The following are the words from the presentation I gave earlier tonight on the application to build 420 houses on the Camelot Theme Park Site, Charnock Richard (allowed 5 minutes, I timed it at 4 minutes 58 seconds)...
"Members of the committee
Park Hall has a long and varied
history, going back to 882AD. Its history, as a leisure venue began in 1933 in
the ownership of George Few. Mr Few sold the Hall and surrounding ancient woodland
to a young John Rigby in 1970 and it was Mr Rigby who initially developed Park
Hall as a dining and entertainment venue and that broad use remains there today.
Mr Rigby also developed the
surrounding area, by the large scale destruction of a huge portion of Kiln
Wood, a significant area of ancient woodland, to create Arena North which in
its day hosted many national and regional events. Arena North was later
developed into Camelot Theme Park which opened its gates in 1982. It is this
area along with the land, containing no built structures, surrounding the
existing Park Hall Hotel that is the subject of this planning application.
Members will be aware of the
Chorley Borough Local Plan and that, in that plan, Charnock Richard is identified
for small scale development and limited infill within the village, this
application is neither, small scale, infill, or in the village. Indeed this is
development on a large scale and out of proportion to the existing villages of
Heskin and Charnock Richard.
Members will also be aware that
this development is a site within the green belt and in order to overcome the
harm to the green belt very special circumstances have to exist, it is the role
of the developer to demonstrate that very special circumstances do exist and
that the development is required.
The developer’s application suggests
that very special circumstances include: creation of construction jobs, increased
numbers of people in the borough who will spend money in the borough; the
provision of a new homes bonus and a commuted sum to improve the boroughs
existing facilities. It goes on to state the development will provide
improvement to existing services via the Community Infrastructure Levy and that
the houses will be of a high quality. These are not very special circumstances
as all of these happen for all developments so are merely circumstances of all development
and certainly not very special circumstances unique to this application, that
would override the Chorley Borough Local Plan conclusion (as accepted by the
inspector) that this is one of the most unsustainable sites within that plan.
Without this development Chorley Borough
has in excess of 7 years’ supply of approved, deliverable, housing and the plan
provides sites that, as agreed by the inspector, fulfil the housing needs of
the borough until 2026. The inspector agreed that this is one of the most
unsustainable sites in the Chorley Local Plan. Even after considering proposals
in the planning application, the site remains unsustainable.
If permitted, this development,
which is one of the most unsustainable sites within the Local Plan, would surely
bring to question the validity of the local planning process.
I trust the committee will refuse
this planning application on the grounds that:
1. There is
significant harm to the openness of the green belt in that the proposed built
structure is far greater in volume than that existing, especially as a large
part of the site is presently open and unobstructed by any form of built
development. The fact that the site is largely hidden from sight does not
reduce the impact on the openness of the green belt.
2. There is
no need, Chorley already has in excess of 7 years supply of housing and a plan (accepted
by the inspector) that delivers the boroughs housing requirements to 2026
meaning there is no requirement to release additional land for housing in the
Borough at this time.
3. The site
is not sustainable, for many reasons including, but not limited to, health and
social care, school places, convenience shopping, the need to access the site
by car, which is the most unsustainable method of access, with at least an
additional 3,600 car movements per day (one extra vehicle every 16 seconds of
the waking day onto an unclassified road). The proposed highways modifications,
including the suggestion that a cycle way be introduced by placing a hard
covering over what is currently largely a public footpath, is at best naïve and
certainly unsustainable.
In summary this development is the
wrong development, in the wrong place, at the wrong time, it is unsustainable, is
out of proportion to the existing villages of Heskin and Charnock Richard, adds
nothing positive to the surrounding villages and is not accompanied by the very
special circumstances that would permit development. A large proportion of the
circumstances provided are those that exist in any development and are not
special to this particular development.
As stated about 4 minutes ago Park
Hall has a long and varied history. It was in 882AD that the remains of St
Cuthbert were buried in Park Hall woods. If this planning application is
granted then the remains of Chorley’s Local Plan may as well be buried under
the footings of the first property.
Thank you"
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