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  1. The Blackbird Leys Estate was built mainly in the 1950s and 1960s to meet the then pressing need for housing. It was part of a plan to re-house people from the dilapidated inner city. This included large-scale clearance of a site near to where the Oxford Ice Rink was built ( The Oxpens ).

  2. 12 de mar. de 2024 · Ed Nix. The council will submit a detailed planning submission for the new community centre and surrounding public space later in the year. A ground-breaking ceremony has marked the official start...

  3. 18 de dez. de 2023 · The Blackbird Leys Estate, Oxford: ‘Never accepted as part of the city proper’. Municipal Dreams. Dec 18, 2023. Blackbird Leys, situated on the south-eastern periphery of Oxford, is to all appearances a pretty ordinary, not to say humdrum, council estate. But it’s achieved notoriety.

  4. Ed Nix. A ground-breaking ceremony to start the construction was held last week. It said it would "return to its rightful home" outside the new community centre once the work was completed. The...

  5. 25 de fev. de 2023 · 25 February 2023. Oxford City Council. A central green space, nature trail and a roof terrace are included in the plans. Almost 300 new homes are set to be built under plans to redevelop an area ...

  6. Blackbird Leys is Oxford's largest council estate, originally built to accommodate some 10,000 residents in about 2,800 dwellings; an estimated 13,464 people live in Blackbird Leys to-day, making it bigger than historic Oxfordshire market towns such as Henley, Thame, Wallingford and Wantage.

  7. According to the ONS mid-year ward population estimates, the population of Blackbird Leys decreased from 6,276 in mid-2009 to 5,652 in mid-2019. This shrinkage - over a ten year period – was an apparent decrease of 624 people or -9.9%. Figure 1 Population of Blackbird Leys by 5 year age band, 2009 and 2019.