Tuesday, 07 February 2012

Planning panel dismisses eco-town plans

The proposed location of an eco-town near Stratford upon Avon would make it unsustainable, according to planning inspectors.

A report from the public examination of the draft west midlands regional spatial strategy – setting out how much development there should be in the area up until 2026 - was published earlier this week.

The panel decided the area needs 398,000 homes - more than the 365,000 proposed by the West Midlands Regional Assembly in the strategy.

The panel members said the plans for the Middle Quinton eco-town would provide more homes than they suggest, but concluded: ‘The location of this proposed eco-town would render it of very doubtful sustainability.’

Protestors against the eco-town say affordable housing is needed across the area not in one concentrated remote location.

The panel also decided ‘advantages in terms of green construction’ would not be ‘greater than those deliverable in any new settlement or urban extension’ because they would not be built until after 2016.

‘All will be required to be eco-suburbs or developments by that time under the government’s timetable for achieving the more sustainable homes, zero carbon development being required by 2016,’ the planning inspectors noted.

David Bliss, chair of the campaigning group the BARD, said: ‘It’s a victory for common sense. Let’s hope the government now accepts this report as the final nail in Middle Quinton’s coffin.’

Mark Middleton, director of policy at the regional assembly, said: ‘An eco-town in Middle Quinton would only draw people out of the major urban areas and undermine our efforts to support urban renaissance.’

Middle Quinton was not one of the four eco-town proposals approved by the government earlier in the year, but remains in the running for future rounds of the programme.

A Communities and Local Government department spokesperson said: ‘No final decisions have been taken on the west midlands plan or the proposals for an eco-town at Middle Quinton.’

The proposed changes to the regional spatial strategy are due by December this year. It is likely be approved by the secretary of state next year.

Have your say

You must sign in to make a comment

sign in register

Related

Articles

  • Tariff cut leaves solar plans on the scrapheap

    04/11/2011

    The sun set on landlords’ solar ambitions this week as an unexpectedly savage cut to a subsidy payment for solar photovoltaic panels left the majority of social housing PV schemes unviable.

  • The green building dream

    20/01/2012

    Back in 2007 David Cameron had just started his march to power, Lady Gaga was finishing off her breakthrough album and, in the housing world, eco-towns were the next big thing.

  • Paint the town green

    04/03/2011

    In 2009 Whitehill and Bordon became one of the first four carbon neutral eco-towns in the UK. Initial euphoria over, its mayor, Adam Carew, explains how its sustainable credentials are shaping up in light of public sector spending cuts

  • The two faces of Simon Jenkins

    22 September 2011

  • Hot air

    30 June 2011

Resources

  • Pie in the sky?

    25 October 2011

    Is cloud computing a ray of light or a gathering storm? Alison Deighton, data protection expert at law firm TLT, takes up the case

  • Eco doctor

    06/05/2011

    The Budget’s surprise changes to the zero carbon standard have sparked lively debate, says the Zero Carbon Hub’s Neil Jefferson, but more important changes are still to come

  • Avoid a brush with the law

    27/05/2011

    Should social landlords be responsible for keeping disabled tenants’ homes in good decorative order?

  • How to...

    11/02/2011

    Martin Reeves explains how to retrofit a whole city by launching a low carbon enterprise partnership to create a booming local green economy

  • Green guru

    09/09/2011

    Social landlords must ask themselves now how they will access green deal cash and whether energy company obligation funding can help, says Sally Hancox

Latest Jobs

  • Development Manager

    One Housing Group is a leading provider of housing care and support across London & the South East managing over ...

    £39,200 - £46,200

    Closing: 2012-01-22 00:00:00

  • Group Director of Finance

    An exciting new opportunity for a Group Finance Director has arisen following a major merger announcement in the North West ...

    £74,500 to £91,000

    Closing: 2012-02-16 00:00:00

  • Head of Design and Procurement

    £50,425 pa

    Closing: 2012-02-21 00:00:00

  • Head of Contracting Services

    Merlin Housing Society is the largest social landlord in South Gloucestershire.

    £55,000 per annum

    Closing: 2012-02-10 00:00:00

  • Head of Neighbourhood Investment

    Eden Brown ( www.edenbrown.com ) are exclusively recruiting for a Head of Neighbourhood Investment for our client a Housing Association ...

    £60,094

    Closing: 2012-02-16 00:00:00