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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Islington London Borough Council v First Secretary of State [2004] EWHC 430 (Admin) (02 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/430.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 430 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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ISLINGTON LONDON BOROUGH COUNCIL | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
FIRST SECRETARY OF STATE | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR D FORSDICK (instructed by Treasury Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
Tuesday, 2nd March 2004
"The Council will require that the design and appearance of all new development is of a high standard, is appropriate to the overall streetscape, is well planned to make the best use of the site and respects the scale, form and character of its surroundings. Where schemes are unsatisfactory in these respects, planning permission will be refused."
Policy D2A stated:
"Proposals for new and altered buildings should acknowledge the most important elements of the urban context and create a positive and appropriate relationship with surrounding buildings and spaces ..."
"8. 46-58 Canning Road and 37-39 Mountgrove Road provide a transition in height between the rest of Canning Road and the taller buildings on the northern side of Mountgrove Road. Although the proposal would increase the height of no 58, the roof of the additional floor would be roughly level with that of the building on the other corner of the junction and below that of the buildings opposite.
9. The design and materials of the additional floor, including the position of windows, would be very different from the rest of the building. It would be set back some 1.35m behind the parapet facing Canning Road with some screening provided by street trees, but I am satisfied that at least the upper part could be seen from the northern end of Canning Road, particularly in winter. I think that the contrast with the largely unaltered façade of the existing building and its neighbours on Canning Road would be noticeable, although the viewer would also be aware of the greater height and different appearance of the buildings on the other side of Mountgrove Road. The flank wall and raised chimneys could be seen in longer views along Canning Road but I think that they would appear to be a taller version of the existing break between nos 44-46.
10. The contrast between the old and new parts of the buildings would be most readily seen along Mountgrove Road and emphasised by the proposed overhang of the blank flank wall and the full view of the rear of the extension from the east. I think that the additional floor would look prominent, particularly when seen from the northern side of the road, despite the similarity in height with the building on the opposite corner, because of the lower profile of other buildings.
11. However, my attention was drawn to recently built examples of new buildings on the end of or among Victorian terraces and roof extensions on older buildings in the borough, including some in conservation areas. In these cases a policy regime very similar to that in the recently adopted Unitary Development Plan did not prevent permission being granted for proposals where the design approach was uncompromisingly modern and materials such as metal cladding were used. With them in mind I am satisfied that the appeal proposal would be appropriate in the streetscape. It would also respect the scale, form and character of its surroundings and relate positively with existing buildings as required by local planning policy.
12. In reaching this conclusion I have borne in mind that PPG1 and PPG3 and several policies and statements in the current Unitary Development Plan and its draft encourage good, innovative and imaginative design. Government guidance also warns against the arbitrary imposition of particular styles and taste and the Council has adopted no supplementary planning guidance on design matters. I am also aware that the 1994 Unitary Development Plan made specific references to variations in design on corner sites where they separate different building patterns in adjoining streets and greater freedom of design where there is a variety of building types."
"Before an award of costs is made, the following conditions will normally need to be met:-
(1) one of the parties has sought an award at the appropriate stage of the proceedings ...
(2) the party against whom costs are sought has behaved unreasonably, and
(3) this unreasonable conduct has caused the party seeking costs to incur or waste expense unnecessarily, either because it should not have been necessary for the matter to be determined by the Secretary of State, or because of the manner in which another party has behaved in the proceedings ..."
"If the planning authority have refused the appellant's request to discuss the planning application, or the possibility of granting planning permission (including a conditional permission) for the development alleged in the enforcement notice, or if they have refused to provide reasonably requested information, an award of costs may be made against them if it is concluded that a more helpful approach would have enabled the appeal to be avoided."
"7. I have considered this application for costs in the light of Circular 8/93 and all the relevant circumstances. This advises that, irrespective of the outcome of the appeal, costs may only be awarded against a party who has behaved unreasonably and thereby caused another party to incur or waste expense unnecessarily.
8. In dealing with this proposal the Council do not appear to have followed their own guidelines on handling planning applications or the advice on dealing with design issues in annex A of PPG1. From the evidence before me it appears that at no time while the application was being considered were the perceived shortcomings of the proposal explained to the appellants in any detail despite their requests. More importantly in a case where the outcome would primarily be based on subjective judgements of the visual impact of the design on the surrounding area, no officer visited the site. I note what is said about pressures on staff time and resources but in my view it is not reasonable in such cases to rely on photographs and other evidence to reject a proposal. On this point it seems to me that the case officer would have had no reason to tell a reporter that he had not made a visit if he had done so.
9. Paragraph 27 of Annex 3 says that if a council refuse to discuss a planning application or refuse to provide reasonably requested information, an award of costs may be made against them if it is concluded that the appeal could have been avoided by a more helpful approach. In this case the Council produced some evidence subsequently to support the reasons for refusal but in my view that evidence is not so substantial or convincing as to indicate that the decision would necessarily have been the same if the application had been dealt with in an appropriate manner.
10. Paragraph 14 of Annex 3 of the Circular says that when determining applications authorities should not seek to control the detailed design of buildings unless the sensitive character of the setting for the development justifies it in line with the advice in Annex A of PPG1. If the degree of control goes beyond what is appropriate for the circumstances of the location, the Council's actions may be regarded as unreasonable. No significant evidence was produced to indicate what justified refusing permission in this case when modern buildings and extensions had been allowed elsewhere among older buildings under a very similar policy framework.
11. I think that the policies in the various incarnations of the Unitary Development Plan set out reasonably clearly and explicitly what proposals, including those for alterations and extensions to buildings, are expected to achieve in design terms. However the reasons for refusal in this case are expressed in very general terms and do not set out precisely and specifically the ways in which the proposal would fail to meet the requirements of local planning policy. As a result they fail to meet the requirements of paragraph 8 in Annex 3 of the circular.
12. All in all I am satisfied that the appellants have been put unreasonably to the wasted expense of pursuing an appeal arising from an application which the local planning authority failed to consider properly in the light of all the evidence available at the time of the initial application. It should not have been necessary for the matter to be determined by the Secretary of State. In concluding that the Council handled the application in an unreasonable manner, I find it difficult to believe that what seems to be a strong and unequivocal dismissal of the proposal by a superior did not have some bearing on how the case officer approached the application.
13. Taking all of these points together I find that unreasonable behaviour, as described in Circular 8/93, has been demonstrated and that a full award of costs against the Council is justified."