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Dover District Council v CPRE Kent and related appeal

Town and country planning – Planning permission – Area of outstanding natural beauty – Appellant council granting planning permission for extensive development in AONB – Respondent challenging lawfulness of decision – Claim dismissed at first instance but allowed by Court of Appeal – Whether court properly quashing decision on basis of failure to provide statement of main reasons and considerations – Appeal dismissed

In June 2013, the first appellant council resolved to allow an application for planning permission by the second appellant for an extensive development on two sites on the western fringe of Dover. Part of the development was to comprise 521 residential units and a retirement village of 90 apartments on land at Farthingloe, within a designated area of outstanding natural beauty (AONB). A further 31 residential units, plus a hotel and conference centre, were proposed on the nearby Western Heights, a prominent hilltop which featured a series of early 19th century fortifications. That site was a scheduled monument although the surviving fortifications were in a poor state of repair and on the English Heritage “at risk” register. Permission was also sought for the conversion of part of the fortifications into a visitor centre and museum. The planning application included proposals for pedestrian access and landscaping between the two sites.

Planning officers considered that the proposals would result in long-term, irreversible harm to the AONB and recommended that permission be granted only for a lower-density development. However, the planning committee resolved to approve the application as submitted. The only reasons given for that decision were in the minutes of the planning committee meeting, which referred to the benefits of the proposed development for regeneration and investment and the restoration of heritage assets. Those benefits were stated to outweigh any harm to the AONB which could be minimised with effective screening. Although the Town and Country Planning (Environmental Impact Assessment) Regulations 2011 (the EIA Regulations) applied, so that the appellants were obliged to make and keep a statement of the main reasons and considerations for their decision, no such document was in fact produced.

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