PLANS to build 345 homes at the former Fairfield-Mabey Bridge site in Chepstow have been approved by Monmouthshire councillors.

The proposed development aims to pay homage to the industrial heritage of the former shipbuilding site, while boosting the prosperity of Chepstow with a riverside park, a link to the Wales Coastal Path, leisure facilities and offices.

Councillors approved a reserved matters application for the scheme yesterday, after outline planning permission for the scheme was granted in 2017.

Under the plans the neighbourhood will be split into three distinct areas including ‘New Chepstow’, 'The Steelyard' at the centre and ‘Hardwick Cliffs’ at the southernmost part of the site.

Free Press Series: This is how the site looked in its shipyard days.This is how the site looked in its shipyard days.

The majority of the homes, 244, will be three-bedroom, while there will be 79 four-bedroom and 22 two-bedroom houses. Around 20-25 homes will be affordable housing on a 1.5-acre site.

At Tuesday's meeting Chepstow councillor Armand Watts questioned why the affordable units were being 'tucked away' and not being mixed with the rest of the development.

READ MORE: Planned 345 homes 'will destroy town', opponents say

But a speaker from Barratt David Wilson Homes gave assurances that the cluster would not cause "any sort of social ghetto" due to its small size.

Monmouthshire planning bosses said the scheme maximised the amount of affordable housing which could be included.

Chepstow councillor Jez Becker said that although the scheme was "lacking in a lot of what was promised", it still had many benefits that the people of the town would "absolutely love."

Councillor David Dovey said the scheme is "an incredibly important opportunity for the town" and that it boost the area's prosperity.

"If you do not like this it begs the question what do you like and what would we be likely to get," he said.

"I think this is a really great opportunity for the town."

Several of the homes will be three-storey, with the designs paying homage to the site's industrial past.