Share your views on Thanet’s activity spaces
Tell us what you think about Thanet’s local spaces and facilities, and how they can be improved for sports, play, and exercise.
Proposed vision for Jackey Bakers as an inclusive multi-sports hub for Ramsgate
Tell us what you think about Thanet’s local spaces and facilities, and how they can be improved for sports, play, and exercise.

Earlier this year, we asked for your ideas on how to improve Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground. Your feedback will help us to shape the £10 million multi-sports hub for Ramsgate. This will be delivered in partnership with the Football Foundation.
We want you to be part of this journey from start to finish. Use this page to see how the project is progressing and discover how your input is making a difference.
Backed by a £10 million investment in partnership with the Football Foundation, the planned regeneration aims to include:
A community evening was held in January to gather ideas, feedback, and priorities from partners. This information will help us plan the future of Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground.
The main focus was looking at how the site can best support Thanet residents through:
Many different partners came to the event. We had great representation from education, health, and community media. There were also partners from grassroots sport, disability sport, and social enterprise.
There was strong and consistent support for Scenario 2, which proposes:
Partners felt this approach would:
Partners emphasised that Jackey Bakers should feel:
A clear and consistent message from partners was the ambition for Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground to become the flagship football hub for Thanet, fully aligned with the Football Foundation’s mission to transform lives and strengthen communities through football.
Jackey Bakers should be positioned as:
Partners gave their full support to clear goals that prioritise underrepresented groups, including:
To support these ambitions, partners highlighted the importance of:
This focus ensures Jackey Bakers is not just a football venue, but a hub that helps the community. Here, football will be used as a tool for inclusion, health improvements, education, and community cohesion.
The engagement demonstrated a strong appetite for Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground to become:
We ran a survey to find out how young people use Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground and what changes they want to see in the future.
We received 120 responses, mostly from young people aged up to 18. This gave us brilliant feedback from teenagers (a group whose views are often missed when designing parks).
Many young people already use the park regularly to:
However, the young people told us the park currently lacks spaces built just for older children, which stops them from visiting more often.
The main message from the survey is that young people want safe, welcoming spaces to hang out and stay active. Their top requests include:
Young people also care deeply about the environment. They want to protect the park’s natural spaces and suggested adding:
Overall, the survey shows a strong demand to invest in Jackey Bakers. Young people want a park that is safer, better for teenagers, and full of great activities, while still remaining a beautiful local green space.
Age group |
Responses |
| 15 – 18 | 55 |
| 12 – 14 | 51 |
| 8 – 11 | 11 |
| Under 8 | 3 |
Total responses: 120 |
Visiting frequency |
Responses |
| Sometimes | 47 |
| A few times a week | 27 |
| Hardly ever | 22 |
| Most days | 12 |
| Never | 12 |
Insight: Most respondents already use the park at least occasionally, meaning improvements could quickly increase regular use.
Activity |
Responses |
| Hanging out with friends | 66 |
| Playing sports | 46 |
| Walking / cycling / scootering | 46 |
| Using the play area | 44 |
| Dog walking | 38 |
Insight: The park is primarily used as a social and informal recreation space, not just for organised sport.
Feature |
Votes |
| Outdoor gym | 68 |
| Better play area | 63 |
| Skate or BMX area | 58 |
| Trampoline / bounce equipment | 56 |
| Zipline | 55 |
| Pump track | 42 |
| Parkour / free-running space | 38 |
Key message: Young people want active, adventurous play equipment, especially things designed for older children and teenagers.
Facility |
Votes |
| Better football pitches | 58 |
| Basketball / MUGA court | 50 |
| Tennis / netball courts | 50 |
| Cricket area | 13 |
Key message: Football remains the most important organised sport, but multi-use courts are also strongly supported.
This was one of the strongest themes in the survey.
Feature |
Votes |
| Seating / sheltered chill-out space | 98 |
| Café or kiosk | 94 |
| Picnic area | 63 |
| BBQ area | 39 |
Insight: Young people clearly want safe social spaces, not just sports facilities.
Feature |
Votes |
| Nature trails | 80 |
| More trees & planting | 73 |
| Wildlife areas | 72 |
Insight: There is strong support for protecting and enhancing the natural environment alongside recreation.
Improvement |
Votes |
| Better lighting | 98 |
| More bins | 94 |
| Safer paths | 70 |
| Clearer signage | 40 |
Key message: Safety improvements are one of the biggest priorities, particularly lighting.
Key themes from written responses:
Requests included:
Example comment: “A safe place to be with things to do.”
Particularly:
Example comment: “Quality of the grass football pitches.”
Young people want places designed for them:
Example comment: “A café so it becomes more social.”
Some respondents emphasised keeping the green space.
Example comment: “That it stays as a park.”
Most respondents were 12–18, and they want:
Lighting and safer paths were among the highest-scoring responses.
Sheltered seating and a café were among the most popular ideas overall.
Football and multi-use courts are strongly supported.
There is strong support for nature trails and more planting.
The project is a major regeneration initiative led by Thanet District Council to transform the Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground into a premier sport and wellbeing facility for all residents.
We are working with national bodies like the Football Foundation. The project will be in the region of £10 million. The council is funding 40% of this project, with 60% coming from national grant funding.
PermalinkNo. There are no plans to build housing on the Jackey Bakers Recreation Ground site. The project is focused on improving the land for sport, recreation, and community health.
The aim is to help more Thanet residents to get up, get out and get active more often to improve their quality of life. This supports our corporate priority to help make Thanet a Thriving Place for all. You can read more about our Corporate Priorities in our Corporate Plan.
PermalinkNo. We are committed to protecting the community’s access to the outdoors. This ensures that dog walkers, families, and residents who enjoy the open space for non-organised activities can continue to use the site exactly as they do now.
PermalinkThe £10 million investment isn’t just for sports pitches; it’s about making the whole area a better place to visit, spend time there and enjoy. Planned improvements include:
The Hub will be for everyone. While it will provide facilities for local football clubs, it’s designed to be open, accessible, and welcoming to all residents. We are placing a focus on supporting:
Securing a £10 million facility is a huge win for our district. This level of investment allows us to build high-quality facilities that would otherwise be unaffordable. Beyond sports, this hub will:
We are currently in the engagement and planning phase. We have held various community stakeholder and engagement events already – we want to hear from you to ensure the final design reflects what the local community actually needs. Your feedback at this meeting and through our Your Voice Thanet surveys is the first step in making this vision a reality. It is too early to confirm an exact construction date. However, if everything goes to plan, the council might be able to start on site in the summer of 2027.
PermalinkYou can follow the project’s progress on our website and Your Voice Thanet, our public engagement website. We will continue to host resident meetings and workshops as the designs develop.
Our goal is to create a flagship space that Ramsgate can be proud of – one that stays green, stays open to the public, and becomes a gold standard for community wellbeing.
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