Published: Monday, 11th May 2026
Residents, community groups and businesses are invited to help finalise a masterplan for King’s Lynn, which will guide sustainable regeneration, investment and opportunity over the next 20 years.
The compelling plan sets out an up-to-date strategic vision for King’s Lynn’s future regeneration and includes indicative proposals for six specific priority sites, in addition to regeneration plans for the Riverfront area.
The Masterplan has been refined following an initial public consultation, as well as conversations with local key stakeholders, and aims to articulate a clear community-backed vision for King’s Lynn to ensure the town is well placed to secure future opportunities for public and private investment.
Working with urban designers and town planners from multidisciplinary design consultancy BDP, the borough council is now sharing the masterplan with everyone in a second public consultation, to affirm there is wide local support and offer another opportunity for comments before councillors are asked to adopt the plan for use.
The six locations where the potential for regeneration has been explored include: the former Debenhams, St James Swimming Pool, Common Staithe Quay, Church Street, Port and Timber Yard area, West Lynn (former Del Monte and dredging sites). This is in addition to areas of the town that have already been explored for regeneration potential, which are included in the overall masterplan. These include the Southgates Regeneration Area, Baxter’s Plain and St George’s Guildhall.
In addition, indicative proposals are presented for future phases of the Riverfront Regeneration, which is a priority area under the Pride in Place Programme and devolution. This includes public realm proposals for South Quay and King’s Staithe Square, as well as concepts for Devil’s Alley, the Sommerfeld and Thomas Warehouse, and Boal Quay.
Find out more and have your say in this second public consultation from Monday 11 May to Monday 8 June 2026 on the Vision King's Lynn website below. If you don’t have online access, you are welcome to use the public-access PCs at King’s Court reception and local libraries, or call Customer Services on 01553 616200 for a paper copy of the survey form.
People are also invited to speak with the project team at the following drop-in events:
- Tuesday 19 May - 3:45pm to 6:45pm - King's Lynn Library
- Wednesday 20 May - 4pm to 6pm - St James Swimming Pool
- Saturday 23 May - 10am to 2pm - The Place, 23 New Conduit Street
- Tuesday 26 May - 8:30am to 11:30am - The Place, 23 New Conduit Street
- Wednesday 27 May - 4pm to 6pm - Lynnsport - ground floor reception
- Thursday 28 May - 11am to 3pm - King's Lynn Library
- Friday 29 May - 1pm to 5pm - The Place, 23 New Conduit Street
- Wednesday 3 June - 1pm to 5pm - The Place, 23 New Conduit Street
- Friday 5 June - 10am to 2pm - The Place, 23 New Conduit Street
- Saturday 6 June - 11am to 2pm - Sainsbury’s, Town Centre
The exhibition boards will be on display in the windows at The Place, 23 New Conduit Street, for the duration of the consultation period. There will also be several sessions at the College of West Anglia to involve young people.
Councillor Simon Ring, Deputy Council Leader, said:
“This is a turning point for King’s Lynn. For years, we’ve had plans that talked a good game but never had the backing or momentum to deliver. This is different.
“We’re setting out a bold 20-year vision that does not just sit on a shelf. It is a plan that future administrations can pick up and run with, because the direction is clear and the ambition is real.
“It is unapologetically ambitious for King’s Lynn, building on what makes our town special, while being honest about the need to step up, attract investment and seize the opportunities ahead, from devolution to private-sector backing.
“This is about joining everything up, backing our priorities and making it clear that King’s Lynn is ready to move forward with confidence.
“Our vision has been shaped by our communities over several years, and now we are bringing it back, stronger, clearer and more deliverable. We want people to see it, challenge it and be part of making it happen.”
Vicky Etheridge, chair of the King’s Lynn Neighbourhood Board, added:
“This is a long-term vision with indicative proposals. Some elements will take longer than others to deliver, things will evolve along the way, much of it will be subject to further, detailed consultation. But having an up-to-date plan is the crucial starting point and will ensure we’re in a strong position to secure further opportunities in the future.
“Having seen all the community engagement that has happened so far, I am hopeful most people will feel the Masterplan reflects their own ambitions for the future regeneration of King’s Lynn. So please take the time to look at the plans and share your thoughts in this second consultation, whether online or visiting one of the drop-in events.”