There are places where the past lingers quietly in brick and glass, where buildings once filled with voices, ideas, and flickering screens now stand in patient stillness. Time moves slowly through such spaces. The corridors remember footsteps long after the desks have emptied, and the windows continue to look out over towns that never quite stop changing.
In Swindon, one such place has waited for its next chapter.
For years, the former headquarters of Intel in the town’s South Marston area stood as a reminder of a different moment in the history of technology and industry. The complex once formed part of the global network of offices that connected engineers, managers, and researchers across continents. Yet after the company closed the site in 2017, the buildings gradually settled into a quieter rhythm, their future uncertain.
Now the site is moving again.
A development company has acquired the former Intel campus as part of a £130 million redevelopment scheme that aims to transform the area into a new commercial and industrial hub. The purchase marks the beginning of a plan that will reshape the land into a modern business park, intended to attract a new generation of companies and jobs to the area.
The project, led by property developer FI Real Estate Management, envisions a series of new industrial and logistics buildings spread across the large site. If fully realized, the development could bring several hundred thousand square feet of employment space to the town, providing room for businesses ranging from distribution firms to light manufacturing operations.
Such changes are not uncommon in towns whose identities have long been tied to industry. Over decades, Swindon has repeatedly reinvented itself — from railway engineering to automotive production and later to electronics and technology. Each era has left its own imprint on the landscape.
The Intel facility once represented one of those turning points. When the company operated there, the campus symbolized the arrival of global technology firms into regional British towns, linking local employment to the rapidly expanding world of microprocessors and digital infrastructure.
When operations ended, the closure reflected wider shifts in global manufacturing and corporate consolidation. Yet the physical spaces — offices, laboratories, and parking lots — remained as quiet witnesses to that earlier moment.
Developers now say the new project aims to bring the land back into active use while aligning it with the logistical demands of modern commerce. Large warehouse-style buildings, flexible commercial units, and updated infrastructure are expected to replace much of the former office complex.
Local authorities have previously expressed support for redevelopment that encourages employment growth in the region, particularly in sectors connected to distribution and manufacturing.
For Swindon, the transformation of the former Intel headquarters may become another example of how industrial landscapes evolve with time — old technology sites giving way to new forms of economic activity.
FI Real Estate Management has acquired the former Intel headquarters site in South Marston, Swindon, as part of a £130 million redevelopment plan to create a new commercial and logistics hub.
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Sources
BBC Wiltshire Live The Business Desk Insider Media Property Week

