Looking for the news in Kent and what’s happening near you? Keep informed about the latest happenings in Kent with our news round-up. Discover new events, local developments, and interesting stories from the Garden of England.
NEWS IN KENT
DOCKYARD FUNDING
The historic dock has been awarded £533,084 from the Museum Renewal Fund. It will, says the dockyard, “help us navigate current financial pressures but, more importantly, allows us to invest in the preservation and reuse of our estate to ensure long-term sustainability.”
Read full details on their website here
ARCHBISHOP OF CANTERBURY
The current Bishop of London, the Rt Revd and Rt Hon Dame Sarah Mullally (pictured), will be the next Archbishop of Canterbury. She is the 106th Archbishop of Canterbury since Saint Augustine arrived in Kent from Rome in 597. Bishop Sarah will be the first woman to hold the office and will take up her role in March 2026.
Read the full official details here
EUROSTAR GOOD GROWTH
A new campaign from the Good Growth Foundation, a think tank focused on reforming the politics and policies of economic growth, is calling on the government to reopen Ashford International to bring good growth to towns left behind. The End of the Tunnel project claims this could inject £534 million a year into the visitor economy – up to £2.7 billion over five years. Ashford is the epicentre of a surprisingly struggling region. Kent and its neighbour East Sussex are often perceived as affluent due to their proximity to London and their overall economic output, but face significant internal economic disparities. This is particularly true for coastal communities, which have increasingly become barometers for overall UK decline. The hope is that the reintroduction of services and tourism will boost the area.
Kent County Council has also endorsed a petition to bring back Eurostar services to Ashford and Ebbsfleet stations.
Read the Good Growth Foundations report here
COUNCIL’S MAJOR CHANGE
Government ministers want councils in Kent and Medway to deliver services differently. The proposed devolution will include the creation of a strategic mayoral authority for Kent, headed by a directly-elected mayor. Under the current system, Kent County Council (KCC) delivers services such as education, social services and roads, and district or borough councils deliver others, including emptying bins and providing council housing. In the proposed new system, unitary councils would deliver all council services in one area. Medway Council operates in that way today. Maidstone Borough Council has set up a survey – see our link here – to share your thoughts on this. You have until 9am on the 6th of October 2025 to take part. The new unitaries will start operating in April 2028.
MILLIONS FOR KENT
The government has announced £5bn of investment for 339 ‘overlooked’ communities under the Pride in Place Strategy. The investment will see some areas receive £2m every year for a decade. For Kent, this is Maidstone’s Parkwood & Senacre, Swale’s Sheppey East and Dover’s Buckland & St Radigund. A further 95 places will receive a one-off payment of £1.5m, including Gravesham, Medway, Swale, and Thanet, according to bbc.co.uk. Adding, the money will be targeted at improvements backed by the local community and could include projects to tackle littering and graffiti or building a new sports ground. Unlike the levelling up schemes, councils do not have to bid to get the money. The government has said spending would only be approved if community groups, local organisations and social clubs have been involved in deciding how the money will be spent.
This is on top of the Plan for Neighbourhoods, which promises to invest £1.5 billion in 75 of the ‘most deprived’ areas across the UK over the next decade, and Ramsgate in Thanet was on the list to ’empower local people to take back control of their future with a long-term, flexible funding pot of up to £20 million of funding and support over the next 10 years’, says the government.
SHELTERS RENEWAL
The Heritage Lab in Thanet are taking on the 20-year lease from Thanet District Council to redevelop the eight art deco shelters on Ramsgate’s East Cliff lower promenade. They will refurbish and renovate them and are exploring ideas. They are hoping to open them for Summer 2026, and are calling out for people who may be interested in individuals, community organisations and private operators to run one or more of three commercial units: a café/bar, a watersports facility and a sauna.
More details here.
FOLKESTONE’S BRIGHTER FUTURE
As part of the Folkestone – A Brighter Future project, Bouverie Square will be returned to its former use as a public garden space, and a new linear bus station will be created along Middelburg Square. New temporary busy stops will now operate from Middleburg Square. The current bus station in Bouverie Square is replaced with a new park that creates a new ‘green heart’ for the town. Stagecoach has a map and plan – see the link here – to help users navigate the changes with details of stops and routes. The new changes start from the 21st September 2025.
UNIVERSITY TRAILBLAZER
University of Greenwich and the University of Kent have agreed to create a ‘super-university’. The plan is to initiate a new model bringing both institutions under one structure whilst enabling each university to retain its name, identity and local presence. Professor Georgina Randsley de Moura, Acting Vice Chancellor and President of the University of Kent, said: “This exciting collaboration is about harnessing the combined power of two ambitious universities looking to the future, to ensure we are sustainable, impactful and can make a bigger difference to the communities we serve.
It is seen as a trailblazer and the start of other institutions to follow, and this merger creates a blueprint for other institutions to follow. If approved, the aim is for it to start from the 2026/2027 academic year.
ANOTHER KENT SHOCK
Locate In Kent announced on 18th September 2025 that it is going into voluntary liquidation after more than 25 years. As Kent’s inward investment agency, they aimed to encourage and support more businesses to set up and expand in Kent, from start-ups to multinationals, and they helped thousands of businesses. In their statement, the causes include a backdrop of rising costs and reduced national funding. Chairman, David Brooks Wilson, says, ” This decision has not been taken lightly. It reflects a challenging set of environmental and financial circumstances and forms part of a structured plan to responsibly conclude our business activities.”
EUROSTAR PLEA
Kent County Council has endorsed a campaign to bring back Eurostar services to Ashford and Ebbsfleet stations. Since the services were suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic, they have not been reinstated, despite the recovery of other travel routes. This has prompted a petition, which has already gathered more than 65,000 signatures at the time of writing, to urge Eurostar to restore these vital connections.
KENT TOURISM SHOCK
News that the Visit Kent brand is entering liquidation, and its umbrella organisation, Go To Places, has also ceased trading, is, says Kent County Council (KCC), a significant loss to the county. Visit Kent was responsible for supporting and growing the sizeable tourism industry in Kent with a visitor economy worth £4 billion and representing 11 per cent of all jobs in Kent. Funding KCC Cabinet Member for Economic Development and Coastal Regeneration Paul King, says, ” Government reductions in funding to Visit England have had wide-reaching repercussions, and investment in Visit Kent, as our Local Visitor Economy Partnership had anticipated from the government, has therefore regrettably not come forward”.
King says, the visitor economy of Kent is likely to suffer, impacting hundreds of local businesses as a result.“We will be writing to the Government to seek support for the sector”, and continues, that the council “are determined that we find a way forward, with partners, that this can continue to be recognised.”
Read their full statement here.
BROADSTAIRS IS THE BEST
Kent has some of the best seaside towns for food and drink, according to a new survey by Which! Along with Cornwall, the coastal towns of Broadstairs, Deal, Folkestone and Whitstable scored highly for the best seaside towns for food in South East England. Broadstairs came out top, scoring highly as a destination, with a beach rating of 5 stars!
NEW BEACH SPA
Folkestone Harbour and Sea Scrub Sauna are joining forces to create a unique Beach Spa. It will include two saunas, a hot tub, a plunge pool, cold dowse showers, a healthy eating café and changing facilities. This will be Kent’s largest beach sauna concept. Works are due to start at the end of 2025.
BREWERY ARTS VENUE
Gravesend’s St Andrew’s Arts Centre will be run by the Gravesham Iron Pier Brewery and, in collaboration with Gravesham Borough Council, will develop a programme of exhibitions, events and activities. The venue is named after the neighbouring Town Pier, the world’s oldest surviving cast iron pier
FOLKESTONE FAVE IS SAVED
The Sports Trust, with support from the De Haan Foundation, has agreed to take over and re-open the Folkestone Sports Centre to run alongside the Three Hills Sports Centre and F51 Skate Park. ” We are delighted to announce that, after months of productive discussions with the administrator, we are now in the final stages of the agreement to take over the operation and ownership of Folkestone Sports Centre,” says The Sports Trust. See the full details of the Folkestone Sports Centre’s future here.
THANET’S TOP LISTING
According to Condé Nast Traveller magazine, Thanet is listed third in their article on the best places to visit in August, with 30 of their favourite destinations. Margate. The feature highlight’s Kent’s age-old seaside resorts well and truly come alive during the Summer months.
WINTER GARDENS UPDATE
Thanet District Council has identified its preferred partner for the Grade II Margate Winter Gardens refurbishment and reopening. Westwood One Theatre, the organisation behind the recent renovation of the Granville Theatre, Ramsgate, have been chosen. They have put forward a vision for the Winter Gardens which aims to create a sustainable and profitable multi-use space. Primarily, it would operate as a theatre and live music venue, with the scope to accommodate conferences, corporate events and weddings. These activities would be bolstered by a rooftop bar with panoramic sea views. The building would also house a drama school, a vocational learning centre and a registered day nursery.
£20 MILLION TO SPEND
The £20 million Levelling Up Fund has successfully been awarded final approval from the Government to spend ‘our’ £20 million Levelling Up Fund allocation on a new health, wellbeing, employment and skills hub in Gravesend, says Gravesham Borough Council. Of the fund, £17 million will replace the ageing Cascades Leisure Centre facility with a new low-carbon leisure venue that can host regional events alongside an improved family-fun offer. The remaining £3m of funding will be used to deliver a range of initiatives within the borough’s urban areas to improve public spaces, create new workspaces for small businesses and accommodate new community uses.
TUNNEL, BUS AND BIKE
The new 1.4km road Silvertown Tunnel has opened linking Silvertown to the Greenwich Peninsula in east London with the aim of reducing congestion at the Blackwall Tunnel, in addition to existing Blackwall Tunnel services, zero-emission bus services through Silvertown Tunnel and across both tunnels. There will be 21 buses an hour during peak times between 7am-7pm Monday to Friday. For cyclists, a new dedicated service will let cyclists take their bikes on a shuttle bus through the Silvertown Tunnel.
Please note that charges apply to the new Silvertown Tunnel as well as the Dartford Tunnel.
NEW ROAD IMPACT
The Lower Thames Crossing has been approved by the government. It will connect Kent and Essex through a tunnel beneath the River Thames. It will almost double road capacity over the river east of London, according to National Highways. It aims to reduce congestion by taking over 13 million vehicles away every year from Dartford and freeing up almost a full lane of traffic. However, Kent Wildlife Trust believes this is a shortsighted decision, as it will impact ancient woodlands, Sites of Special Scientific Interest and cause irreversible damage to the UK’s climate and biodiversity.
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News In Kent
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Picture Credit: © Good Growth Foundation/Ashford International