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49 22/00197/FUL - 11 Hinton Avenue PDF 145 KB
Minutes:
The Committee
received an application for full planning permission.
The application sought approval for erection of a detached two-bedroomed
dwelling and side, rear and loft extensions along with remodelling of internal
layouts and raising of ridge to existing dwelling following granting of
planning permissions (19/0015/FUL and 20/04608/HFUL).
The Committee received a representation in objection to the application
from a resident of Hinton Avenue:
i.
Spoke on issues the Objector
thought were at odds with the current Cambridge Local Plan:
a.
The house at Number 11 and the
new-build development approvals were re-sold to the current developer, who submitted
a revised application in January 2022, to include garden offices and bicycle
sheds for each of the houses.
Construction activity commenced in late 2021, based on the original
planning approvals.
i. The
new planning application ignored condition number 7 of the original approval
decision relating to no further changes being permitted, reducing the garden
length beyond the patio area for the new-build house from 16 metres to 8.7
metres.
ii. This
was but one element of a slow-creep incremental approach to seeking planning
approval at odds with Policy 52 of the Local Plan
iii. Number
11’s original garden had been reduced by 43% to accommodate the new-build
house, with two dwellings now on the original site. This revised planning application reduced the
garden area by a further 25%, meaning that the overall reduction of garden area
was approximately 57%, at odds with Policy 52 (b).
b.
The Council imposed wide-ranging
Tree Preservation Orders on the site to act as a deterrent to a proposed
development of Lilac Court, with a Planning Inspector describing the area as
verdant and an important wildlife habitat.
i. The
multiple development activities in the area damaged this environment, with
multiple mature trees and bushes removed.
The proposed garden offices would reduce further any chance of
replacement planting with any equivalently sized trees, contradicting
sub-clauses a), b) and c) of Local Plan Policy 71.
c.
The proposed garden office for
number 11 was overbearing in size and inappropriate in location, in
contravention of Local Plan Policy 58 (e).
i. The
Planning Officer recommended approval of this planning application on the basis
that the garden offices did not require planning permission, as their heights
were only slightly greater than the requirement.
ii. To
counter this argument, the garden office proposed for number 11 would be in excess of one metre higher than the communal fence, and
as proposed, have a similar square footage to the entire ground floor extension
of the main property.
ii.
Was surprised to see the marketing
information on the billboard outside number 11 advertising that both houses
would have garden studios, when these had yet to be approved by the Council. It was understood that one of the houses has
already been sold, including that unapproved amendment to the planning
approval.
iii.
Requested the Council rejected the
revised planning application as it was counter to a number of
important policies in the Local Plan. In
addition, the individual planning applications for developments in the
immediate area did not appear to be considered as a whole, and the result was a
very significant reduction in the wildlife environment, amenity for existing
residents and appropriate garden space for the eventual purchasers.
Councillor Thornburrow proposed amendments to the Officer’s
recommendation:
i.
Outbuilding should not be
used separately for residential use.
ii.
Bin and cycle store details
to be agreed for both units.
iii.
The development should
comply with Building Regulations Part B.
The amendments were carried
unanimously.
Councillor Gawthrope Wood proposed
amendments to the Officer’s recommendation:
i.
Electric vehicle charging points
should be installed for the new dwelling.
ii.
The new dwelling should be
encouraged to use sustainable energy sources such as solar PV.
The amendments were carried unanimously.
Councillor Porrer proposed amendments to the Officer’s recommendation:
i.
Removal of Part E permitted
development rights.
ii.
The development should comply
with M42 standards (ensuring that the building is accessible) – outbuilding
should be habitable and accessible.
The amendments were carried
unanimously
The Committee:
Unanimously resolved to grant the
application for planning permission in accordance with the Officer
recommendation, for the reasons set out in the Officer’s report, subject to:
i.
the planning conditions set out in
the Officer’s report;
ii.
delegated authority to officers, in consultation
with the Chair, Vice Chair and Spokes, to draft and include the following
additional conditions:
a.
that the outbuilding shall not be used separately
for residential use
b. for
the removal of Part E permitted development rights]
c. bin
and cycle store details to be agreed for both units
d.
electric vehicle charging points should be installed for the
new dwelling.
iii.
Informatives
to be included on the planning permission in respect of:
a.
the new dwelling should be encouraged to use
sustainable energy sources such as solar PV
b.
the development should comply with Building
Regulations Part B
c. the
development should comply with M4 (2) standard – the outbuilding should be
habitable and accessible.