The one that gets me is the objections from people living in a new build estate to proposals for another new build estate next to theirs due to loss of countryside
Guess what england was all countryside once!!!!
Well that is excellent news, no doubt there will be another one soon enough though
I stroll about my local area now and when I see an empty plot I think “that’ll be flats in a year”.
The car park between Beach green Shoreham and the houseboats? Definitely flats.
The field opposite the Saltings roundabout? Definitely housing.
Infrastructure and amenities don’t enter into the consultations. It’s one massive game of Tetris. If it fits, they’ll build it. And if trees get in the way? Take them down.
They’ve already destroyed a stretch of the river bank when the new pumping station flooded. Expect lost more lord when all those knees are built. Habitats destroyed for good.
Heartbreaking.
The one that gets me is the objections from people living in a new build estate to proposals for another new build estate next to theirs due to loss of countryside
Guess what england was all countryside once!!!!
You seem very confident that this is going to happen.
One look at the Worthing and Adur Local Plan suggest nothing of the sort - in fact, the opposite.
Lol…plans change …the current builds going on in Shoreham weren’t in a plan before the latest one…his confidence is from what he’s seen happen
If a planning application goes in, and it runs contrary to the Local Plan, it has every probability of being rejected.
The area between Beach Green and the houseboats is one Adur DC specifically wish to environmentally preserve. Meanwhile, the land by the Saltings roundabout has, according to Adur DC, flood risk problems that are deemed unsolvable.
The lack of investment in infrastructure is the biggest issue with these new build estates. Sounds great housing 1500 people until there's no GP or dentists appointments anymore, and you cant drive down the road without sitting in traffic for half an hour.
Not to mention they pack these houses in so tight everyones living on top of each other.
I'd like to see a Government designate more protected land in and around villages. There are some massive developments being made in parts of Sussex that are totally changing the life for those villages with disproportionate allocations of houses given the current size of them. A place like Worthing with 100,000 population can easily absorb another 400 homes (I get there is a tipping point) but look at what they doing to some villages where the number of homes are being doubled. Yes it comes with extra facilities sometimes but it totally changes the feel of the place. That can't be right. The surrounds of Horsham and neighbouring villages are a good example.
wait so you'll object based on how much profit might be made, rather than the need for housing? and unfounded assumptions of what they'll look like? heres what they're supposed to look like.
dont care for the Barret box, bit of a London thing, not everything has to be "of merit" other than substantial build and fitting with the local pattern. need homes not award winning homes.
We are desperate for more housing in this country.
I have spent all my adult life living in cities and I care very much about built up areas, their looks, their functionality, how we interact with the environment and how we react to the environment; in my view aesthetics are vitally important. If I had my way I'd ban these 'design and build' companies. We need distance and a bit of friction between architects and builders; it brings out the very best in both dicsiplines.
And in my opinion these new builds look shit. Very little thought has gone into their design.
Quite. I’m okay with losing some green space as long as what is built there is well thought out and gives normal people the Chance to build a life, start a family, grow old together etc.
In principal, I’m in favour of the Monks Farm development in Lancing / Shoreham. But I’m dead against the 9 storey behemoth on the old civic centre site. It changes the skyline, creates darkness for dozens of houses, wipes out that tree and dwarfs the Welly. Grim.
wait so you'll object based on how much profit might be made, rather than the need for housing? and unfounded assumptions of what they'll look like? heres what they're supposed to look like.
dont care for the Barret box, bit of a London thing, not everything has to be "of merit" other than substantial build and fitting with the local pattern. need homes not award winning homes.