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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Corus UK Ltd, R (on the application of) v Erewash Borough Council [2007] EWHC 2486 (Admin) (12 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/2486.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 2486 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF CORUS UK LIMITED | Claimant | |
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EREWASH BOROUGH COUNCIL | Defendant |
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Mr Andrew Hogan (instructed by Erewash BC Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
"The Urban Capacity Study for Erewash has examined brownfield sites with a view to establishing which of these will contribute to the Local Plan housing needs for the period up to 2011.
The greenfield sites are allocated within the Local Plan and have been a matter for debate at the Public Inquiry into the Local Plan.
However, one brownfield site, Oakwell brickworks in Ilkeston, features in neither document. The site is heavily contaminated and has been derelict for a number of years; it has been allocated for residential development for over 10 years.
A serious proposal (ie an application for planning permission) to deal with the contamination and to redevelop the site has not been put forward by its owners or promoted by any outside agency, it is considered that it may not make a contribution
to the new Local Plan housing target and could distort the figures or cause other more realistic sites to be deleted.
Hence, it has singularly been discounted in the Urban Capacity Study in order that the Local Plan housing targets and allocations remain realistic and achievable."
"The Council decided to delete the allocation for the second deposit of the Local Plan primarily on the basis that it considers that the site is unlikely to be developed within the plan period due to the costs of decontamination. No applications for development have been forthcoming over a number of years, despite the Oakwell Brickworks Development Brief being prepared in 1990. In accordance with Government guidance ... it is necessary to allocate land which is suitable and available for house building."
"The Council does not per se have a problem with this site being developed in the long term, subject to the existing environmental concerns being sensitively managed. However, the Council believes that due to the existing constraints, it is thought to be unlikely that the site will be brought forward within the plan period and as a result the Council has decided that the site should not be included in the local plan to meet the housing allocation figures up to 2011. There is no statement in the further written submissions from Corus to contradict the Council's assumption in this respect. Also, due to the conclusions of the Council's Urban Capacity Study ... the site is not required to meet the structure plan housing requirements ..."
"3.11.4 The Council indicates that the primary reason for de-allocation was the costs of decontamination and the consequent likelihood that the site would not be developed during the Plan period. However, I find no new evidence on this matter that could account for that change of view. It might explain why the site has not been developed since its allocation in the adopted Local Plan in 1994. However, the much-enlarged site is surely more attractive as a development prospect. Corus UK Limited considers that the project is deliverable during the Plan period. Apart from the enlarged site they refer to the increase in housing land values relative to decontamination costs. Also, with the projected housing shortfall in the Ilkeston sub-area and the very limited housing land allocations now proposed it is reasonable to suppose that there would in future be a reduced tendency for the development of the Oakwell Brickworks site to be put off simply because there were easier and more profitable greenfield sites available to develop. I conclude that it has not been demonstrated that this very worthwhile project would not be viable and achievable in the Plan period. That is not to say that there is no uncertainty, but the recommended non-implementation allowance would at least enable the provision in Proposal H1 to take this into account.
3.11.5 It may be the case that the site owner would in any event have to do a certain amount of site remediation as part of a duty of care. However, it seems to me that the allocation of the enlarged site would add considerable impetus to site reclamation undertaken as part of a comprehensive scheme. This would provide the local community with a better and more timely balance of benefits in terms of housing, open space, amenity and nature conservation. I am far from convinced that the allocation would hold back the development of less problematic sites allocated in the Plan.
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3.11.9 All things considered, and with certain qualifications, I conclude that the site should be allocated for housing development."
"RECOMMENDATIONS
I recommend that the Local Plan be modified by re-instating in Proposal H1 the housing land allocation at Oakwell Brickworks."
"The section entitled Principal Housing sites, paragraphs 2.25-2.33a and Proposal H1 to be deleted.
Reason: This modification has been set out first in this chapter because many of the modifications that follow are as a result of this substantial change. Due to updated housing figures for 2004 as set out in the revised Urban Capacity Study 2004 and November 2004 update ... the Borough is currently 371 dwellings above its Structure Plan target of providing 6,000 houses by 2011. This figure includes houses completed, urban capacity and committed sites. There is therefore now no need to allocate land for housing development within the Plan. As such there is no need to retain paragraphs 2.25-2.33a and Proposal H1 within the plan. The existing committed sites together with the urban capacity sites provide a range of development options for the Plan period. This does not mean that further housing sites will not be granted planning consent, as urban capacity and windfall sites will continue to come forward. Consideration of residential planning applications will be based on their merits. The deleted sites, together with all other relevant sites will be considered for allocation as housing land as part of the Council's Local Development Framework, work on which is due to commence in line with the review of the Regional Spatial Strategy."
"Disagree with inspector's recommendation. Due to updated housing figures for 2004 there is now no need to allocate housing land for development. As such there is no need to retain Proposal H1."
"(1) In relying on the January 2005 Urban Capacity Study as a reason for excluding Oakwell Brickworks [from the Local Plan] the Council failed to have regard to a material consideration that the Urban Capacity Study's rejection of the Brickworks site on the basis of deliverability had been rejected by the inspector. Had the brickworks site been included in the Urban Capacity Study it would have ranked with the other identified sites as sites included in the Local Plan housing supply. Alternatively the Council displayed a closed mind in relying on arguments in the Urban Capacity Study which had been rejected by the inspector, without recognising that they had been rejected, let alone reconsidering the point and answering it, or its reasoning was inadequate."
"Whilst the figures show a shortfall in the Ilkeston Sub-Area, the over-provision in the Long Eaton and Derby Sub-Areas, part of which are physically close to Ilkeston and public transport, can be used to meet this shortfall. This results in a borough-wide over-provision of 21 dwellings."
"The Structure Plan allocates different housing figures to different Sub-Areas of the Borough. The Urban Capacity Study 2003 shows an over-provision of housing in the Long Eaton and Derby Sub-Areas, but an under-provision in Ilkeston. Given the proximity of the areas, particularly Long Eaton and Ilkeston, it is reasonable to consider that the under-provision in the Ilkeston Sub-Area will be in part met by the additional housing in the Long Eaton Sub-Area. However, given that there is already an over-provision, it would not be appropriate to allocate further sites in Long Eaton. It is envisaged that the market will continue to provide windfall sites which would meet the criteria set out in paragraph 2.20."
"3.11.1 The Council appears to accept that much of the site is previously developed land, and I would not question that. I appreciate that in the First Deposit adjoining greenfield areas were added to the site that was allocated in the adopted Local Plan. However, I would rate the enlarged site highly in terms of the sequential approach and sustainability criteria in both PPG3 and RPG8. On this basis, and despite the presence of some on-site constraints and the promotion of several other sites by objectors, I conclude that the site deserves to be given priority in considering sites for housing development. It is notable that the Second Deposit allocates no brownfield sites for residential development in the Ilkeston sub-area.
3.11.2 From the evidence submitted by Corus UK Limited I infer that it would be feasible to reclaim the contaminated parts of the site, create safer, managed areas for public access, amenity and nature conservation and provide land for housing development that would make a significant contribution to the strategic housing requirement. In particular, the development would help to remove the housing shortfall for the Ilkeston sub-area, and its contribution would be even more important were the allocation of the allotments sites in Ilkeston to be withdrawn. In view of my related findings in section 3.2 I cannot agree with the Council that a site such as this is 'not required to meet the Structure Plan housing requirements'."
"3.2.32 I cannot agree that land allocated for housing in Ilkeston is excessive and out of balance. The question of balance between the sub-areas has been addressed in the Structure Plan, and I see no justification for re-opening it now. Table B and Proposal H1 show that the Council's allocations in the Ilkeston sub-area are not sufficient to raise housing provision to the level required to meet the Structure Plan requirement. This remains the case even with the Council's Proposed Changes.
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3.2.34 The housing requirement for Erewash is stated in Housing Policy 14 of the Structure Plan. The policy makes quantitative provision for the Borough as a whole. It also divides the total figure between the three sub-areas. Proposal H1 and Table B indicate that the Plan provides for sufficient housing to meet the overall requirement for the Plan period, but that there is a shortfall in the Ilkeston sub-area and a surplus in the Long Eaton and Derby sub-areas. The Proposed Changes and the Housing Topic Paper show a similar position although the figures are not the same.
3.2.35 I accept that the Plan should aim to meet the sub-area requirements as stated in the Structure Plan. However, I also accept that there are several arguments in favour of accepting the shortfall for the Ilkeston sub-area in this case. First, the latest figures in the Housing Topic Paper show that the shortfall is not great: at 158 dwellings it is a little less than 1 year's supply. Secondly, to put this in context, the Structure Plan figures are rounded to hundreds and the policy states that they should be 'located generally' in the sub-areas concerned. This suggests to me that minor deviations from the figures would not be regarded as serious. Thirdly, it is notable that the County Council has not objected to the Plan on these grounds: indeed, it evidently regards the housing chapter to be in conformity with the Structure Plan.
3.2.36 Fourthly, it is reasonable to suppose that the harm that results from the Ilkeston shortfall can to some extent be mitigated by the projected overprovision in adjoining sub-areas, especially Long Eaton. The latest figures indicate that the overprovision there is well in excess of the Ilkeston shortfall. That is not to say that it is generally acceptable to plan for sub-area shortfalls as long as overall balance is achieved. In this case I am conscious that the Structure Plan provision for the Ilkeston sub-area explicitly includes an element (650 dwellings) to accommodate overspill from Long Eaton in order to protect the general extent of the Green Belt here. The recent figures indicate that the over-provision at Long Eaton is not dependent on site allocations but results from higher than expected urban capacity. In my view these circumstances considerably moderate the degree of seriousness of the Ilkeston shortfall.
3.2.37 By the same token they reduce my concern about the over-provision in the Long Eaton sub-area. Because the over-provision arises even without making site allocations, there is some justification for the Council's Proposed Changes that would delete the two allocations in Proposal H1 of the Second Deposit. It would accord with the last sentence of PPG3(30), which indicates that the search for potential housing sites should not be extended further than required to provide sufficient capacity to meet the housing requirement."
"2.9a. Whilst the figures show a shortfall in the Ilkeston Sub-Area, the over-provision in the Long Eaton and Derby Sub-Areas, part of which are physically close to Ilkeston and public transport, can be used to meet this shortfall. This results in a borough-wide over-provision of 371.
Reason: To accord with the inspector's recommendation."
"The Council failed to have regard to a material consideration, namely the inspector's comments on the desirability of a ten-year housing land supply. The inspector had considered that a ten-year supply ought not to be required time because of the time which would be taken to identify sites. Even given the Council's decision that there was a sufficient supply to the end of the plan period (in 2011) Oakwell Brickworks could still have been allocated to contribute to the longer period."
"3.2.5 Clearly, the Plan does not make provision for a 10 year supply of housing land from the expected time of plan adoption. I regard this as an important deficiency, especially in view of the Ministerial Statement of 17 July 2003, which drew attention to existing guidance in PPG3(28) and PPG12(6.8), and which highlighted the need for development plans to make provision for at least 10 years potential supply of housing from the forecast adoption date. While it is true that PPG12(6.8) also advises that a local plan should be prepared to the same period covered by the relevant structure plan, that advice is qualified by the words 'where possible' and is set in a context that appears to me to give priority to meeting the 10 year requirement. That the last few years of the 10 year period would in this case be beyond the period of the Structure Plan, and could not therefore be assessed as being in conformity, would not itself present any great problem in my view. The development plan system is due to change over this period and the plan, monitor and manage approach would allow flexibility to make adjustments in future years in response to evolving strategic guidance. The implication of my conclusion on this matter is that more housing land may need to be allocated in the Plan, in order to meet the requirement for the Borough. I consider this aspect further in dealing with the land allocation issues below.
3.2.44 (b) To accord with Government guidance an additional 3 or 4 years of housing provision are required, in order to provide for 10 years of supply from the date of Plan adoption. Based on annual figures produced at the inquiry, I estimate that this could involve the allocation of an additional 700 to 950 dwellings in total.
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3.2.46 Were I to recommend that the Council undertake the necessary information gathering and analysis work for the purpose of modifying the Plan to provide for conclusion (b), it is likely that the adoption of the Plan would be very considerably delayed. This would be contrary to all the Government's objectives for the transition to the new development planning system, as set out in draft PPS12(5.1.1). I believe it would greatly slow the Council's progress to the new Local Development Framework. Secondly, it would also harm the aim of maintaining continuity in the development plans system as a framework for development control. The relevant provisions in the current adopted Local Plan extend only to 2001 and so there is a presently a development plan hiatus, which it is desirable to minimise. Thirdly, it would fail to minimise transitional costs. That is because the scale of modifications to the Plan would be considerable, and would be followed soon afterwards by the process of establishing the new Local Development Framework.
3.2.47 I therefore conclude that it would be better for the Council to move quickly to the adoption of the Plan, making adequate provision for the period of the Structure Plan, but then being able to make an early start on the Local Development Framework. This would allow a more efficient transition and one that should allow housing provision for the years up to and beyond 2011 to be addressed without undue delay."