Kelvin Way north of Manor Royal was being
built up by 1953. (fn. 58) Roads and sewers had been completed by 1954 to serve 130 a., and a further 45 a.
were being developed. (fn. 59) The southern end of Gatwick Road and Napier Way flanking it had been
built up by 1955, and Maxwell Way east of it by
1956. (fn. 60) A northwards extension to open up a further
78 a. was approved in 1954. (fn. 61) Factories on Fleming
Way, parallel with and north of Manor Royal, were
opened from 1956, (fn. 62) and by that time the corporation was planning an extension of the industrial area
along Gatwick Road north of its junction with Fleming Way. (fn. 63) Works flanking the northern end of
Gatwick Way were opened from 1956, in Rutherford
Way west of it from 1957 to 1959, and in Priestley
Way west of that in 1963. (fn. 64) Fleming Way was extended westwards after 1968. (fn. 65) By 1983 the industrial
area covered more than 300 a.; (fn. 66) in 1985 it included
a further north-eastwards extension along Gatwick
Road, Whittle Way west of it, and Cobham Way to
the east, besides Tinsley Lane North estate between
Whetstone Close and the London-Brighton railway. (fn. 67)
The development corporation claimed in 1955 that
the industrial area was an 'unusually attractive district'. (fn. 68) Some original trees were retained, new ones
being planted; the main roads were flanked with
lawns and flower beds, and in 1985 several factories
stood in large grassed areas.
The construction of residential parts of the town
began with two neighbourhoods within the ring
road. The first to be built was West Green, covering
180 a. west of the town centre, and including much
of the existing town of Crawley. The population,
then c. 2,100, was intended to rise to c. 4,700.
Houses were being built by 1949, (fn. 69) and most had
been finished by 1951. (fn. 70) There were 622 dwellings
complete or under construction by 1952, when the
neighbourhood centre had been designed. (fn. 71) West
Green was regarded as largely complete in 1954 (fn. 72)
although some infilling was taking place in 1955 (fn. 73)
and old people's flats were built in the area in 1975. (fn. 74)
The neighbourhood included the existing cemetery
and hospital. (fn. 75) Together with the town centre, it had
4,714 inhabitants in 1981. (fn. 76) For Northgate a detailed
plan had been prepared by 1951; the neighbourhood
was named after a turnpike tollgate in the London
road and covered 168 a. north of the town centre including some existing housing in Tushmore Lane,
Cobbles Crescent, and Woolborough Road. The
master plan foresaw an increase to 4,328 inhabitants.
Some houses and roads had already been built. (fn. 77) By
1952 the neighbourhood centre had been designed
and 758 houses and flats had been or were being
built, (fn. 78) and by 1955 the neighbourhood was complete except for infilling. (fn. 79)

Crawley Neighbourhoods c.1982
Work on Three Bridges neighbourhood in the east
part of the town, including the existing settlement
west of Three Bridges station and intended for a
population of 4,500, began in 1952; by 1955 the
neighbourhood was largely complete, 982 houses
having been built. (fn. 80) Old people's flats were built
there in the late 1970s. (fn. 81) There were 5,400 inhabitants in 1981. (fn. 82)
The development corporation originally intended
to build Langley Green neighbourhood, north-west
of the ring road, only after the neighbourhoods
within the ring had been finished. It was the first
neighbourhood to contain little earlier settlement. By
1951, however, the corporation had decided to bring
forward the building of the neighbourhood, and a
survey and plan were prepared. The corporation was
expecting to let contracts in 1952. (fn. 83) Nearly 1,600
houses had been finished by 1955, (fn. 84) and the neighbourhood was thought complete in 1956. (fn. 85) Its
growth coincided with the arrival in Crawley of
many semi-skilled and unskilled workers, and it thus
became a mainly working-class community. (fn. 86) By
1981, when the population was 7,517, more than a
fifth of pupils in Langley Green junior school came
from ethnic minority families. (fn. 87)
In contrast Pound Hill in the east, between the
London-Brighton railway and Balcombe Road, was
expected to become a middle-class area. (fn. 88) Work
began c. 1953, (fn. 89) and by 1954 the roads had been
built and house building was well advanced. (fn. 90) By
1955 the southern part of the neighbourhood was
'half completed'; the northern part was reserved for
unsubsidized, i.e. middle-class, housing. (fn. 91) The
southern part of Pound Hill was completed by 1956
and the northern part was then being developed. (fn. 92)
Pound Hill was designated to expand under the new
plan of 1961. (fn. 93) Private detached houses were being
built there in 1972. (fn. 94) In the later 1970s there was
infilling in the north-west and a new shopping
parade was built west of Grattons Drive; in addition,
the neighbourhood expanded beyond Balcombe
Road as far as the M 23 motorway, Wakehams green
being built over. In 1981 Pound Hill was Crawley's
largest neighbourhood, with 11,617 inhabitants, of
whom c. 2,000 lived east of Balcombe Road. (fn. 95) In the
early 1980s further development, largely complete
by 1984, took place at Crabbet Park, south of
Wakehams green. (fn. 96)
Three more neighbourhoods were rapidly built up
in the mid 1950s. Although development in Ifield,
which extended to the old village, had been intended
to begin in 1953, (fn. 97) detailed planning was complete
only in 1954. (fn. 98) By 1955 some 330 houses were being
built and contracts had been let on a further 906. (fn. 99)
Parts of the area were reserved for unsubsidized
houses. (fn. 1) By 1957 Ifield was virtually complete. (fn. 2) It
attracted professional people and skilled technicians,
including c. 130 teachers; the middle-class population later partly dispersed to other neighbourhoods. (fn. 3)
Deerswood Court, a group of 99 flats in blocks, was
built in 1961-2. (fn. 4) Ifield neighbourhood had 7,221
inhabitants in 1981. (fn. 5)
Southgate, intended as the largest of the original
nine neighbourhoods, was to cover 342 a. between
the old Crawley town and the southern ring road,
with an estimated population of 1,577 in 1950. (fn. 6)
Although a provisional plan had been prepared by
1952, (fn. 7) the outline plan was not submitted until 1954 (fn. 8)
and house building began only in 1955; the western
part was reserved for private housing. (fn. 9) Southgate
East was mainly built up by 1957. (fn. 10) The planning of
Southgate West, designated for expansion in 1961, (fn. 11)
was delayed until 1966, (fn. 12) and building started in
1968; a second shopping parade was planned. (fn. 13)
Building was delayed by failures of industrialized
methods, (fn. 14) and by 1970 only 284 houses and 213
flats, just over half the planned total, had been
finished. (fn. 15) Southgate West was completed in
1972. (fn. 16) Southgate had 7,653 inhabitants in 1981. (fn. 17)
Tilgate neighbourhood in the south-east was
begun with the construction of roads and sewers in
1955. (fn. 18) The houses were built between 1956 and
1958. (fn. 19) The southern part included the 72-a. Tilgate park, which the Commission for the New Towns
transferred to the urban district council c. 1964. (fn. 20) An
army camp there was used as a labourers' hostel for
building workers from 1950 to 1957 and later transferred to the Crawley community association for use
by clubs. (fn. 21) Tilgate had a population of 7,130 in
1981. (fn. 22)
The ninth and last of the original planned neighbourhoods, Gossops Green south-west of the ring
road, was expected from the first to attract the richer
settlers. (fn. 23) Roads were built in 1956-7, (fn. 24) and houses
from 1958, including an above average proportion of
private houses. Gossops Green was regarded as complete by 1961 (fn. 25) but the neighbourhood centre was
still unplanned in 1963. (fn. 26) Old people's homes were
planned in the area in 1963, (fn. 27) and 140 private houses
and flats were completed in 1972. (fn. 28) There were
5,698 inhabitants in 1981. (fn. 29)
In 1956 the development corporation proposed
that Tilgate East, reserved in the master plan for
possible use as housing, should be covered with c.
1,000 houses to meet the needs of Crawley's natural
expansion. (fn. 30) The new neighbourhood, sanctioned by
the expansion schemes of 1958-61 (fn. 31) and renamed
Furnace Green after the existing farm there, was intended for 'the lower executive class' (fn. 32) and grew
more slowly than had the older ones. Work on roads
and sewers started in 1960, (fn. 33) and on houses in 1961,
and 460 'standard II' houses each with a garage had
been built for rent by 1962, with another 42 for
sale. (fn. 34) Building continued in the mid and late 1960s.
In 1965 it was claimed that shortages of labour and
materials had delayed work, though the urban district council had built 98 houses. (fn. 35) Two further
housing schemes, for c. 120 and c. 140 houses respectively, were begun in 1967 and finished in 1970;
proposals for using industrialized methods were
abandoned. (fn. 36) Further building was done by selfbuild groups and housing associations. Seventy-two
old people's flats were completed in 1975, (fn. 37) but the
neighbourhood was still unfinished in 1978. (fn. 38) There
were 6,737 inhabitants in 1981. (fn. 39)
Broadfield neighbourhood, outside the ring road
south-west of the town and the first new neighbourhood in the scheme of 1961, (fn. 40) was planned in 1967
and begun in 1969. Much larger than the other
neighbourhoods, it was intended to cover 562 a. and
to provide 4,000 dwellings for 14,000 people. (fn. 41) By
1971 a school and temporary shops had been built, (fn. 42)
and later in the year the Commission for the New
Towns began to build 184 houses for sale, finished
in 1973. (fn. 43) Three fifths of the rest were to be council
houses, two fifths private. (fn. 44) More than half the
council houses had been built by 1976, (fn. 45) and the rest
were completed c. 1978. Private building (including
some by housing associations) was slower, so that the
neighbourhood was then still only half finished. (fn. 46) A
shopping parade, with a large supermarket, and a
community centre were built between 1976 and
1980. The Guinness Trust Housing Association was
building houses at Broadfield in 1981, when the
neighbourhood had 8,300 inhabitants. (fn. 47)
Bewbush neighbourhood, west of Broadfield and
separated from it by a main road, was begun in
1974-5, despite objections that it was on green belt
land. (fn. 48) It too was large, being intended to cover
385 a. and to house 9,000 people in c. 3,000 houses
and flats. By 1976, when the first houses were occupied, the planned total had been increased to 3,600
dwellings. (fn. 49) Houses and flats were built around
courts and walkways, away from traffic. (fn. 50) By 1980,
when the neighbourhood was due to be complete,
the shopping centre had still not been started, (fn. 51) and
in 1981 there were fewer than 5,000 inhabitants. (fn. 52) A
leisure centre was opened c. 1984, (fn. 53) and the shopping centre had been completed by 1985, when
houses were still being built. The plan for the neighbourhood included an area to the west cut off from
the rest by the railway; (fn. 54) it was developed in the
early 1980s as Hyde Drive, a detached area connected by road to Ifield neighbourhood.
In 1980 the area known as Maidenbower, south of
Pound Hill and outside the original designated area,
was chosen as the most likely to fulfil Crawley's
future need for more houses. An outline scheme for
a privately built neighbourhood of c. 3,700 houses
and flats was announced in 1986. (fn. 55)