Question 6 - Site 3 - Windmill Lane

Showing comments and forms 1 to 30 of 154

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6575

Received: 05/02/2019

Respondent: Mrs Caroline Gooding

Agent: Mrs Caroline Gooding

Representation Summary:

I object owing to the fact that the location of the site is too far removed from the central amenities. This is turn will cause more traffic on the roads, which the village cannot cope with and which will endanger the lives of pedestrians. The bypass should be built first before any further development.
As soon as development begins, the wildlife will flee! This should remain greenbelt land and the wildlife should be protected by the Council.
Assuming the development goes ahead, the trees on the northern boundary bordering the extension to Kelsey Court should be protected.

Full text:

I object to this site being developed and at least until a bypass is put in place to cater for the through traffic passing through the village, thereby allowing for the existing infrastructure to cater for increased traffic from new residents. If this goes ahead, it will become extremely difficult for residents in Kelsey Lane to exit their drives safely in the morning!

This site is also, from practical experience, having lived in the village for over 30 years, significantly too far away from the central amenities in the village, which will therefore promote the use of more cars on the road. Most people would consider it too far to walk to the station to catch the train to work, or to walk to the village shops and back, for example. Indeed, there isn't even a pavement down half of Meeting House Lane, which new residents living nearer Windmill Lane would use to walk down and drive down to the village centre. I consider walking down Meeting House Lane already to be extremely unsafe.

The car parking in the centre of the village is already at absolute capacity and needs sorting for existing residents, let alone for new residents in addition.

The site is greenbelt land and in view of the beautiful trees and wildlife which occupy the land, should be sorely protected by the Council. As soon as any development and the associated noise begins, the wildlife (including the newts), will flee and who can blame them! Developing the land, will also have a significantly adverse impact on the many trees in the area, in particular those trees which already have a tree preservation order on them.

In particular, and assuming the site will be allocated for development, I strongly believe that the rural feel of the area should be maintained as much as possible. For example, there is a long row of trees behind 64B Kelsey Lane, separating Highcross Farm from the land behind Kelsey Court, which should remain. This would also serve as a natural barrier between several different conurbations. The trees should, if at all possible, be granted tree preservation status or at the very least, be the subject of planning conditions within any planning approval associated with the proposed low density housing to the rear of Kelsey Court.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6581

Received: 05/02/2019

Respondent: Mr Leslie Noble

Representation Summary:

This is a poor site because it is too far away from the village amenities and resident will drive to the village centre to use it. It is also too far away from the railway station and again residents would drive to an already very busy station car park. This site further extends the village unnecessarily. The current development in this site was a mistake and should not have been approved.

Full text:

This is a poor site because it is too far away from the village amenities and resident will drive to the village centre to use it. It os also too far away from the trains station and again resident would drive to an already very busy station car park. This site further extends the village unnecessarily. The current development in this site was a mistake and should not have been approved.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6604

Received: 06/02/2019

Respondent: Mrs Natalie File

Representation Summary:

I would highly recommend further consultation with other residents who have recently purchased and moved to Meer Stones Road.

Full text:

Having looked at the draft local plan I note further developments (ca. 200 new Houses) and 2 access roads to our new, quiet house on a cul-de-sac. Our house was purchased back in 2017 at which time with no knowledge of these plans and a move from Solihull to a quiet village protected by a natural habitat area. This is extremely disturbing and I would like to object.
Access roads and more housing will definitely generate increased traffic - impacting safety, noise - impacting the surrounding area and surely disturb the natural newt habitat. In addition there will be a significant impact of building noise and construction traffic during the building phase.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6610

Received: 06/02/2019

Respondent: Mr Andrew Hall

Representation Summary:

Congestion on Kenilworth Rd is already excessive, especially at peak times causing rat runs down Windmill Lane etc. Access out of Meer Stones Road is already hard and and new building would need extra entry/exit via Windmill Lane as a minimum or roundabout on Meer Stones Road. Speeding is already excessive down Kenilworth road in this area as well. Also, need additional local amenities including doctors, dentist, schools, shops to support additional housing being planned. Please do not progress!

Full text:

Congestion on Kenilworth Rd is already excessive, especially at peak times causing rat runs down Windmill Lane etc. Access out of Meer Stones Road is already hard and and new building would need extra entry/exit via Windmill Lane as a minimum or roundabout on Meer Stones Road. Speeding is already excessive down Kenilworth road in this area as well. Also, need additional local amenities including doctors, dentist, schools, shops to support additional housing being planned. Plus, this is more Green belt that is being lost to new estates. Please do not progress!

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6618

Received: 06/02/2019

Respondent: Mr Harry Siggs

Representation Summary:

Plan is supposed to avoid adding population in areas without transport infrastructure and local employment. Balsall Common is specifically identified as lacking in local services and in local employment. No plans are given for new business premises

Full text:

Plan is supposed to avoid adding population in areas without transport infrastructure and local employment. Balsall Common is specifically identified as lacking in local services and in local employment. No plans are given for new business premises

Support

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6641

Received: 08/02/2019

Respondent: Ms Natalie Moss

Representation Summary:

I support the development but do not support the developer proposal of gaining access through the existing Elysian Garden development. Its already very busy and hard to get out onto the Kenilworth road. The access would also go along the front of my house (No 43) which was not identified as potential development when I purchased.

Full text:

I support the development but do not support the developer proposal of gaining access through the existing Elysian Garden development. Its already very busy and hard to get out onto the Kenilworth road. The access would also go along the front of my house (No 43) which was not identified as potential development when I purchased.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6659

Received: 09/02/2019

Respondent: Lisa Champion

Representation Summary:

I strongly object to the proposed access to the site from the new development off the Kenilworth Road. These access routes are narrow and cannot accommodate 2 lanes of traffic easily and there are no footpaths. The scale of the proposed development will add considerably to the noise/traffic in Drovers close. A site visit will confirm that the design and layout of the existing roads would not accommodate this access.

Full text:

Development in other parts of Balsall should provide the allocation rather than encroaching on good quality green belt and the impact on the windmill. This area has already experienced development.
I strongly object to the proposed access to the site from the new development off the Kenilworth Road. These access routes are narrow and cannot accommodate 2 lanes of traffic easily and there are no footpaths. The scale of the proposed development will add considerably to the noise/traffic in Drovers close. A site visit will confirm that the design and layout of the existing roads would not accommodate this access.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6705

Received: 16/02/2019

Respondent: Mr Leigh Mayers

Representation Summary:

The housing proposed will be far too densely populated for the size of land and the surrounding area.
The proposed housing will detract from the historic windmill and ruin the historic site

Full text:

The housing proposed will be far too densely populated for the size of land and the surrounding area.
The proposed housing will detract from the historic windmill and ruin the historic site

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6715

Received: 18/02/2019

Respondent: Mr Christopher Seel

Representation Summary:

Access to the site is very poor - the road will not accommodate more traffic (it is very narrow with no pavements)
Building on this site will cause congestion on the road at peak times

Full text:

I currently live on Drovers Close and looking at the proposed plan it appears that this will be used as an access road for the proposed estate. Given that Drovers Close has direct access to the Kenilworth Road it is sensible to assume that large volumes of traffic will access the new estate using Drovers Close. This road is not fit to fulfill that purpose. It has no pedestrian pavements and is very narrow, specifically outside of my house. It will also cause congestion on the road at peak times as turning right onto Kenilworth Road is already very difficult.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6744

Received: 21/02/2019

Respondent: Mrs Debbie Gill

Representation Summary:

This site should not be considered for housing due to the following -
Too far away from local shops and railway station
Not a large enough site to include school etc.
Too close to very busy Birmingham Road giving danger for more vehicles accessing this road from housing estate.
Too close to historic Windmill in Windmill Lane
Already has a new housing estate nearby recently constructed which proved not suitable for affordable homes as too far away from Railway station etc.
Windmill Lane not suitable for access as a narrow country lane.

Full text:

This site should not be considered for housing due to the following -
Too far away from local shops and railway station
Not a large enough site to include school etc.
Too close to very busy Birmingham Road giving danger for more vehicles accessing this road from housing estate.
Too close to historic Windmill in Windmill Lane
Already has a new housing estate nearby recently constructed which proved not suitable for affordable homes as too far away from Railway station etc.
Windmill Lane not suitable for access as a narrow country lane.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6772

Received: 24/02/2019

Respondent: Mr Julian Henwood

Representation Summary:

This site is on greenfield land and is next to the charming Berkswell Windmill. The development of this site would destroy the countryside feel of the windmill.

Full text:

This site is on greenfield land and is next to the charming Berkswell Windmill. The development of this site would destroy the countryside feel of the windmill.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6844

Received: 25/02/2019

Respondent: Mrs Wendy Wilson

Representation Summary:

Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Extends further south than sites that SLP Inspector allowed. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise. Development would be neither efficient nor effective use of land. Identified as a mineral safeguarding area for coal. Inaccuracies in SA, SHELAA and Green Belt Assessment, and cannot stand up to scrutiny.

Full text:

See letter

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6845

Received: 25/02/2019

Respondent: Mrs Wendy Wilson

Representation Summary:

Concept Masterplan
Inaccuracies and discrepancies in evidence used. Accesses unsustainable in advance of by-pass and rigorous transport assessment required. Inadequate protection for protected species. Fails to adequately reflect ecological assessment. Proposal to offset biodiversity rather than conserve on site as with Sites 1 and 2 is unacceptable. Density and lack of green buffer does not respect local character or residential amenity. Lack of assessment of impact on Windmill from affect on prevailing wind.

Full text:

See letter

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6860

Received: 27/02/2019

Respondent: Ms Anne Stewart

Representation Summary:

Overall level of growth in settlement is excessive and much greater than proposed elsewhere, with reduction in numbers for Dickens Heath/Shirley and no allocations in Dorridge. Brownfield sites put forward as alternatives to avoid development of greenfield land, not as additional sites. Proposals will impact on air quality and health.
Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise.

Full text:

See letter

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6875

Received: 28/02/2019

Respondent: CGA Taylor

Representation Summary:

Overall level of growth in settlement is excessive and much greater than proposed elsewhere, with reduction in numbers for Dickens Heath/Shirley and no allocations in Dorridge. Brownfield sites put forward as alternatives to avoid development of greenfield land, not as additional sites. Proposals will impact on air quality and health.
Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise.

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common

I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.

I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.

To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that any growth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hour during peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".

Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly putting the lives of the newts at risk.




Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Road residents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.

Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.

All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.

Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.

In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Support

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6878

Received: 01/03/2019

Respondent: Mr Alfred Valler

Agent: Mr Ronald Perrin

Representation Summary:

My clients of Windmill Lane, Balsall Common, support the inclusion of site 3, and their land is specifically referred to in paragraph 112 of the consultation document. The site would form a new boundary of the Green Belt, which is clearly defensible in the long term. It also encloses some land that is already developed and land that could be reasonably developed.

My clients would be prepared to include their house and commercial buildings for development on this site, increasing capacity of the allocation itself.

It would be appropriate to reuse the existing access from Windmill Lane.

Full text:

See attached letter

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6885

Received: 01/03/2019

Respondent: Mr Alexander Hamilton

Representation Summary:

Narrows green belt/Meriden Gap which Mayor has pledged to protect. Performs poorly in sustainability terms. The area is rich in wildlife. No plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, so the habitat and feeding grounds will be destroyed. Danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Access unsuitable. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument. Noise from development on top of disruption from HS2 works. No green buffer to existing housing.

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common

I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.

I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and also site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.

To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that any growth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hour during peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".

Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly putting the lives of the newts at risk.

Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Road residents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.

Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.

All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.

Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.

In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6889

Received: 01/03/2019

Respondent: Mrs Elspeth Hamilton

Representation Summary:

Overall level of growth in settlement is excessive and much greater than proposed elsewhere, with reduction in numbers for Dickens Heath/Shirley and no allocations in Dorridge. Brownfield sites put forward as alternatives to avoid development of greenfield land, not as additional sites. Proposals will impact on air quality and health.
Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise.

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common

I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.

I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and also site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.

To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that any growth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hour during peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".

Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly putting the lives of the newts at risk.

Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Road residents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.

Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.

All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.

Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.

In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6893

Received: 01/03/2019

Respondent: Mrs H Brookes

Representation Summary:

Overall level of growth in settlement is excessive and much greater than proposed elsewhere, with reduction in numbers for Dickens Heath/Shirley and no allocations in Dorridge. Brownfield sites put forward as alternatives to avoid development of greenfield land, not as additional sites. Proposals will impact on air quality and health.
Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise.

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common

I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.

I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and also site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.

To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that any growth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hour during peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".

Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly putting the lives of the newts at risk.

Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Road residents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.

Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.

All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.

Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.

In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6932

Received: 02/03/2019

Respondent: Mr P Greasley

Representation Summary:

Overall level of growth in settlement is excessive and much greater than proposed elsewhere, with reduction in numbers for Dickens Heath/Shirley and no allocations in Dorridge. Brownfield sites put forward as alternatives to avoid development of greenfield land, not as additional sites. Proposals will impact on air quality and health.
Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise.

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common

I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.

I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and also site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.

To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that any growth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hour during peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".

Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly putting the lives of the newts at risk.

Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Road residents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.

Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.

All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.

Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.

In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6935

Received: 02/03/2019

Respondent: Mr Ronald Handfield

Representation Summary:

Our home is off Windmill Lane, which is already very busy at peak periods acting as a rat run to avoid the traffic on the Kenilworth Road. At peak periods that Kenilworth Road traffic queues from Everson's fuel depot to get though the Village. Waste Lane/Hob Lane are used to access Coventry or University, yet are unsuitable. Will encourage more commuting as public transport infrequent and little parking at station. Area has suffered from noise/piling for existing developments. Impact on wildlife. Unfair concentration of growth in this area.

Full text:

I just returned from a 'road show' at the Jubilee Hall, Balsall Common to find that there is a plan to turn Balsall Common into what is, in effect, a small town.

To move to add another 2000 dwellings in our village, without an increase in secondary schools, medical centres and other amenities is to my mind a travesty of planning. To build any new dwellings without major increases in the road system and parking in the village centre and rail station would be intolerable.

Our home is off Windmill Lane, which is already very busy at peak periods acting as a rat run to avoid the traffic on the Kenilworth Road. At peak periods that Kenilworth Road traffic queues from Everson's fuel depot to get though the Village. It will also be obvious to any one with access to a map, that to get from the Kenilworth Road to Coventry and or the University, the traffic had to use Waste Lane or Hob Lane. Yet Hob Lane is almost single track in places, and HS2 has already built a depot on Waste Lane, adding to the problems of people commuting. And they will commute in their cars, since with only 2 trains an hour (with very little parking at the station), and a very infrequent bus service to Solihull and Coventry, they will have little choice.

In addition we have, on Windmill Lane, already had significant building noise for the last 4 years. Initially there was the pile driving. This was followed by the constant beep beep beep of plant reversing. It has started at 8 am and continues all day, often 6 days a week, making life very tiring. Then there is the question of wildlife. Quite frankly, given the level of noise and disruption over the last 4 few years I am surprised that there is any left in our immediate vicinity.

One only has to read the newspapers to by aware that there is perceived to be a 'housing crisis', but to load what seems to be most of the boroughs new development or our rural community seems very unfair. A cynic might believe that to upset one community rather than a number, if the development is spread around, may be a deliberate ploy. I however could not possibly comment.

Comment

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6939

Received: 04/03/2019

Respondent: Mrs Barbara Hedley

Representation Summary:

The green belt boundary would be better if aligned with the footpath from the Windmill to Kenilworth Road. This would prevent longer views of the Windmill being obscured further, and maintain the rural character of that area. The southern point of this parcel reaches too far, and would mean that the village boundary steps substantially further south along the Kenilworth Road.

Full text:

The green belt boundary would be better if aligned with the footpath from the Windmill to Kenilworth Road. This would prevent longer views of the Windmill being obscured further, and maintain the rural character of that area. The southern point of this parcel reaches too far, and would mean that the village boundary steps substantially further south along the Kenilworth Road.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6946

Received: 02/03/2019

Respondent: Beth Foster

Representation Summary:

While I recognise that new homes are needed I object to the significant number proposed for our area. Such huge changes to our area will drive current residents away and change significantly the character of our village.
New residents will endure limited green space and infrastructure pressures. There are no footpaths on Windmill Lane, no mains sewers or gas supplies.
Impact on Berkswell Windmill overlooked as it will be sandwiched between new homes and by-pass.

Full text:

I have just attended the presentation in Balsall common held by the Berkswell parish council. I have attempted to answer the online questionnaire - but it does not allow answers to more than one question and deletes comments to earlier questions!

However - my objection lies in the fact that residents in Balsall Common and Berkswell - we live in both parishes - chose to do so because it is surrounded by green space and countryside. While I recognise that new homes are needed I object to the significant number proposed for our area. While this may be recognised as nimbyism you ask if as residents we support the plans and I do not. Such huge changes to our area will drive current residents away and change significantly the character of our village.

The residents of the new homes will endure limited green space and infrastructure pressure. The current infrastructure is already under pressure - medical services, schools and roads are under strain and I fail to see how this an be adapted to cater for such proposed growth. Cycle paths are short and end in major roads, in Windmill lane ( where I live) there are no footpaths , nor mains sewers or gas - is it realistic to think the village can be transformed to provide all these service to a much larger population when it cannot do so at present ! The windmill on our lane is an ancient historic monument and yet its importance seems to have been overlooked as it will be sandwiched between new homes and the by pass!

Your questionnaire asks for comments on individual sites - this only achieves a situation where individuals object to development in their area and agree to other site development. This is not an appropriate or reasonable approach, as residents are generally not sufficiently technically knowledgeable about developmental arguments and leads to emotional responses which will no doubt be ignored.

Please think again about the significant number of homes planned for my area - it is unreasonable and unrealistic

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6947

Received: 03/03/2019

Respondent: Catherine Langton

Representation Summary:

Greenfield site in green belt/Meriden Gap that Mayor has pledged to protect. Performs poorly in sustainability appraisal. Area is rich in wildlife. No plans for nature reserves, unlike the other sites at Frog Lane/Barrett's Farm, so the habitat/feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. Danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Access unsuitable and poor accessibility will exacerbate congestion. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting residents amenity and the numerous species of local wildlife

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common
I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.
I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and also site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.
To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that any growth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hour during peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".
Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly putting the lives of the newts at risk.
Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Road residents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.
Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.
All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.
Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.
In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6954

Received: 03/03/2019

Respondent: David Langton

Representation Summary:

Greenfield site in green belt/Meriden Gap that Mayor has pledged to protect. Performs poorly in sustainability appraisal. Area is rich in wildlife. No plans for nature reserves, unlike the other sites at Frog Lane/Barrett's Farm, so the habitat/feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. Danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Access unsuitable and poor accessibility will exacerbate congestion. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting residents amenity and the numerous species of local wildlife

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6958

Received: 03/03/2019

Respondent: Diane Langton

Representation Summary:

Greenfield site in green belt/Meriden Gap that Mayor has pledged to protect. Performs poorly in sustainability appraisal. Area is rich in wildlife. No plans for nature reserves, unlike the other sites at Frog Lane/Barrett's Farm, so the habitat/feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. Danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Access unsuitable and poor accessibility will exacerbate congestion. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting residents amenity and the numerous species of local wildlife

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6962

Received: 03/03/2019

Respondent: Mr John Wilson

Representation Summary:

Greenfield site in green belt/Meriden Gap that Mayor has pledged to protect. Performs poorly in sustainability appraisal. Area is rich in wildlife. No plans for nature reserves, unlike the other sites at Frog Lane/Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. Danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Access unsuitable and poor accessibility will exacerbate congestion. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting residents amenity and the numerous species of local wildlife.

Full text:

See letter

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 6967

Received: 03/03/2019

Respondent: Arta Golestani

Representation Summary:

Overall level of growth in settlement is excessive and much greater than proposed elsewhere, with reduction in numbers for Dickens Heath/Shirley and no allocations in Dorridge. Brownfield sites put forward as alternatives to avoid development of greenfield land, not as additional sites. Proposals will impact on air quality and health.
Site is greenfield/green belt and should be protected as Mayor has pledged. Site performs very poorly in SA, is not accessible, and development will harm listed Berkswell Windmill and adversely affect wildlife. Road access is unsuitable. Development would impact on residents as no green buffer, and from construction noise.

Full text:

See Letter

Attachments:

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 7004

Received: 04/03/2019

Respondent: Andy Wilson

Representation Summary:

Greenfield site in green belt/Meriden Gap that Mayor has pledged to protect. Performs poorly in sustainability appraisal. Area is rich in wildlife. No plans for nature reserves, unlike the other sites at Frog Lane/Barrett's Farm, so the habitat/feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. Danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect on nocturnal creatures. Access unsuitable and poor accessibility will exacerbate congestion. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting residents amenity and the numerous species of local wildlife

Full text:

Objection to the allocation of site 3, Windmill Lane, Balsall Common

I wish to register my objection to the on-going proposal, in the Draft Local Plan, to build 220 housing units on the greenbelt, greenfield land between Windmill Lane and the Kenilworth Road in Balsall Common known as Site 3.

I understand that the council has recently decided, in line with government policy, to develop three brownfield sites in Balsall Common at Wootton Green Lane, Lavender Hall Farm and Pheasant Oak farm. These sites were suggested by residents to the council as alternatives to site 3 (and also site 2, Frog Lane) in the last consultation in 2017. However, rather than developing these sites instead of the greenfield sites, they are to be developed in addition. Our village of circa 3900 homes is now expected to grow by a further 1755, 460 coming from the brownfield sites. In contrast, other settlements within the borough are seeing a big reduction in the proposed housing numbers (South Shirley and Dickins Heath) and Dorridge has not been allocated any housing sites at all. This does not seem to be a fair distribution, particularly with our village also having to deal with the disruption of HS2. The council would appear to be paying lip service to residents' concerns and efforts to assist in finding alternative sites to build on.

To manage any significant expansion of the village needs careful planning, in terms of schooling, traffic, housing sites and amenities, alongside HS2. There is no timing plan within the Draft Local Plan to give residents the confidence that anygrowth will be managed. The primary school is already full at 4 form-entry. There is no capacity to take any more children until a new school is built. Public transport is inadequate with infrequent bus services and there are only 2 trains every hourduring peak times, so people depend on their cars. As yet, there has been no assessment done of the Highways to ensure the road network can cope, at least until such time that the bypass is built. The Kenilworth Road, in particular, has long queues of traffic at peak times. All this affects the air quality in our village and the health of the residents. Given that many of the proposed sites are in open countryside, it is also worrying that no Ecological Assessments have been made available to the public. I understand that there is a proposal to build a new settlement to the north of Balsall Common and I would urge the council to seriously look at that as an alternative to imposing any significant level of new housing on Balsall Common, a village which is already clearly "bursting at the seams".

Turning to site 3 itself, this is a greenfield, greenbelt site in the Meriden Gap. Mayor Andy Street and Leader of the Council, Bob Sleigh, have both pledged to protect this precious area. The development of site 3 would create the narrowest gap yet so, as residents, we do not understand why the site is being included. The council has also assessed the sustainability of the site and it scores very poorly (9 negatives and only 2 positives), not least because it stretches so far out from the village boundary that you would need to drive to the village shops, the medical centre, the train station and the primary school. Just because there are two housing estates now built in the vicinity should not provide a "shoo- in" to build on the rest. The area is rich in wildlife - owls, red kites, woodpeckers, deer, hawks, numerous insects, bats, amphibians and the protected Great Crested Newts, to name but a few. As there are no plans to include nature reserves, unlike the other two greenfield sites at Frog Lane and Barrett's Farm, the habitat and feeding grounds for these creatures will be destroyed. There is also the danger of light pollution from street lights having a detrimental effect onnocturnal creatures. Although there are areas protected for the newts, these are to be crossed over by roads, clearly puttingthe lives of the newts at risk.

Furthermore, the only additional access point onto the road network will be onto Windmill Lane opposite Hob Lane. Otherwise new residents will be expected to access their homes through the Meer Stones Road estate. This means that drivers from 280 dwellings (including Meer Stones Roadresidents) will be trying to access the road network from two points, one of which is the busy Kenilworth Road and the other Windmill Lane. This lane is already turning into a fast "rat run" as drivers try to avoid the congestion in the village. This is not sustainable.

Last, but by no means least, there is the harm that development in this area would have on the magnificent Grade 2* Listed Berkswell Windmill opposite. This is an historic monument of local, regional, national and international significance and is part of our heritage which attracts many visitors into the area. Not only will building houses nearby harm the setting of this unique tower mill, but also the wind flow will be interfered with, which will stop the sails from turning. Given that this is one of the few remaining functional mills in the country, this would be an absolute travesty. This is a magnificent and iconic landmark, the heritage of which must be respected and preserved for generations to come.

All these are reasons to remove site 3 from the plan, but there is also the impact this site would have on current residents to consider. Although low density housing is proposed in some areas next to current properties, in other parts medium density housing is proposed with no "green buffer" to preserve any of the visual amenity currently enjoyed by residents. This is not respecting the local character of housing in this locality nor the people who currently live there.

Moreover, based on the recent housing estates, the ground conditions are such that these new homes would require pile driving. The impact of the relentless noise and vibrations from this building process on residents is indescribable. It is impossible to work from home, which many of us do and not always out of choice. Such invasive work in the vicinity of the Berkswell Windmill also risks causing long-term damage to this historic monument as well as disrupting the numerous species of local wildlife. This, in itself, should be justification for not developing site 3, or indeed any site with similar ground conditions. Balsall Common residents will be under significant stress from the impact of HS2 construction as well as housing development, not least with the never-ending temporary traffic lights and road closures. We should not be expected to have to deal with this noise as well.

In summary, I would urge that the council take note of this response and remove Site 3 from the Draft Local Plan. There is no doubt, based on SMBC's criteria, that the site is neither sustainable nor accessible. Given the number of housing units available on the brownfield sites, it is unnecessary and incomprehensible as to why the site has not been taken out already. There is no need to build here.

Object

Draft Local Plan - Supplementary Consultation

Representation ID: 7035

Received: 06/03/2019

Respondent: Mrs Helen Dean

Representation Summary:

Medium/High density housing currently proposed in the masterplans is not in harmony with the existing low density housing within this area. The masterplan must be reviewed to ensure that any new development is in harmony with the existing local character of the area.

There have also been concerns raised by existing residents within this area re. Construction methods used by developers of the Elysian Fields site. Impact and disruption on existing residents must be minimised during this period of construction.

Full text:

Medium/High density housing currently proposed in the masterplans is not in harmony with the existing low density housing within this area. The masterplan must be reviewed to ensure that any new development is in harmony with the existing local character of the area.

There have also been concerns raised by existing residents within this area re. Construction methods used by developers of the Elysian Fields site. Impact and disruption on existing residents must be minimised during this period of construction.