Around
Long Ashton the developers, enthused by the prospect of the South
Bristol Link Road, are lining up to challenge the green belt, and to make a quick fortune in the process.
Over
on this side, around Stockwood and Whitchurch village, BaNES planners are also
facing relentless bids to overturn the policies that protect the open
space.
The
attempt by developer Robert Hitchins to put close on 300 houses (and
negligible supporting infrastructure) to fill the remaining gap
between the two settlements has become a war of attrition. Twice
the application has gone in; twice it's been refused, because it
breaks all the agreed land-use planning priorities. On the first
refusal, Hitchins started an appeal and then backed off. Now
they're again going to Pickles and his inspectorate to complain that
they've been badly treated.
You
have to wonder what might have been said to make them think it's
worth it.
Just
across Stockwood Lane, you'd expect the neighbours at the rescue
charity HorseWorld to value their green belt asset – that's why
they're there. But for one reason or another (and the Bristolian
offers his explanation here), they're having a hard time balancing
the books .
Horseworld's
Big Idea to secure its financial future is to scrap the existing
Visitor Centre and the grazing around it, and put 120 houses there
instead. This would, they hope, raise enough to build a bigger
better Visitor Centre even further from the main transport links, to
which lots of new people would drive ready to empty their purses and
wallets in the cause of providing an income to keep the charity going
forever.
I
suspect that's not the most promising of business plans – but it is
the foundation for the case for allowing 120 houses to be built on
the present site, along with conversion of a number of listed
buildings to residential use. That's why it's called an 'enabling'
development. It's much like the way Sainsburys get permission for a
new superstore, not on its own merits, but on the promise of a new
football stadium. No-one, not even the applicants, pretends that
this application has any merit per se – but the planning committee
will be asked to judge it on the merits of the greater prize; more
horses rescued = more jobs = economic growth. Except there won't be
any more long term jobs.
Whilst
Horseworld have been fairly upfront about their long term plan,
they've been far less public about actually putting in the planning
application, so few people outside
HorseWorld's own email list are aware of it. The official closing date for
comments is today Thursday, July 18th.
- There's no attempt to mitigate the considerable carbon footprint of the new development. Not even the Horseworld's biggest product, manure, gets utilised to offset energy inputs.
- The huge arena roof expanses remain pretty much untouched by solar panels.
- The sole attempt to improve public transport access is to suggest that the 515 bus be diverted that way, away from many of us who benefit from it just now.
- An existing bus service, the single trip 636 Tuesday and Friday route, is claimed by the 'professional' consultants to provide a daily service to Horseworld's nearest public road.
- The same consultants use an 'apples and oranges' strategy, with different traffic measures to play down the increases in road traffic.
- Every possible excuse is used to avoid 'green' construction standards.
- Above all, the business plan seems to pluck future visitor figures out of thin air – and these are the figures that 'justify' the enabling development.
On balance, this
is a shoddy, cheap, unsustainable and unjustified bid with high
environmental costs, relying mostly on emotional blackmail that
horses will suffer if the development is turned down.
We're
not persuaded.