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Carl Meale

Carl Meale

I grew up in London and didn’t think there were any opportunites there so I moved to Milton Keynes at the age of 16.

I’m now the youngest manager of the biggest and best leisure asset in Buckinghamshire; Xscape.

Milton Keynes for me is an amazing place.  If I had not made that move, I would never have had the opportunities I did and I would not do what I do now.  For me, Xscape is like the bad relation in the family in Milton Keynes.  Everything’s square with the grid roads and then you have this huge building which just dominates the skyline and it breaks all the rules and regulations.

The Xscape building dominating the skyline in Milton Keynes

We kind of do the same.  It has a reputation for bringing the best or the first of everything.  We had the first real snow ski slope in the country, the first indoor sky diving tunnel and the biggest casino outside of London.

“I love Milton Keynes.  My children are growing up here and I wouldn’t want that to happen anywhere else.  From wherever you are in MK you can see this building, they say ‘look daddy there’s your building’, that’s a really proud moment for me.”

There’s no limit to the future of Milton Keynes – it’s the new town that just keeps giving!!

Chris Bridgman

Chris Bridgman

In the 1970’s my parents moved from Surrey to work for the Development Corporation, the organisation behind the visionary New Town of Milton Keynes.

A decade or so later I was one of the first babies to be born in its hospital.

Chris estimates there must be over 250 million daffodils in Milton Keynes!

My father worked in the Landscape Department and I was destined to follow in his footsteps, working in the horticultural industry. For the last 11 years we have been business partners operating from offices in our town.

“I love being from Milton Keynes and telling people all the great things about it. This really is the ‘City of Dreams'”

To me, Milton Keynes is the ideal location for me to grow and nurture our business, but that’s not all I’ve contributed. I have been educated in local schools, attended local clubs and from the age of 15 volunteered at thriving community events and productions, even performing as a Human Tree at the Millennium Dome for the Milton Keynes Our Town Story in 2000.

Christian Horner

Christian Horner

It’s incredible what’s happened in fifty years, where you can see the growth that’s gone particularly in the last twelve that we’ve been here, so where it’ll be in the next 50 years is what is fascinating, but it’s one of the fastest growing cities or towns in the uk

Milton Keynes has been very good for us – I mean location wise it’s fantastic – easy access to the airports, to a lot of suppliers who are local to this vicinity, Silverstone just up the road, so it’s worked incredibly well for us.

Christian Horner is Team Principal of the Red Bull Racing Formula One team

When Red Bull bought the team from what was Jaguar Racing, which had previously been Stewart Grand Prix, it was by accident that we found ourselves in Milton Keynes but quickly came to realise that location wise, and access wise it was a perfect location for us.

Since then over the last twelve years we’ve invested very very heavily in the site here and expanded and made MK our long term home.

“We’ve established Milton Keynes as very much our home and we’ll be here for some time to come.”

The lakes are nice; we have a lot of people who head out at lunchtime you know either round Caldecotte lakes or in the local area, there’s everything on hand here so there’s nothing that you want for. Our young drivers they all come and live here prior, when they start as junior drivers, so whether that was Daniel Ricciardo, Daniil Kvyat or Carlos Sainz Jr., they’ve all lived in Milton Keynes as part of their training and education as Red Bull Racing drivers

Colin Bradley

Colin Bradley

When I was a kid 50 years ago, this was parkland and meadows.

Our regular weekend walks with my mum and dad and two brothers was to go up through Old Bletchley, past the church, work our way along footpaths and across the old railway footbridge which is still there, through the little village of Simpson, by the canal, back to Water Eaton and home.

Colin looks out over where he used to take walks as a child with his family

I would have been in about the fourth year of my secondary school when it was announced that Milton Keynes was going to be built. I remember going to Bletchley library and seeing a huge architect’s model of the new Lakes Estate and thinking that was a pretty big area.

“I absolutely love what the place has become. Anywhere in Milton Keynes, in five or ten minutes you can be in a really nice green space and get around with the kids on their bikes. It’s wonderful!”

It looked gorgeous with all models of trees but when it first went up, there were no trees and it looked like rows of barracks. It was only after about 25 years when the trees had grown that you realised that’s what the model showed us! I absolutely love what the place has become. Anywhere in Milton Keynes, in five or ten minutes you can be in a really nice green space and get around with the kids on their bikes. It’s wonderful!

Corina Cleaver

Corina Cleaver

I am dressed as a human sized princess most of the time if I’m honest. I have run a kids party company for a number of years now.

The fancy dress started after one Mum said I looked like a princess, and asked me to dress up for her child’s party. So I dressed up as Elsa from Frozen and it all went from there.

Corina spends most of her time dressed up as children’s favourite characters…

Now I am always a princess of some sort! The kids love it. I don’t sing though! As well as Elsa I’m also Tinkerbell, Repunzel, Ariel the Mermaid… I can be anyone you want me to be!

“I also support 39 different charities – all in Milton Keynes and surrounding areas.  I helped raise over £44 thousand pounds last year.”

I can be anyone you want me to be! I also support 39 different charities – all in Milton Keynes and surrounding areas.  I helped raise over £44 thousand pounds last year. I often visit very poorly children, dressed as their favourite character, to fulfil the child’s last wish. I’ll sit and have a tea party with them, or we’ll play or run around or do anything they fancy doing.

It’s a sad situation. It’s hard to meet children who are nearing the end of their lives, it’s been some of the hardest times of my life because I often get close to the families too. But it’s important work. I like to think I’ve helped fulfil their dreams

David Lock

David Lock

I was a town planning student in the late 60’s and remember well when Milton Keynes started. All my town planning magazines were full of these ‘new towns’ coming, but Milton Keynes was always the loudest, always the brashest and always the most boastful!

It always got the headlines and was always on TV. I knew about it and watched with interest. So when I got the opportunity to work for the Development Corporation in 1977 I jumped at it. I brought my wife and 2 children up here from Tunbridge Wells which was a real cultural shock I can tell you! But it was so exciting – a book to be written instead of an old book; for a town planner this is the dream – the ultimate opportunity!

David Lock at work.

I was working for the strategic planning department at the time, which meant I was helping to decide what was going to be built next. What should the contents be for each new grid square, each new chunk. Housing, schools, shops, transport… all of it. Plus we also had to grow our community with Girl Guides, Boy Scouts and churches. Whatever you can think that would usually take 200 odd years for an ordinary town to form, MK had to do it very quickly.

“Town planning magazines were full of these ‘new towns’ coming, but Milton Keynes was always the loudest, always the brashest and always the most boastful!”

Now we need to think of the next step as we have a dilemma. Do we call it complete and stop dead? In which case, what about housing – where will people go? Do we roll out the familiar Milton Keynes line – another row of grid squares in every direction? Or my personal view is to see us grow baby towns a little distance away, which can be joined to Milton Keynes by little whizzy buses or whatever. That way we get to keep the countryside threaded through and we all prosper. Don’t squash us up like old industrial towns, that’s not what we’re here for.

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