Thursday 26 June 2014

A break

In what is becoming something of a tradition, we close today for a summer break. 

We took over a month off last summer, dealing with sailing championships for children, school holiday and breaks away.  This year sees a family older and people looking to new directions.

Children have completed A' levels and GSCE's and looking to new choices, new lives, new schools, work, university or whatever beckons.  So we take the chance, to take one and her friends away adventuring for a few days and then a family holiday in our beloved France.  In the midst one reaches the age of majority and the inevitable distraction these things bring.

The business has undergone less change than envisaged last summer, and there have been some serious challenges in between, all of which make us stronger.  As the economy slowly grinds upwards we find instructions increasing and the scale of work larger than last year, so we remain optimistic that sustainable growth and opportunity will continue in General Election year and beyond.   

Recharging the batteries is essential. It allows a period of rest, sun, swimming before breakfast, wine at lunchtime and quite possibly a small cafe-Cognac before bed. By the end of it I'm sure we will have reflected and be chomping at the bit with renewed vigour to deliver more and better.

Should you need our services urgently please email plplanning@btconnect.com as we will be picking up email remotely as and when we can.  

Otherwise we thank you for your continued support and look forward to seeing you around the 23rd July. 

P

 

Wednesday 11 June 2014

Appeal Success. 17 Apartments. Land for Sale

We are delighted to announce that we have secured approval for 17 apartments for a client on a prime site in Rhos on Sea.  The scheme has no affordable housing requirement and my client is now seeking to dispose of the site.  Contact via email for further details.

Our client resorted to appeal after the Council refused approval citing "inadequate information" on streetscene drawings and sunlight daylight impacts to enable it to positively determine the application, despite having assessed those and supported the impacts in an earlier outline planing permission.

The inspector was moved to comment "Whilst these details might have aided the Council in assessing the scheme I do not consider that such information was essential or that the appellant was under an obligation to provide it" finding that the approval sought complied with the terms of the outline planning permission we previously secured for the client after an earlier refusal.

Yet another example of where our skills get to the heart of things quickly and (cost) effectively.

 (c) Richard Broughton Ltd





Tuesday 10 June 2014

BREEAM, Code, Sustainable Buildings

From 31 July 2014, it will no longer be necessary to provide Code for Sustainable Homes or BREEAM reporting with the majority of applications.  

The Minister has now set out how current requirements for BREEAM/Code for Sustainable Homes will be removed from the planning process.  On 31 July 2014, Part B of the sustainable building policy under Planning Policy Wales (minimum sustainable building - standards code level 3, BREEAM para 4.12.4) will be withdrawn.  Decisions made after that date need not take it into account and the current requirement to accompany planning applications with pre-assessment C4SH or BREEAM reports will fall.  The same approach applies to S73 applications to vary planning conditions on existing planning permissions (e.g. requiring interim and post-construction reporting).  We are happy to take instructions on those.

The change is linked to devolving to WG of Building Regulations and the 2014 changes to the Regs. The planning change is procedural (rather than practical) and a welcome one.  It remains to be seen how the practicalities of Building Regs compliance might impact on schemes post-planning.  We will keep an eye on this and the flexibility of planning departments to tweak schemes to meet the 2014 BRegs.

Other parts of the WG sustainability planning policy (designing for climate change and strategic LDP sites) remain in force.  TAN 22 (Planning and Sustainable Building) will be withdrawn in parallel and TAN12 updated. (again as we understand it on 31 July 2014).

The Minister has re-stated his commitment that all new development in Wales be sustainable.  Most LDP's contain sustainable building/construction policies and the main thrust of national policy remains . LDP policies will still have to be considered in developing schemes.  The Minister has warned against developing local-level sustainable building policies in LDP's but that doesn't appear to rule out SPG being developed to flesh out local considerations for current policies - agains we hope if they do that wont push against the spirit of positive planning.  

Pete

PS.  The Future...  The Minister states:

"The next review of Part L, planned for 2016, will consider further steps in energy performance towards meeting the EU Directive target of nearly zero energy new buildings by 2019 for the public sector and 2021 for all new buildings. In the meantime I expect all new development to achieve the new 2014 Building Regulations and for developers to be taking these levels into account in the design of their development proposals (subject to the transitional arrangements set out in Building (Amendment) (Wales) Regulations 2014/110."