[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> CEG Land Promotions II Ltd v Secretary of State for Housing Communities And Local Government [2018] EWHC 1799 (Admin) (18 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2018/1799.html Cite as: [2019] PTSR 353, [2018] EWHC 1799 (Admin), [2018] WLR(D) 452 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2019] PTSR 353] [View ICLR summary: [2018] WLR(D) 452] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
CEG LAND PROMOTIONS II LIMITED |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOUSING COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT |
Defendant |
|
- and - |
||
AYLESBURY VALE DISTRICT COUNCIL |
Interested Party |
____________________
(instructed by CLYDE AND CO) for the Claimant
MR TIM BULEY
(instructed by GOVERNMENT LEGAL DEPARTMENT) for the Defendant
Aylesbury Vale District Council did not appear
Hearing dates: 3 & 4 JULY 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE OUSELEY :
"146. In this case I have concluded that there would be moderate to substantial harm to landscape character, limited harm to the setting of the AONB, moderate to substantial harm to settlement character and the rural setting of Wendover. There would also be material adverse visual effects and the irrevocable loss of part of a valued landscape. In these important environmental respects the proposal would be contrary to development plan policies which are entirely consistent with the Framework. Due to the overarching nature of the policies and the degree of contravention I conclude that the proposal would be contrary to the development plan as a whole. In combination this accumulation of harms would be significant in terms of their scale and severity and as such they attract very substantial weight."
The Decision Letter and the Inspector's approach to landscape issues
"GP.35 The design of new development proposals should respect and complement:
(a) the physical characteristics of the site and the surroundings;
(b) the building tradition, ordering, form and materials of the locality;
(c) the historic scale and context of the setting;
(d) the natural qualities and features of the area; and
(e) the effect on important public views and skylines."
"Finally RA.2 confirms that, other than for specific proposals and land allocations, new development in the countryside should avoid reducing open land which contributes to the form and character of rural settlements, having regard to the need to maintain the individual identities of settlements. Again the judgments required in relation to this policy are applicable to all prospective developments and the Appellants accept that this policy should be accorded full weight. All of these three policies are consistent with the core planning principles in the Framework which, amongst other things, seek to ensure that the intrinsic character and beauty of the open countryside is protected."
This policy is in the section of the Local Plan entitled "Coalescence of Settlements."
"39. Whilst the appeal site forms a relatively small parcel within the wider Southern Vale LCA, it is not only typical of the character area, but comprises one of the localised pockets of a higher quality. These factors, combined with the nature, size and scale of development and the visibility of the site in this locality, lead me to conclude that the overall effect upon the LCA would be on the spectrum between moderate and substantially adverse."
"For these reasons I conclude that there would be a loss of open land contributing to settlement character and a merging of World's end with Wendover. Irrespective of whether or not this merging is characterised as 'coalescence' within the usual planning meaning, it would be contrary to the policy objectives in RA.2 due to the resultant material harm to that settlement character attributable to the loss of the open land which helps to define the character of Wendover. Due to the prominence of this gateway site and its contribution I would quantify the harm to settlement character as moderate to substantial."
"These areas are expressed to be sensitive landscapes which are the 'valued landscapes' for the district as referred to in national policy. Nevertheless it is well-established that the lack of local or national landscape designation does not preclude the site from being a valued landscape. It was also accepted that the criteria in Box 5.1 of Guidelines for Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment are accepted as a useful tool for assessing value."
"68. Here the landscape under consideration is relatively small scale. In this instance the appeal site is clearly understood to be part of land on the edge of the vales. It is not only representative of that landscape character, it is a pocket of high quality land. It also makes a key contribution to the attractive rural setting of Wendover on a gateway approach and forms part of the countryside which provides the setting for the AONB. It has a scenic value as well above the ordinary for the reasons given. It is adjoined by and associated with the SSSI which adds value to the local landscape and adds to the sense of rural tranquillity. It is not merely a matter of the site's well-used internal footpath providing views of the escarpment; rather it is the expansive and scenic nature of those views seen in the context of an open foreground uncluttered by development which gives the views their value and high quality. That is not to impute the characteristics and value of the adjoining AONB to the appeal site but to recognise that the scarp forms part of the backdrop in the smaller scale landscape of which the appeal site is an integral part. In combination all of these matters and physical characteristics take this site beyond mere countryside and into something below that which is designated but which is a valued landscape.
69. In finding that the site comprises part of a valued landscape I have endorsed the professional judgments of the Council's landscape witness. I acknowledge that this goes against the opinion of both the Appellants' professional witness and that of the consultants tasked by the Council of identifying sensitive landscapes which fed into the Council's subsequent designation of Areas of Attractive Landscape and Local Landscape Areas. These later studies were district wide studies. All of my assessments are largely based on qualitative judgments. In coming to my conclusions I have had the benefit of expert opinions focussed on an analysis of the site and its surroundings, as well as several site visits and the evidence of third parties. For all of the reasons given I am satisfied that this site comprises part of a valued landscape and its development would fail to protect and enhance the landscape contrary to the objectives set out in the Framework."
"It is necessary to consider whether the provisions of paragraph 109 of the Framework in relation to valued landscapes comprise a specific policy indicating that development should be restricted in accordance with the fourth bullet point of paragraph 14."
"76 There would be harm to landscape character by the loss of part of the land of the character type identified. Whilst the visual effects would largely be localised, the development would have significant adverse visual effects in a number of key respects. In addition there would be material harm to the rural setting and settlement pattern of Wendover and further limited harm to the setting of the AONB. There would also be the erosion of part of a valued landscape. These harms are substantial and are contrary to the local plan and national policy objectives already set out. In combination these harms attract significant weight."
Ground 1A
"Local planning authorities should set criteria based policies against which proposals for any development on or affecting protected wildlife or geodiversity sites or landscape areas will be judged. Distinctions should be made between the hierarchy of international, national and locally designated sites, so that protection is commensurate with their status and gives appropriate weight to their importance and the contribution that they make to wider ecological networks."
"where the development plan is absent, silent or relevant policies are out-of-date, granting permission unless:
- any adverse impacts of doing so would significantly and demonstrably outweigh the benefits, when assessed against policies in this Framework taken as a whole; or
- specific policies in this Framework indicate development should be restricted."
Ground 1
"64. Pointing to the Stroud judgment the Appellants further contend that the appeal site itself has to have some demonstrable physical attributes which take it beyond mere countryside in order to qualify as a valued landscape. The council's interpretation is that the appeal site cannot be considered in isolation from its surroundings and that in the Stroud judgment the Court was looking at matters beyond the site in examining the potential demonstrable physical attributes.
65. In coming to a view as to whether or not a site falls to be classified as a valued landscape within the terms of the Framework, it seems to me that one first has to consider the extent of the land which makes up the landscape under consideration before examining whether or not there are features which make it valued. Developments and appeal sites vary in size. For example it is possible to conceive of a small site sitting within a much larger field/combination of fields which comprise a landscape and which have demonstrable physical characteristics taking that landscape out of the ordinary. The small site itself may not exhibit any of the demonstrable physical features but as long as it forms an integral part of a wider 'valued landscape' I consider that it would deserve protection under the auspices of paragraph 109 of the Framework. To require the small site itself to demonstrate the physical features in order to qualify as a valued landscape seems to me to be a formulaic, literal approach to the interpretation of the question and an approach which could lead to anomalies. It could lead to individual parcels of land being examined for physical characteristics deterministic of value. Adjoining parcels of land could be categorised as valued landscapes and 'not valued landscapes' on this basis.
66. Further I do not accept that the Stroud case is authority for the proposition that one must only look to the site itself in seeking to identify demonstrable physical characteristics. In examining matters Mr Justice Ouseley confirmed that the Inspector was entitled to come to certain judgments about the factors and evidence in relation to matters outside the confines of the site itself. When assessing what constitutes a valued landscape I consider it more important to examine the bigger picture in terms of the value of the site and its surroundings. That is not to borrow the features of the adjoining land but to assess the site in situ as an integral part of the surrounding land rather than divorcing it from its surroundings and then to conduct an examination of its value.
67. As already indicated I find some difficulty in ascribing the term landscape to an appeal site comprising one large agricultural field. To my mind the term 'landscape' denotes an area somewhat wider than the appeal site in this case. In this regard I note the reference of my colleague in the Loughborough appeal to the GLVIA definition of landscape as 'an area, as perceived by people, whose character is the result of the action and interaction of natural and/or human factors'. I endorse the view that 'it is about the relationship between people and place, and perceptions turn land into the concept of landscape'.
Overall conclusion