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Apologies Minutes: No apologies were received. |
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Declarations of Interest Minutes:
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Minutes - to follow Minutes: Minutes of the previous meeting to be reviewed in future. |
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19/1763/FUL - Whittle Laboratory, 1JJ Thomson Avenue PDF 440 KB Minutes: The Committee received an application for
full planning permission. The
application sought approval for extension of the Whittle Laboratory, including
new National Centre for Propulsion and Power(4,251 sq metres of Academic (D1) Floorspace), demolition of 1,149
sq metres of D1floorspace, and all associated
infrastructure including landscaping, drainage, substation and car and cycle
parking. Rob Miller, Director of the Whittle Laboratory addressed the Committee
in support of the application on behalf of Cambridge University. The Committee noted the amendment sheet. The Committee Chair briefly
lost internet connection to the meeting and the Officer repeated the relevant
section of the presentation. Members questioned some of the conditions including, green roofing,
public art, long term maintenance of trees, completion date of cycle lane and
the BREEAM (Building Research
Establishment Environmental Assessment Method) sustainability assessment. These matters were addressed as follows:
i.
Condition 16D to be amended in read ‘in perpetuity’
in line with other application in the area.
ii.
Public Art would be addressed as part of a wider
strategy for the wider campus.
iii.
Conditions regarding maintenance of trees to be
amended to include maintenance of any trees lost from the intial
planting for a further five year to ensure their long-term maintenance.
iv.
Adding a specific date for the completion of the
cycle path was agreed to be problematic as it would require the cooperation of
the Highways Department and road closures. It was agreed that an informative
requiring the cycle lane to be completed as expediently and timely a fashion as
possible.
v.
The BREEAM standards were agreed to be
satisfactory. 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; and
ii.
the following amended conditions
where the final wording of the conditions would be delegated to Officers in
consultation with the Chair and Spokes: a)
The addition of standard condition
one, requiring commencement on site within three years. b)
Amendment of condition regarding
green roof to add the word ‘in perpetuity’. c)
Additional condition regarding
maintenance of any replacement trees for a further five year
period. and
iii.
An additional informative included
on the planning permission in respect of: a.
the cycle lane to be completed as
expediently and timely a fashion as possible. |
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18/1678/FUL - Station Area Development PDF 697 KB Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee
received an application for full planning permission. The application
sought approval for the erection of two new buildings comprising 5,351sqm (GEA)
of Class B1(a)/ Class B1(b) floorspace including ancillary accommodation/
facilities with associated plant, 162 cycle parking spaces, and 8 off-gauge
cycle spaces for Block F2 and an Aparthotel (Class C1) comprising 125suites,
terrace, ancillary accommodation and facilities with multi-storey car park for
Network Rail (total GEA 12,153sqm) comprising 206 car parking spaces and 34
cycle parking spaces for Block B2 with associated plant, hard and soft
landscaping, new alignment of access from Station Road into Station Square and
permanent access from Devonshire Road to the Cambridge Station Car Park,
utilising the existing pedestrian and cycle access, restricted to emergency
access to the railway only. The Committee
received representations in objection to the application from the following: i.
Chair of South Petersfield
Residents Association. ii.
Cambridge Cycling Campaign. iii.
Resident of 85 Great Northern
Road. iv.
Resident of 89 Great Northern
Road. The representations covered the following issues: i.
Where would taxis ‘over rank’ when
they cannot fit into the car park? ii.
Was it acceptable that the
footprint of building B2 would be far bigger than in the outline application? iii.
Building F2 would block a cycle
route and encroach on a generously wide pavement. iv.
Camcycle
objected to this application under Local Plan policies 56 and 80. a.
Their members believed this
application would exacerbate problems in the Station Square area, in large part
because of the multi-storey car park, which Camcycle
thought conflicted with the council's own transport plans to reduce car usage
here. b.
Cycle parking expansion
commitments were cancelled, car parking spaces should have been taken out
instead. c.
This site contains a key link in
the Chisholm Trail, which the city and the GCP have been advancing for years as
a route intended to be easy enough for a 12-year old to navigate. There was
still no safe and obvious cycle route through this site suitable for all ages
and abilities. The proposed buildings encroach too closely on the junctions at
either end of the site. d.
Asked the committee to refuse
permission to this application because it fails to create a successful place.
i. It
did not integrate vehicle, pedestrian or cycle access routes and spaces between
buildings well.
ii. It
did not safeguard the Chisholm Trail. v.
Expressed concern about noise
from: a.
Traffic. b.
Bin movements / refuse collection. vi.
Requested: a.
Heavy traffic be limited to
09:00-17:00. b.
Construction traffic be limited to
09:00-16:00. vii.
Suggested relocating the entrance
nearer the loading bay. viii.
As the City Council had declared a
climate emergency, it should be mindful of the amount of carbon embedded in the
development. ix.
A pedestrian crossing was required
on the eastern end of the site. x.
Expressed concern the application
would block light for nearby [existing] residents’ homes and amenity spaces.
There had been no light impact study. Mr Derbyshire (Applicant’s Agent) addressed the Committee in support of
the application. Councillor Robertson (Ward Councillor) addressed the Committee about the
application: i.
Would speak on behalf of himself and County
Councillor Jones. ii.
Buildings F2 and B2 draw on the concept approved
just over 10 years ago. iii.
It was regrettable that F2 was given outline
planning consent as would overshadow neighbouring buildings. It was now bigger
and would be dominant, overbearing and loom over local residences. iv.
F2 and B2 were now proposed to be located closer
together than originally proposed, which would cause a canyon effect. This
would negatively affect the area, and the Chisholm Trail in particular. v.
Believed that F2 and B2 conflicted with Local Plan
policies: a.
Overshadowing. b.
Creation of comfortable pedestrian areas. c.
Sustainability of pedestrian and cycle movements. d.
Creating successful places. vi.
Asked for the application to be rejected. But if
accepted, please go with option B [in officer’s report] where a stakeholder
group would be selected to look at people movements in the CB1 area. vii.
Made the following points on behalf of Councillor
Jones: a.
This development was objectionable in size and
scale, and an unnecessary addition to the tightly packed blocks that are
already constructed in CB1. b.
The aparthotel would increase traffic movements and
the Network Rail car park would encourage commuters in a crowded city to access
the rail station by the most environmentally damaging mode of transport. c.
The county council had objected to the proposed
licensed hackney carriage access across Station Square. A new road cutting
across the square runs against the design of the square, which currently
enabled pedestrians to move safely from the station to the start of Station
Road. It was also a reversal of the county transport hierarchy that puts
pedestrians and cyclists at the top. d.
It was claimed that taxi access across the square
would relieve traffic on Great Northern Rd but, if so, this was likely to be a
minor, short-term effect. Systematic traffic management in the square and
better policing of delivery lorries could achieve as much. Giving priority on
Great Northern Road to cyclists and installing a safe pedestrian crossing point
would achieve more. e.
Took issue with the claim that pedestrians should
be persuaded to walk on the other side of Station Rd to avoid Tenison Rd. f.
Called on the planning committee to strike out the
proposal in para. 2.17. The city council should not settle for supposed
short-term ‘fixes’ for problems created by growth but focus on strategic, whole
area improvements, such as opening up an Eastern approach to the station. Councillor Baigent briefly lost internet connection to the meeting so
the Principal Planner repeated the relevant section of officer answers to
councillors’ questions. Councillor McQueen proposed and Councillor Lord seconded a proposal to
defer the application. The proposal was lost by
2 votes to 6. The Committee: Before
considering the substantive officer recommendation for approval of the
application, Members first had to vote on whether they wished to agree:
i.
Option A (with new access).
ii.
Option B (without new access). Voted
on whether to: i.
Accept
Option A in the Officer’s report - lost by 3 votes to 0. ii.
Accept
Option B in the Officer’s report - agreed by 5 votes to
0. iii.
Refuse
Options A and B in the Officer’s report - lost by 2 votes to 0. Resolved (by 5
votes to 3) to reject the Officer recommendation to approve the application. Adjourned 16:25-16:44 for officer discussion to quantify minded to refuse
reasons. i. The proposed development would fail to prioritise the movement and safety
of pedestrians and cyclists within the CBI area introducing conflict at Station
Square and Station Road and further conflict along the car park access road
connecting to Devonshire Road. In addition, the footprint of B2 would reduce
the flexibility of development coming forward within this quarter of CBI to
adequately respond and provide for high quality cycling (including the Chisholm
Trail) and pedestrian routes that should have priority over vehicular traffic.
The proposal is therefore contrary to policies 25, 56, 57, 59 and policy 80 of
the Cambridge Local Plan (2018) and NPPF (Feb 2019) paragraphs 104 and 109. ii. By virtue of the scale, massing and footprint of building B2 in close proximity to Carter Bridge, the proposed building
would appear visually cramped, overly prominent and detract from the character
and appearance of the existing area. The proposal is therefore contrary to
policies 55, 56 and 57 of the Cambridge Local Plan (2018) and NPPF (Feb 2019)
paragraph 124. iii. The proposal would cumulatively exceed the anticipated hotel need for
Cambridge contrary to policy 77 and is therefore unjustified. Voted
on whether to: i.
Accept
Reason 1 - agreed by 5 votes to 3. ii.
Accept
Reason 2 - agreed by 5 votes to 3. iii.
Accept
Reason 3 - lost by 2 votes to 6. The Delivery Manager recommended using the Adjourned Decision
Making Protocol as the reasons councilors proposed went against Highways
Authority advise. Resolved (by 4 votes to 4 and on the Chair’s casting vote) not to accept the
officer recommendation of approval, as the committee were minded to refuse the
application, a decision on whether to approve or refuse the application was
subsequently deferred under the Adjourned Decision Protocol Under the Council’s agreed Adjourned Decisions
Protocol this application will be brought back to a future meeting of the
Committee to allow further discussion of reasons for refusal. The following matters may form the basis for
detailed reasons for refusal: i.
The proposed development
would fail to prioritise the movement and safety of pedestrians and cyclists
within the CBI area introducing conflict at Station Square and Station Road and
further conflict along the car park access road connecting to Devonshire Road.
In addition, the footprint of B2 would reduce the flexibility of development
coming forward within this quarter of CBI to adequately respond and provide for
high quality cycling (including the Chisholm Trail) and pedestrian routes that
should have priority over vehicular traffic. The proposal is therefore contrary
to policies 25, 56, 57, 59 and policy 80 of the Cambridge Local Plan (2018) and
NPPF (Feb 2019) paragraphs 104 and 109. ii.
By virtue of the scale,
massing and footprint of building B2 in close proximity to
Carter Bridge, the proposed building would appear visually cramped, overly
prominent and detract from the character and appearance of the existing area.
The proposal is therefore contrary to policies 55, 56 and 57 of the Cambridge
Local Plan (2018) and NPPF (Feb 2019) paragraph 124. |
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19/1375/FUL - 1 Rectory Terrace, High Street, Cherry Hinton PDF 201 KB Minutes: Councillor McQueen left after the vote on item 20/52/Plan. The Committee
received an application for full planning permission. The application sought approval for the rebuild of the existing Tesco
convenience store building (including part demolition, external works, and
refurbishment) to provide the following: ·
Retail unit (use class A1). ·
8 x 1 bed residential units. ·
Reconfiguration of the car park and associated
areas. The Principal Planner updated his site plan from the version shown in
the plans pack. The Committee received a representation in objection to the application
from a resident of 6 Chalfont Close: i.
All objections related to the car
park. ii.
Had no issue with the proposed
housing. iii.
The proposed car park design would
remove screening and enable significant overlooking of 6 Chalfont Close, by
bringing people to the boundary <2.3 m from the house. This would allow
views into the kitchen of 6 Chalfont Close. iv.
Reduced parking spaces would cause
overflow onto side streets and the already limited parking at Chalfont Close. v.
The redesign of the car park to
give apparent amenity (ie the small green space)
reduced functionality, ultimately shifting parking into the surrounding
residential streets. Mr Bainton (Applicant’s Agent) addressed the
Committee in support of the application. Councillor Ashton (Ward Councillor) addressed the Committee about the
application: i.
He supported the scheme as did a
majority of residents. ii.
The Developer had been proactive in trying to keep
residents informed of development. iii.
Councillor Ashton has signposted residents to the
Developer so their concerns could be addressed. Councillor Dryden (Ward Councillor) addressed the Committee about the
application: i.
Agreed with Councillor Ashton’s points. ii.
Security of the car park would be improved as flats
were located above it and could overlook it. iii.
The streetscene would be
better as a result of the application. Councillor Smart proposed an amendment to the Officer’s recommendation
for landscaping at the entrance to the
car park. This amendment was carried
unanimously. Councillor Thornburrow proposed an amendment to the Officer’s
recommendation that a green roof be required,
and that it should be maintained. This amendment was carried
unanimously. Councillor Porrer proposed amendments to the Officer’s recommendation
for a: i.
courtyard landscape plan. ii.
buffer around car parking space 18. This amendment was carried
unanimously. The Committee: Unanimously resolved by all present (7 votes to 0) 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; [and]
ii.
an additional condition requiring
a green roof, and that it
should be maintained in perpetuity. [and]
iii.
informatives
included on the planning permission in respect of: a.
landscaping at the entrance to the car park b.
first floor external courtyard landscape plan c. buffer around car parking space
18 [and]
iv.
Delegated powers for officers to
finalise the wording of the new condition and informatives. |