How planning by appeal cost Thanet one of its few remaining woodlands

A poor photograph but the damage to this piece of woodland is all too evident

This admittedly awful photograph shows what remains of one of Thanet’s last snippets of woodland.

With just 4.4 per cent tree canopy cover on the isle, Thanet is one of the least wooded districts in England – this was perhaps a contributory factor in the district council’s decision in August 2015 to refuse plans for 153 houses at Grade II-listed Westwood Lodge.

In explaining its decision, the council said: “The proposed development would result in a significant incursion of the built form into the Green Wedge, which would reduce the separation between settlements and result in a substantial loss of openness and established woodland habitat.”   

In these days of ‘planning by appeal’, however, Westwood Cross Developments did indeed appeal the council’s decision and in February 2017 the Planning Inspectorate duly approved the Broadstairs scheme, which entailed the felling of 150 Category C sycamore trees.

The inspector said the council’s position was weakened by its lack of a five-year housing supply.

Turning to the Green Wedge – the council’s long-standing policy that aims to keep open countryside between the three main towns of Margate, Ramsgate and Broadstairs – the inspector said:

“Further loss of trees within the site, and the introduction of additional dwellings, would be partially visible. However, as the woodland visible along the northern and eastern site boundaries would be largely retained, its distinctive landscape qualities would not be prejudiced.”

The original developer Places For People Homes had pulled out of the scheme, but it was taken up by Rooksmead Residential working with L&G Modular Homes, which has been building the properties at an off-site factory before they’re moved to Thanet.

Property management company Love Living Homes subsequently launched the shared-ownership development, which includes two-, three- and four-bedroom properties.

The plans had included the planting of 450 trees, along with wildlife corridors, but it’s difficult to see how the natural environment has won out on this one.

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Developer’s assault on Thanet Green Wedge repelled with refusal of plans for housing estate

Thanet’s Green Wedge policy is designed to stop towns merging through indiscriminate development

A chunk of Thanet’s Green Wedge has been spared with the decision to refuse permission for a 74-unit housing estate on the edge of Broadstairs.

Developer Land Allocation Ltd, from Hull, had chosen to ignore Thanet District Council’s long-standing Green Wedge policy, which aims to keep open countryside between the three main towns of Margate, Ramsgate and Broadstairs, and build on farmland at the junction of Reading Street and Convent Road.

The council’s decision notice said the planned development would mean the “irreversible loss” of Green Wedge and “best and most versatile” farmland. It also referred to the cramped nature of the proposal, additional traffic and increased recreational pressure on the Thanet Coast and Sandwich Bay Special Protection Area and Sandwich Bay and Hacklinge Marshes Site of Special Scientific Interest.

The site was not allocated for development in the Local Plan.

Jenny Matterface, speaking for Fight the Reading Street Road Development, said: “They [local people] felt very strongly about this because if the Reading Street part of the field was to go with the 74 homes, they could see the next area which would go.

“People also felt incredibly strongly about the loss of prime agricultural land.”        

Thursday, March 10, 2022