Red House Farm (East of Lillington)

Showing comments and forms 1 to 11 of 11

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 46341

Received: 10/07/2012

Respondent: Mr Ian Clarke

Representation Summary:

The scale of proposed development is appropriate for the location.

Full text:

The scale of proposed development is appropriate for the location.

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 46502

Received: 16/07/2012

Respondent: Mrs Alison Kirk

Representation Summary:

I would be very sad to see development on this greefield site.

Full text:

I would be very sad to see development on this greefield site.

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 46926

Received: 25/07/2012

Respondent: Neil King

Representation Summary:

Unsuitable location for a number of reasons.

No easy access for traffic to this site, black lane is used by many walkers/residents nearby and more traffic using this lane would make it very dangerous, there isn't many places to widen the lane with allotments, water treatment works and back gardens from housing on buckley road.

Stunning views of the countryside from this site, also increase in people and traffic would ruin the rural feel of this area with enjoyable public footpaths in the area.

Full text:

Unsuitable location for a number of reasons.

No easy access for traffic to this site, black lane is used by many walkers/residents nearby and more traffic using this lane would make it very dangerous, there isn't many places to widen the lane with allotments, water treatment works and back gardens from housing on buckley road.

Stunning views of the countryside from this site, also increase in people and traffic would ruin the rural feel of this area with enjoyable public footpaths in the area.

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 48079

Received: 26/07/2012

Respondent: Pauline Liggins

Representation Summary:

Green Belt , land option Red house Farm. I am against this site as it is the highest point in town, so will be seen for miles around.

Full text:

Scanned Response Form.

Attachments:

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 49072

Received: 02/08/2012

Respondent: Mr Harry Johnson

Agent: RPS Planning & Development

Representation Summary:

Supports the allocation of land at Red House Farm for 200 dwellings. The site is directly adjacent to the existing urban area of Lillington and this would result in the natural expansion of the settlement. The site is a sustainable location with good transport links. The existing southern boundary is shielded by a tall hedgerow, thus development at this location would result in sustainable development in accordance with NPPF.

Full text:

Scanned Letter and Response Form

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Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 49283

Received: 23/07/2012

Respondent: Mr Harry Johnson

Agent: Barlow Associates Limited

Representation Summary:

WCC Highways have agreed that the current access off Buckley Road is suitable and may give opportunities for improvements to the Clare Road/ Buckley Road junction.
The land is Grade 3 agricultural land and currently used mainly as grazing land for the riding school. Alternative grazing land is available to the south of the site.
The site has a strong southern boundary but further planting to screen the site to the east is envisaged. Development should stop short of the north east boundary.
The site is well served by local services and has a good network of footpaths.
Although Green Belt land will be lost, development of this site aligns naturally with existing housing boundaries.
Generally supports the policy of "dilute & disperse" which will allow for a number of well-designed neighbourhoods.
Respondant would be happy to work with Council to bring improvements to Lillington.

Full text:

Attached Letter

Attachments:

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 49704

Received: 27/07/2012

Respondent: Barford, Sherbourne and Wasperton Joint Parish Council

Representation Summary:

This would seem to be a reasonable site to utilise if numbers demand it.

Full text:

PO1 Preferred Option: Level of growth
I consider that the proposed level of housing growth of 555 homes per year is not supported by all the evidence available. The mathematics of the calculations are not shown so they cannot be checked easily.
The baseline population on which the future need is apparently calculated is the ONS estimate of 138,670. Since those calculations the 2011 census has measured it at 136,000.
The initial stage of consultation gave a range of growth possibilities and the clear majority of respondents opted for the lower growth levels which would more reasonably reflect the inevitable organic growth in our population due to increased longevity, better health and changes in birth rates along with some inevitable inward migration.
Residents made a clear choice to accept lower infrastructure gains in return for limiting growth and specifically avoiding more growth in excess of local need.
Approximately 250 homes per year would appear to be more than adequate to meet these need if more adventurous use of brownfield urban sites was made..

PO2 Preferred Option: Community Infrastructure Levy
The current market conditions demonstrate that because developers are not confident in the ability of customers to buy, and sites that already have planning approvals are not proceeding.
CIL should be used on a local benefit to relieve effects of or immediately related to development proposal areas.


PO3 Preferred Option: Broad location of Growth
I supports the dispersal of additional housing that cannot be located on urban brownfield sites so there is a small effect on a number of places, rather than a large effect on a few. In general, this will reduce travel and demand for traffic improvements, use existing educational, health and other community facilities where there is available capacity to do so.
The NPPF para 54 requires that in rural areas, local authorities should be responsive to local circumstances, planning housing development to reflect local needs. In para 55, to promote sustainable development in rural areas, housing should be located where it will enhance or maintain the vitality of rural communities.

PO4 Preferred Option: Distribution of sites for housing
Location 1 Sites within existing towns. This is the best option. If it were possible, all the housing required should be in existing towns and dispersed therein, to make the least demand on support infrastructure and reducing traffic movements.
Location 2 Myton Garden Suburb. No objection.
Location 3 South of Gallows Hill/West of Europa Way. This development must not take place. It is a criminal intrusion into the rural southern setting of both Warwick and Leamington with important implications for the setting of Warwick Castle and its parkland. It will create a natural infill area for later development until eventually all the area south of Warwick and Leamington id completely filled.
The additional traffic from the proposed 1600 homes plus employment on a road system that is already struggling will impose even greater stacking effects back through the village of Barford which already suffers enormous amounts of rat-running from commuters trying to avoid the daily J15/Banbury Spur commuter
The numbers show that it is not needed and the council needs to bold enough to decide to continue the Green Wedge through to Castle Park.
Location 4 Milverton Gardens. 810houses + community +employment + open space.
and
Location 5 Blackdown. 1170 houses+ employment +open space + community.
These two sites may well be cases where the Greenbelt policy could be relaxed with limited overall damage whilst providing essential housing land. There would be limited damage to the settlement separation intentions of the Greenbelt policy.


Location 6 Whitnash East/ South of Sydenham. 650 houses + open space and community facilities
No specific comment but is this really required?
Location 7 Thickthorn, Kenilworth 770 houses + employment +open space + community
Use of this as part of the policy for dispersal of the housing required is supported.
It is, better to use this site than land of rural, landscape and environmental value elsewhere in the district. It is the only contribution to the preferred option plan located in or near Kenilworth.
Location 8 Red House Farm, Lillington 200 houses + open space.
This would seem to be a reasonable site to utilise if numbers demand it.
Location 9 Loes Farm, Warwick 180 houses + open space
This would seem to be a reasonable site to utilise if numbers demand it.
Location 10 Warwick Gates Employment land 200 houses + open space.
No objection.
Location 11 Woodside Farm, Tachbrook Road 250 houses + open space
There seem to be merits in using this site as it extends previously developed land towards a natural boundary (Harbury Lane) and is hence self-limiting.

Location 12 Fieldgate Lane/Golf Lane, Whitnash 90 houses + open space
No objection.
Locations 13 &14 Category 1 & 2 villages Category 1, 5 villages at 100 and category 2, 7 villages at between 30 to 80 in each plus 8 category 3 villages within the existing village envelopes.
These are very significant increases for many of these villages! Do the category One villages really NEED to take 500 in total or 100 each. In Barford's case this will be an 18% increase in the number of dwellings, and that on top of a recent development of approximately 70 homes. I would suggest that the total Cat One numbers should be significantly reduced and that numbers should then be spread pro-rata over all the Cat one villages according to current house numbers of population number to give a more equitable spread and certainly to keep the increases at or below the district wide increase.
Considerable attention should be paid to the Sustainability Assessments included in the plan where it should be noted that Barford, a Category one village based on its facilities scores the THIRD WORST Sustainability score of all the villages assessed (Cat one, two and three) with only Rowington and Norton Lindsey scoring lower.

Furthermore despite having a very successful school there is considerable doubt about how such numbers could be accommodated and the amount of harm that would be inflicted on currently resident families and pupils of such increases.


PO5 Preferred Option: Affordable housing
I have considerable concerns that the 40% requirement is considerably in excess of the real need for "social housing" and as such will drive up the costs of market homes to such a degree that all homes will become significantly less affordable. It is perhaps appropriate to consider what is trying to be achieved and to review the way in which Affordable Housing need is actually measured - specifically it seems that those in need are counted before their need is actually validated whereafter the real need is actually considerably less and they are re-routed to more conventional housing sources.
PO6 Preferred Option: Mixed communities and a wide choice of homes
Regarding retirement housing of various sorts must be provided as part of a whole-life

PO7 Preferred Option: gypsies and travellers.
The Gypsies and travellers remain and always will be a problem. Most tax-payers are at a loss to understand why they must be treated differently to everyone else when they could acquire land and pursue the planning process just like everyone else.
The proposal to "provide sites" will bring out the worst elements of the NIMBY culture and blight certain areas.
It is my opinion that the problem needs solving by primary legislation not the current soft PC approach. This is a job for central government, no doubt through "Europe".

PO8 Preferred Option: Economy
Employment need only be provided/attracted to match our population. The previous stage of the consultation gave a clear indication that the majority were preferring to accept lower growth rates of housing, employment and infrastructure. That choice must be selected and a focus on consolidation rather than growth should be the watchword. We are a low unemployment area and any extra employment provision will bring with it a proportionate housing demand and inevitably more houses, which is not required.
The Gateway project may still materialise and this will make extra demands as some of the jobs will no doubt be attractive to our residents in addition to bringing in new workers. Provision should be made for housing local to that site and not for such workers to be subsumed into the wider WDC area.

PO9 Preferred options: Retailing and Town Centres
The support retailing and town centres is welcomed and should be vigorously pursued by both planning policy and fiscal incentives. There must be adequate town centre parking provision to support town centre businesses.

PO14 Preferred options: Transport

Access to services and facilities.
Clearly, it is essential to provide sufficient transport infrastructure to give access to services and facilities. The amount of work required is dependent on the level of growth selected. If the low growth scenario is chosen in preference to the current preferred option, then the infrastructure improvements will be much less and probably not much more than is currently necessary to resolve existing problems. This would be less costly and less inconvenient to the public than major infrastructure improvements.

Sustainable forms of transport.
The best way is to keep as much new housing provision as possible in existing urban locations because people are then more likely to walk, bus, bike to work, shops, school etc.


PO15 Preferred options: Green Infrastructure

The policies set out in PO15 are supported


PO16 Preferred options: Green Belt

The NPPF states that once established, Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. I believe that it may be a proper time to review the Green belt to ensure that it is appropriate to the current situation and not merely being carried forward, just because it has always been so. Some relaxation within villages and on the edges of the major settlements would make massive contributions to the housing need whilst doing little harm to the concept of ensuring separation between settlements.

Removing Green Belt status from rural villages would allow currently unavailable infil land to make a significant contribution to housing numbers whilst improving the sustainability of those villages. Barford, not in the Green belt has had considerable infil in the past and as such is relatively sustainable whilst actually scoring poorly on the WDC conventional Sustainability Assessment scoring system.



PO17 Preferred options: Culture & Tourism

The preferred option of medium growth seems to be totally oblivious of the value of the approach road from the south to the Castle. It proposes to materially downgrade the approach past Castle Park by building housing along the length of the road from Greys Mallory to Warwick, a distance of about 2.5 km. The views across the rolling countryside to the east of the approach road are an essential part of the character of the district and county about which books have been written.

The low growth option makes that loss unnecessary.

PO18 Preferred options: Flooding & Water

Flooding: Development should take place where flooding is unlikely to occur. The low growth option would make it easier to select sites for development that do not carry this risk.

Attachments:

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 49862

Received: 02/08/2012

Respondent: Bishops Tachbrook Parish Council

Representation Summary:

This site is in the green belt and can only be developed under very special circumstances. However, if sites 4 and 5 do not proceed, then it would not be unreasonable to select this site if it is unavoidable.

Full text:

See Attachments

Object

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 50077

Received: 26/07/2012

Respondent: Elaine Rumary

Representation Summary:

Concern about drainage if built on top fields of Red House Farm. Terrain fairly level but definite trend of land to slope away south/south eastwards towards River Leam and most easterly part of site falls through 2 x 25 foot contours. Foul and surface water sewers would drain across farmland rather than into existing Lillington sewers. Will these be installed or pumped to existing sewers.
Recent flooding in Lillington as drainage overloaded. Although alleviation schemes completed/planned, will sewers cope with additional houses?
Entirely new system needed with added expense/inconvenience which should be borne by owner of farm.

Full text:

Attached proforma

Attachments:

Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 50348

Received: 25/06/2012

Respondent: Mr Andrew Instone

Representation Summary:

Supports the development of Loes Farm

Full text:

scanned form

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Support

Preferred Options

Representation ID: 50349

Received: 25/06/2012

Respondent: Mr Andrew Instone

Representation Summary:

Supports the development of Red House Farm

Full text:

scanned form

Attachments: