Revealed: Shock plans to bring AFC Wimbledon to Colliers Wood

Merton Council plans to provide space for a football stadium on the site of the Savacentre in Merantun Way. Sainsburys and M&S would be relocated Merton Council plans to provide space for a football stadium on the site of the Savacentre in Merantun Way. Sainsburys and M&S would be relocated

Plans to bring AFC Wimbledon to Colliers Wood have been drawn up by the council alongside massive regenerations plans for the area, we can reveal.

The Wimbledon Guardian understands proposals for a football stadium on the site of the Savacentre in Merantun Way, currently home to Sainsbury’s and Marks and Spencer, are being worked on by planners.

In what is being called the "Merantun Way transformation and AFC Wimbledon master plan", it has also emerged insurance giant Aviva has been identified as a developer to build a mixed use development of 1,000 new homes along with the 20,000-seater stadium.

The revelation comes just days after separate plans emerged from a property developer to demolish Wimbledon greyhound stadium in Plough Lane and replace it with up to 800 flats and a cinema.

AFC Wimbledon – which later this month will celebrate their 10th anniversary after Wimbledon FC was ripped from Plough Lane and taken to Milton Keynes – have long held aspirations to move back to Merton from Kingston.

It was believed the council had paved the way for the football club to move to Plough Lane after it earmarked the greyhound stadium site for “sporting intensification”, while the Merantun Way plans were never talked about publically.

Plough Lane remains the preferred site for AFC Wimbledon’s homecoming, the council leader insisted, despite the revelation that planners had also identified Colliers Wood as a potential site.

Councillor Stephen Alambritis said the Savacentre had been discussed with AFC Wimbledon as a potential site but that it was on a shortlist of potential venues, including a ground-share with Tooting and Mitcham Football Club in Imperial Fields – an option sources have ruled out.

He said: “The dog track is preferred but if AFC Wimbledon wanted to look at Merantun Way, it is for them to have decisions with our planners about that.

"We want them back in Merton and yes, we have big ambitions for the Colliers Wood area.

"AFC Wimbledon has spotted that and the appeal of the SW19 brand it has.”

He added any development of the Plough Lane site would need to include an intensive sport offering.

Instead, the council has proposed alternative sites in which to relocate Sainsbury’s and M&S.

The plans are part of ambitious regenerations plans for the wider area, including turning Merantun Way into a “boulevard”, as described earlier this year by Councillor Andrew Judge, the council’s head of regeneration policy.

The council has been allocated cash from the Mayor of London which includes £1m for revamping Merantun Way with adding footpaths, cycle paths and better access to Merton Abbey Mills.

Other plans for Colliers Wood and South Wimbledon include:

  • Building a mixed-use development. This would include 100 homes on the Priory Retail Park, in Christchurch Road;
  • Relocating Merton Bus Garage to Morden Industrial Estate and redeveloping the existing site for 150 homes and either shops or offices;
  • Led by Merton Priory Homes, building between 700 and 1200 new homes on the High Path estate;
  • Creating a Merton Abbey Mills “creative quarter”. Under the plans for this, a Sainsbury’s supermarket and 250 new homes would be built.

What do you think of the plans? Leave a comment below, tweet us at @WimbledonNews or email Omar at: ooakes@london.newsquest.co.uk.

Comments(19)

mangad says...
1:03pm Thu 17 May 12

Most ridiculous idea I've ever heard. How is plonking a football stadium in the heart of the area supposed to help regeneration? How is it supposed to boost Merton High Street in any way?

And just where on earth are they going to find the land to squeeze in a sizeable M&S and Sainsburys in all this?

I'm sure most people agree that Colliers Wood needs improvement, and I'd be in favour of moving the bus depot out of the way.

But replacing it all with a football stadium? Well that's hardly going to foster the community and make people want to move here, is it?

But this just seems to be an expensive planners wishlist, whilst doing nothing to tackle the real problems in the area such as traffi

JamesDaniels says...
3:29pm Thu 17 May 12

Seems like an excellent move. Especially in this day and age, anything that brings investment and new jobs to the area cannot be opposed. The site is very big and a lot can fit there. This will be great for the local economy. The football fans will only bug us for a few hours a week, not a problem.

Stevo01 says...
3:39pm Thu 17 May 12

You only have to look at Arsenals Stadium to see how a sports venue can boost a local economy and transform a run down area. This would be a great move for the area.

mangad says...
4:01pm Thu 17 May 12

With all due respect to AFC Wimbledon, AFC Wimbledon are not Arsenal.

And replacing a huge Sainsburys and a huge M&S with a football ground will have a negative impact on jobs. Because unless they get a new site (and who says they even want to move?) those jobs will go.

What's going to bring in more money to the local area? The existing shops or a football stadium that's only got limited use.

ajr1974 says...
4:12pm Thu 17 May 12

This is really excellent news - at last a serious chance to bring Wimbledon back to SW19. Good luck to all to make it happen.

JamesDaniels says...
4:25pm Thu 17 May 12

Well it's clear that a relocation of Sainsbury's etc is part of the deal. That won't be a problem. A stadium will bring thousands of people into the area, on average, every 2 weeks which will certainly have a positive impact on local businesses. Shops are pointless without people in them.

peacedon says...
4:50pm Thu 17 May 12

will have a very negative effect on the area in my opinion, traffic pollution, anti-social behavior, unfortunately football supporters still can't manage to drink sensibly, just imagine when (if) Luton come to town

piggeh says...
5:36pm Thu 17 May 12

this would be a fantastic location and a great boost to the local area. traffic once a fortnight with great public transport options and green travel plans will be a lot less of an impact than having 7 days a week shopping or 3000 flats. AFC Wimbledon have been brilliant for the community around the kingsmeadow site, which is why Kingston are keen for us to stay there.

truthtruthtruth says...
8:14pm Thu 17 May 12

"We welcome the return of AFC Wimbledon to Merton, but have never proposed that Sainsbury’s/M&S be redeveloped for a stadium." - Merton Council.

Honney says...
8:46pm Thu 17 May 12

Never, ever expect Merton Council to back AFC Wimbledon. 20 years of hurt - thanks a lot Merton. Lets stick with Kingston.

Wallace13 says...
7:02am Fri 18 May 12

mangad wrote:
Most ridiculous idea I've ever heard. How is plonking a football stadium in the heart of the area supposed to help regeneration? How is it supposed to boost Merton High Street in any way?

And just where on earth are they going to find the land to squeeze in a sizeable M&S and Sainsburys in all this?

I'm sure most people agree that Colliers Wood needs improvement, and I'd be in favour of moving the bus depot out of the way.

But replacing it all with a football stadium? Well that's hardly going to foster the community and make people want to move here, is it?

But this just seems to be an expensive planners wishlist, whilst doing nothing to tackle the real problems in the area such as traffi
This is VERY bad news for the Colliers Wood area, we should not under estimate these developments. We finally get that awful tower redeveloped (or about to be started), but with the loss of investment from the developer on the area and schools...Now the council are selling us down the river with the plan to move in a football stadium. I have lived by a stadium before in East London, it is not good for the area! Property prices go down/stay down and it is horrific for traffic and anti social behaviour on match days. Families move out area and the housing becomes rented, a sense of identity is lost.
At a recent council meeting they explained how hard it was to expand schools in the area, so where on earth will they find new spaces for M&S and Sainsburys? A lot of people depends on these stores, especially elderly people in the area, so it would be a great loss to see them moved.
Traffic is also grid locked at weekends around Colliers Wood, just imagine on match days, never mind where they would all park?
Lets hope the council see sense and relocate the stadium to the previous location and the dog track, a place that is already used to sporting events.

tjames says...
2:34pm Sat 19 May 12

no public money should be wasted on this--and tmufc ground is personal to tmufc--it was only allowed with that proviso

Mick123 says...
2:18pm Sun 20 May 12

'Wimbledon FC ripped from Plough Lane and taken to Milton Keynes'. How about the 12 years spent at Selhurst?!?!

markmo says...
3:34pm Mon 21 May 12

Sounds like the NIMBY's are out again

JP__86 says...
6:54pm Mon 21 May 12

I live directly opposite the site and have absolutely no problem with this at all. It'd be good to see the Dons back in Merton, and yes, it would create jobs, it would bring a LOT of money to the area (which it badly needs) and I'd rather there be a stadium there than the current supermarkets, or a ridiculous amount of new homes.

The nimby's can do one, bring the Dons home.

mangad says...
9:21am Tue 22 May 12

If you think that a 7 day large supermarket and a very large clothing store are going to provide less money to the area than a barely used football stadium, you're frankly wrong.

tjames says...
9:30am Tue 22 May 12

not with my money--and 5road s are gridlocked already

ByegroveRoad says...
11:40am Thu 24 May 12

How are this many new homes - never mind a football stadium - a good idea in Colliers Wood?
The infrastructure is already at breaking point. Long traffic jams at busy times, schools so full that Garfield is adding a fourth reception class and parents living a couple of hundred yards from Singlegate can't get a place for their kids.
Council has already done enough damage to the area, letting the black tower be built, erasing Merton Abbey with a flyover and marching pylons over Wandle Park.

MK Fan says...
11:15pm Fri 1 Jun 12

Since when was Wimbledon FC ripped from Plough Lane and taken to Milton Keynes. Talk about twisting facts.

MERTON COUNCIL sold their souls over the restrictive covenant causing Wimbledon FC to spend many years at Sellhurst, and taking the club to the point of bankruptcy...

...before they were rescued by Pete Winkelman and Milton Keynes

SHAME SHAME SHAME on you!

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