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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Ex-BBC chief Greg Dyke starts work on £26m plan to redevelop fort

The Victorian Fort Bovisand site is on track to become flats and houses with a bistro and events space too

Fort Bovisand, the Victorian Palmerston Fort at Wembury, on the fringe of Plymouth

Former BBC director general Greg Dyke has begun work on a £26million plan to transform a Victorian fort into homes and businesses.

After gaining , construction is now beginning in earnest on the scheme at historic Fort Bovisand, on the coast at Wembury, on the edge of Plymouth.

Mr Dyke, chairman of Ford Bovisand Developments Ltd, is behind the ambitious project at the 19 th Century Palmerston fort, which has been the subject of stop-go proposals for more than a decade, and has started with a £500,000 programme of cliff stability work.

Experts have been abseiling the cliff face at Wembury as they check its condition and the safety of the access road to the fort.

Greg Dyke

Eventually the former fortress will be transformed into 80 houses and apartments, a bistro café with rooftop terrace, visitors’ centre and events space.

Mr Dyke said: “We have taken the first step on the way to saving the fort and bringing it back into sustainable and meaningful use. This is the first stage of our exciting plans for the future of the Fort.

“Basically, we are starting a £26million project by spending more than £500,000 making sure the access road at the front of the fort doesn’t fall into the sea. Obviously this has to be done first before we get on with the rest of the project.”

The ambitious project to restore the former stronghold and build more than 80 houses and apartments on the site can’t begin until the cliffs and the access road, to the fort and neighbouring residential properties, are secure.