Almost four acres of land bought by council bosses so it could build a school that has never been constructed could be sold off to housing developers.
And two farms owned by Norfolk County Council could also be sold as the authority, which recently revealed it needs to plug a £42.6m funding gap in its budget next year, looks to find extra cash.
The Conservative-controlled cabinet at County Hall will be asked to agree to declare land in Sheringham and Outwell surplus to requirements and to make it available for sale.
READ MORE: Councillors pledge to fight Norwich Wensum Lodge sell-off
The Sheringham land, off Nelson Road Field, was originally bought by the council so a new school could be provided.
But that school was never built and, since 2006, the land has been leased to North Norfolk District Council.
However, Broadland Housing Association wants to acquire the site so it can build affordable homes there.
County Hall officers have reviewed the site and confirmed the council no longer needs it.
At a meeting on Monday (July 3), councillors are being asked to agree for the site to be sold directly to the housing association, or, if no agreement is reached, then on the open market.
The cabinet is also asked to agree to sell two farms in Outwell, which belong to the authority's County Farms estate - farms which the authority rents out to tenants.
READ MORE: Norfolk County Council to lose 200 acres of A47 farmland
One of the farms is on land at Edge Bank and totals almost three-quarters of an acre, while the other is at Downham Road and measures 1.7 acres.
Council officers said the tenants have surrendered their farm business tenancy agreements and recommend that councillors agree to sell the land on the open market through sale or tender.
The council last week revealed its plan to sell its freehold in Norwich's Wensum Lodge, after closing the adult learning education centre.
Andrew Jamieson, the county council's cabinet member for finance, recently said he was keen to find ways to plug next year's £42.6m without causing an impact on services.
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