PrC1/MU1
Gwrthwynebu
Ail Gynllun Datblygu Lleol Adneuo Diwygiedig Sir Gaerfyrddin
ID sylw: 5252
Derbyniwyd: 13/04/2023
Ymatebydd: Mr & Mrs J. T. J. & C.W. Davies
Asiant : Evans Banks Planning Limited
Cydymffurfio â’r gyfraith? Heb nodi
Cadarn? Nac Ydi
Objection to the inclusion of West Carmarthen (PrC1/MU1). The main reasons for the objection relate to the slow delivery rate on the site which has been allocated for some time, parts of which were previously allocated within the Carmarthen District Local Plan (1997), and subsequent Carmarthenshire Unitary Development Plan (2003). The main developer on the site has sold its last property. Clearly, there is no historic demand for a site of this scale in this part of Carmarthen. More physically challenging sites, such as the Roman Park site in Llangunnor by Redrow Homes, and the Mount Pleasant site, also in Llangunnor, by Lovell Homes have come forward, and been fully completed, long before West Carmarthen.
Remove allocation PrC1/MU1 from the Plan.
We are instructed by Mr J.T.J. & Mrs C.W. Davies to a make a formal representation to the
“soundness” of the Deposit Draft of the Carmarthenshire Local Development Plan.
Our clients made a formal Candidate Site Submission in August 2018, which was referenced
SR/058/003, seeking inclusion of their land for future residential development within the
defined settlement limits of Ferryside within the Replacement Local Development Plan.
The Candidate Site comprises a rectangular-shaped former grazing field set to the
immediate rear of the Parc-y-Ffynnon residential estate, which was completed in 2019.
Provision for future access into the rear field has been left over in two points.
We have noted that approximately half of the Candidate Site is included within the Second
draft settlement limits as Residential Allocation Sec2/h2 capable of accommodating 12
residential units according to the housing schedule listed under Policy HOM1 of the Plan.
However, the eastern half of the field has not been included.
This formal Representation relates solely to the unsuccessful part of the Candidate
Site.
The Council have published a “Site Assessment Table” (January 2023) which provides
details of the Council’s analysis of each received Candidate Site submission, and in the case
of our clients’ submission, reasons why all the site was not selected for inclusion within the
Second draft settlement limits of Ferryside, as contained within the Second Deposit Draft.
We note that the submission successfully passed through all three Assessment Stages,
being Stage 1 (site compatible against the location of future growth presented in the
Preferred Strategy), Stage 2A (Initial Detailed Site Assessment), Stage 2b (Further Detailed Site Assessment) and Stage 3 (Sustainability Appraisal and Habitat Regulation Assessment) of the Council’s site assessment. It therefore crucially was adjudged acceptable in all technical aspects of formal assessment but was only partially rejected at the final selection stage, with reasons for non-inclusion reported as follows: “Part of the site is to be allocated with reference SeC2/h2.”
Our clients consider the LDP is “unsound” and should be changed, as it fails to meet the tests for “soundness,” in that the Plan “is not appropriate,” and “will not deliver,” as defined by the Planning Inspectorate’s LDP Examinations Procedural Guidance.
Specifically, our clients consider that the Second Deposit draft settlement limits for Ferryside, as defined under Policy SD1 “Settlement Limits”, should be amended to include the land as edged in red upon the extract of the Proposals Map for Ferryside, as reproduced below in Figure 1. The land should be appropriately allocated for housing under Policy HOM1 “Housing Allocations.”
Figure 1 – Extract from Second Draft Proposals Map with site edged in red
This formal representation letter supplements the following documents which comprise a complete submission to the Second Deposit Draft Consultation stage:
- Completed Deposit LDP Representation Form
- Completed Sustainability Appraisal form
Response to Council’s Reasons for Non-Inclusion
of Site within Settlement Limits
1.0 Allocation of only Half of Candidate Site
1.1 The Council have not provided any reasoning whatsoever for the draft allocation of only half the Candidate Site. The new settlement limit, as shown by Google Earth in Figure 2 below, does not follow any defensible boundary, such as a hedgerow, treeline or even dividing fence across the enclosure. Its positioning is therefore physically illogical in the context of adding new housing to this part of Ferryside.
Figure 2 – Google Earth (April 2021) – illustrating the cultivated form of the Candidate Site
1.2 We therefore consider that the Council has adopted this rather inconsistent approach on the basis that it only considers that Ferryside should grow by very minor proportions over the Plan Period to 2033.
However, the village is significant in scale, containing several hundred dwellinghouses, primary school, convenience shops, public houses, education centre and railway station. It also possesses good public bus service connections to Carmarthen and Llanelli, with the X11 service calling en-route to Swansea City Centre. In other words, it is highly sustainable as a place to live, work and also continue to accommodate holidaymakers. The village contains several guest houses, caravan and chalet parks serving the tourist sector.
Candidate Site
Draft Housing Allocation Sec2/h2
1.3 The Representation Site indicative site layout plan is reproduced below as Figure 3.
It illustrates for cul-de-sac form of development with a total of 23 detached and semi-detached dwellinghouses set fronting an internal estate road, which can access the site via two independent access points from the Parc-y-Ffynnon estate. Thus the proposed form of layout and development is complementary in form to adjacent established form of residential layout at Parc-y-Ffynnon, with frontage parking, and traditional rear garden space.
1.4 The draft Allocation for only 12 units indicates that one access would be used, being the western access, and thus it would require amendments to the site layout to ensure all vehicles access and egress through that single access.
1.5 We submit that the Candidate Site encompasses the entire rear, south-eastern boundary of Parc-y-Ffynnon properties and thus complemented that entire development in width and form. The proposed draft allocation in only proposing half that area fails to respect that character, and in commiting to allocate land beyond the previous LDP settlement limits, our clients cannot understand the physical logic in not extending the draft allocation over the entire field. The Candidate Site field exhibits a consistent gradient and form across its entire length, and therefore the excluded eastern half bears no difference in profile and physical form to the western draft allocated half.
1.6 Google Earth provides such graphic evidence that the allocation of the whole field will not pose any detriment to the visual amenities of the locality. The eastern perimeter stands as a tall and proud hedgerow, with mature, tall trees to the rear extent. Coupled with the lower ground being dominated by adjoining modern houses, any viewer from public viewpoints on ground east, west and north of Parc-y-Ffynnon will have no ready appreciation that the Candidate Site is wholly developed as opposed to only half developed as suggested by the Council. There is no public access to land to the south given it is significantly higher in contour level, steep and impassable with dense woodland vegetation. It nevertheless presents a “green blanklet” or backdrop to the modest expansion southwards of Parc-y-Ffynnon.
Figure 3 – Indicative site layout plan of proposed Representation Site
2.0 Overall Housing Supply at Ferryside & Carmarthen Cluster
2.1 The proposals under this Representation merely seek the addition of a further 11
residential units to the overall housing supply of Ferryside, to add to the 12 units
already allocated within the draft Plan. Ferryside is defined as a Tier 2 Service
Centre, and lends to the principal service centre centring upon the Carmarthen
Cluster as defined within the draft LDP.
The Carmarthen Cluster aims to provide an additional 1646 residential units over the
Plan period to 2033, and thus the addition of a larger allocated site at Ferryside of 23,
rather than the current draft of 12 units will not lead to an over-supply of
dwellinghouses within the Cluster. The LDP village classification as a Tier 2 Service
Centre implies that it possesses far more community facilities and public
transport links than a typical Carmarthenshire village. Accordingly, it should be
afforded a reasonable level of future housing growth for the next 10 years.
2.2 Ferryside is quite unique in terms of its positioning and setting being part of the
Carmarthen Cluster. It is placed at the south-eastern extremity of the defined area,
bordering the Llanelli Cluster, and its extremity settlements such as Kidwelly.
Ferryside serves a rural hinderland and is the principal settlement off the eastern
banks of the Towy Estuary, and consequently, there are few other defined settlements in this part of the County which contain specific residential allocations.
2.3 Policy HOM1 provides details of the two allocations in Ferryside as shown below.
Figure 4 – Policy HOM1 Residential Allocations at Ferryside
Only one other site is allocated in Ferryside that relates to 12 residential units at “Caradog Court”. It benefits from an extant planning permission dating from 2011, and has been mostly completed, albeit a range of modest, two-bedroomed linked units form the bulk of the remaining allocation of 12 units as defined in the draft Allocation. That site is “carried over” in allocation from the previous 2008-21 LDP.
2.4 We have therefore examined and researched sites which have been brought forward as Residential Allocations with the Second Deposit Draft in the Carmarthen Cluster. The Cluster extends in geographic area to Bronwydd, Cynwyl Elfed, Peniel, Rhydargaeau, Alltwalis and Llanpumsaint to the north of the town. It stretches south-west to Llansteffan and Llangain, and east along the River Towy to include Nantgaredig, Pontargothi, Llanarthney and Capel Dewi. It extends along the A48 road as far as Llanddarog and Porthyrhyd. Finally, it stretches south-east along the Towy Estuary to include Cwmffrwd and Ferryside and partly along the Gwendraeth Valley to Pontyates. The following allocations are noted for their inactivity and undeliverability over the last 8-9 years.
2.5 West Carmarthen (PrC1/MU1) – 700 UNITS
In Carmarthen, great emphasis within the Draft Plan has been placed upon the continued allocation of a large, proposed housing site at West Carmarthen. The site is allocated for 700 residential units as Site PrC1/MU1.
This allocation forms the bulk of a Residential Allocation carried over from the current LDP (2014-21) where the allocation was for 1100 units.
We have calculated that of that 1100 units only a total of 141 were constructed between the Plan Adoption date of December 2014 and start of this Replacement LDP Plan Period of 2018. Since 2018, a further 90 units have been constructed, and we note from Land Registry records that the last completed unit was sold at Maes Macsen in September 2021 (18 months ago).
Therefore, since adoption of the 2014 LDP, only a total of 231 units have been completed, equating to a build rate over that 7-year period of only 33 units per annum. This build rate is considerably lower than the anticipated and much promised
delivery of 1100 units in the Plan Period of 2014 to 2021, which would have expected an annual build rate of 157 units. An actual return of 33 units per annum equates to only a 21% build rate return on that anticipated for delivery in the 2014-21 Plan.
Only 39 of those units were built in 2017-18 accordingly to the Joint Housing Land Availability Study 2018. The 2019 Study reveals that only a further 5 units were constructed in 2018-19. The August 2019 Study reports that none were under-construction at that time. During 2020 and 2021 when Covid-19 restrictions were at their peak, more units were constructed than at any other time in that LDP plan period, and therefore we would submit at this point in our formal objection that low build rates cannot be held to be reduced as a consequence of Covid-19 restrictions.
It is equally noteworthy that at a time when the housing market was at its most buoyant in 2022, that the only housebuilder with a track record on the site had ceased construction and sold their last completion (September 2021). We submit that this is testament to the weak marketability of the West Carmarthen Site.
Only 231 units out of 1100 units of the Strategic Site have therefore been completed in the 2014-21 LDP period, which equates to only 21% of that allocated total.
The Replacement LDP seeks to delivery 700 units over a Plan Period from 2018 to 2033. The extract from the Proposals Map for Carmarthen reveals that the figure includes for 90 units constructed between 2018 and 2021, leaving a balance of 610 units envisaged in the remainder of the Plan Period to 2033. That would equate to a build rate of 61 units per annum over a 10-year period. Based upon previous build rates at this site, such a predicted build rate can be described as overly optimistic, being nearly double that actually achieved on the site to date.
The West Carmarthen draft allocation includes parcels of residential allocations off the flanks of the A40 that were previously allocated within the Carmarthen District Local Plan (1997), and subsequent Carmarthenshire Unitary Development Plan (2003). No progress was made in bringing the sites at Llysonnen Road and Old St. Clears Road forward, and yet it was allocated within the Local Development Plan in 2014. Consequently, twenty-seven years of Development Plan allocations have elapsed without any signs of delivery of the majority of this site.
Clearly, there is no historic demand for a site of this scale in this part of Carmarthen. More physically challenging sites, such as the Roman Park site in Llangunnor by Redrow Homes, and the Mount Pleasant site, also in Llangunnor, by Lovell Homes have come forward, and been fully completed, long before West Carmarthen. Yet still the Council is prepared to allocate the site once again for hundreds of residential units in a new Development Plan.
2.6 Pibwrlwyd (Site PrC1/MU2) – ALLOCATION OF 247 UNITS
We would also question the allocation of land at Pibwrlwyd in Carmarthen, being partly for a residential development of 247 units on the Parc Pibwrlwyd development. The Council published and subsequently adopted Supplementary Planning Guidance on “Pibwrlwyd” in 2014.
Paragraph 3.2 was quite specific in that “The LDP describes the acceptable uses on the site as follows: “The proposed use for the site is for a business park centred around employment uses (Use Classes B1, B2 and B8), with uses associated with, and ancillary to the existing Coleg Sir Gâr.”
A development brief in the form of SPG has been prepared and adopted. This in setting out appropriate uses under Use Classes B1, B2 and B8 for the employment element of the site also explores other compatible uses. Residential use on this site is not considered appropriate.” (self-emphasis)
The Council has seen fit to re-examine the Development Plan status of this Mixed-Use Site and concluded that residential uses should now be brought forward, with a residential capacity of 247 units. No explanation has been provided within the supporting text to LDP policies to warrant a dramatic departure from the adopted SPG.
The site is completely and physically divorced from established housing at Pensarn and Llangunnor. It is physically separated by foot from local schools, community facilities and play facilities by the A40 / A48 trunk road network, with only a dark and insecure pedestrian underpass linking it to the Pensarn Commercial Area.
New housing at this location would accordingly be quite alien in form to the long-established business and education uses at Pibwrlwyd.
2.7 Land off Parc-y-Delyn (PrC1/h4) – ALLOCATED FOR 17 UNITS
This new allocation suffers from including Tree Preservation Orders imposed upon specimens at the proposed vehicle access onto Parc-y-Delyn. The site also appears covered in rich flora and fauna and could harbour biodiversity interests.
2.8 As referenced at the outset of this Section, there are several satellite settlements about Carmarthen contributing housing allocations to the Cluster Total of 1690 dwellings. However, we have discovered that many allocations have simply and conveniently been “rolled over” from the 2014 adopted LDP, or in some cases even earlier from the 2008 Unitary Development Plan. No explanation, evidence or demonstration of viability or deliverability has been provided within the Site Assessment Table (January 2023) to demonstrate such a widespread practice.
The following sites are examples of such dormant sites:
Cae Camfas, Heol Llanelli, Pontyates (SeC1/h4) – ALLOCATED FOR 8 UNITS
This site in Pontyates was allocated in 2014 in the Local Development Plan, and yet no applications for planning permission have been submitted in the entire 8 years of the Plan Period.
2.9 Gwyn Villa, Llanpumsaint (SuV12/h1) – ALLOCATED FOR 20 UNITS
This site in Llanpumsaint was allocated in 2014 in the Local Development Plan, and yet no applications for planning permission have been submitted in the entire 8 years of the Plan Period.
2.10 Fronheulog, Cynwyl Elfed (SuV1/h1) – ALLOCATED FOR 8 UNITS
This site in Cynwyl Elfed was allocated in 2014 in the Local Development Plan, and also the 2008 UDP, and applications for planning permission have been submitted for only two individual houses in the entire 15 years of the above combined Plan Periods have been commenced.
2.11 We submit that the above draft allocations at West Carmarthen be significantly reduced in scale, and in the case of Pibwrlwyd and above-named satellite allocations be omitted from the Plan and that housing allocation be redistributed to modest Candidate Sites, of up to 20-30 units such as that proposed at Parc-y-Ffynnon. There is clear evidence in the rapid completion of the adjoining Parc-y-Ffynnon development that such modest sites are far more likely to be brought forward and developed in full by regional and small housebuilders given that construction and development costs are more likely to be viable in relation to house sales and the general housing market in this part of Carmarthenshire.
2.13 In the case of Parc-y-Ffynnon, there are little signs within the immediate locality of properties for second sale, and no evidence of undeveloped land available within this part of the settlement limits, which is a strong indicator of a healthy property market at Ferryside. Consequently, it is a location where housing proposals are deliverable, assisting to meet housing needs in this part of the Carmarthen Cluster.
CONCLUSION
In conclusion, this Representation to the Second Deposit Draft of the Revised LDP has sought to examine the Council’s reasons for non-inclusion of all the Candidate Site.
Our clients have illustrated that their indicative proposals to construct a total of 23 dwellinghouses will not appear at odds to the prevailing spatial pattern of development in Ferryside. The locality has numerous examples of modern cul-de-sac development being completed at backland / edge of settlement locations, which in turn, advocates that the form of development proposed at Parc-y-Ffynnon is no different, resulting in it being respectful to the character and setting of the locality. The Council have already acknowledged that a backland site is suitable at this location in Ferryside, our clients merely suggest that it be enlarged to encompass all the level field to a parallel position with the constructed Parc-y-Ffynnon development.
We respectfully request that this Representation be given careful examination, and consequently the defined settlement limits of this part of Ferryside realigned to include the whole Representation Site, as a Residential Allocation in the Proposals Map of the adopted Local Development Plan.
Disagree, the allocation of the site within the LDP for residential purposes has been subject to full consideration through the site assessment methodology. As part of this assessment process a detailed site pro forma has been prepared.
Gwrthwynebu
Ail Gynllun Datblygu Lleol Adneuo Diwygiedig Sir Gaerfyrddin
ID sylw: 5282
Derbyniwyd: 13/04/2023
Ymatebydd: Evans Banks Planning Limited
Cydymffurfio â’r gyfraith? Heb nodi
Cadarn? Nac Ydi
Objection to the inclusion of West Carmarthen (PrC1/MU1). The main reasons for the objection relate to the slow delivery rate on the site which has been allocated for some time, parts of which were previously allocated within the Carmarthen District Local Plan (1997), and subsequent Carmarthenshire Unitary Development Plan (2003). The main developer on the site has sold its last property. Clearly, there is no historic demand for a site of this scale in this part of Carmarthen. More physically challenging sites, such as the Roman Park site in Llangunnor by Redrow Homes, and the Mount Pleasant site, also in Llangunnor, by Lovell Homes have come forward, and been fully completed, long before West Carmarthen.
That the allocated site be reduced in size to total only 300 units.
1.0 I NTRODUCTION
1.1 Evans Banks Planning Limited act for a number of landowners and have made formal representations in respect of those clients’ land interests in relation to the Carmarthenshire Replacement Local Development Plan (2018-21): Second Deposit Draft. Within those Representations, we have referred to previous Candidate Site submissions made in August 2018. The Council in response to those Candidate Site submissions have published a Site Assessment Table (January 2023). We have noted in rejecting Candidate Sites, the Council has on multiple occasions concluded that a Candidate Site should not progress and be allocated as “there is sufficient land allocated for housing growth elsewhere in the Plan.”
1.2 Policy HOM1 “Residential Allocations” refers to the schedule of sites put forward by the Council as draft residential allocations to meet housing growth over the Plan Period.
1.3 This Statement will focus upon a significant allocated site with the Carmarthen Cluster (Cluster 1) that being Site PrC1/MU1 at West Carmarthen. The Schedule of Residential Allocations at Policy HOM1 indicates that 700 residential units are proposed and anticipated to be brought forward over three “Delivery Timescales”, namely over Years 1-5 (2018-23), Years 6-10 (2024-28) and Years 11-15 (2029-33). The Schedule, however, indicates for 291 “units beyond the Plan Period.”
1.4 On behalf of our clients, we herewith lodge a formal representation in objection of the Residential Allocation. We submit that the Council’s expectations for the delivery of this site are unachievable based upon its lack of progress since allocation within the adopted Carmarthenshire Local Development Plan 2008-21. This Statement will focus upon the slow progress of the site evidenced by not only lack of applications for full planning permission, but also the low build rates upon the modest areas on the site where works have been completed. A noticeable lack of active site marketing further compounds the argument that the level of allocation is unrealistic.
2.0 SITE CONTEXT IN SECOND DEPOSIT DRAFT
2.1 The West Carmarthen Strategic Residential Site (PrC1/MU1) is part of a Mixed-Use Allocation, made under the provisions of Policy SG1 “Regeneration and Mixed-Use Sites” which in the case of West Carmarthen states that the site is provided for “Mix of uses consisting of residential (an allowance for 700 new homes within this plan period), employment, community facilities and amenity. A key deliverability indicator is the Carmarthen West Link Road which is now completed and open.”
2.2 The site is shown upon the Proposals Map for Carmarthen as reproduced below as Figure 1, and extends over several dozen hectares of open, undulated, former pasture, set off the northern flank of the A40 Trunk Road, extending west from Old St Clears Road to Travellers Rest.
Figure 1 – Extract from Proposals Map showing extent of Site PrC1/MU1
2.3 The southern extent of the allocation shows it wrapping about newly constructed dwellinghouses known as Maes Pedr. To the east of that series of cul-de-sacs, lies further residential cul-de-sacs, known as Maes Macsen and Clos Elen, which extend off Ffordd Pentre, being the main spine distributor road running south to north off its roundabout junction with Llysonnen Road. The road was built in recent years and provides a link about West Carmarthen linking north to junction with College Road and Job’s Well Road some two kilometres to the north-east of the above-named residential cul-de-sacs. Figure 2 below provides a Google Earth image of the residential development as of April 2021, whilst Figure 3 shows the state of development progress back in June 2018, which coincides with the start of the Replacement LDP Plan Period.
Figure 2 – Google Earth – April 2021 – illustrating extent of development at southern part of West Carmarthen at that time
Figure 3 – Google Earth – June 2018 – illustrating extent southern part of West Carmarthen at that time at start of Replacement LDP Period
2.4 The above Google Earth images reveal that extent of housing building at had taken place up to June 2018, and what had been developed up to the latest image in April 2021. We have calculated that from the start of the Plan Period in 2018 to September 2021, a total of 90 units were completed. Therefore, from the LDP allocation capacity of 700 units, there remains a balance of 610 units at this time. Construction of new units has ceased since September 2021, and has not continued since.
3.0 Progress since Adoption of Local Development Plan in 2014
3.1 The Carmarthenshire Local Development Plan was adopted in December 2014. The Plan is scheduled to run over a Plan Period from 2008 to end of 2021. The Site at West Carmarthen was allocated for Mixed Use in that Plan for a total of 1100 residential units (referenced GA1/MU1). Figure 4 below illustrates the extent of the allocation for the current adopted Plan.
Figure 4 – 2014-adopted Local Development Plan for Allocation GA1/MU1
3.2 We have calculated that of that 1100 units only a total of 141 were constructed between the Plan Adoption date of December 2014 and start of this Replacement
LDP Plan Period of 2018. Since 2018, a further 90 units have been constructed. Land Registry records that the last completed unit was sold at Maes Macsen in September 2021 (18 months ago). “Rightmove” provides details of selected new house sales over the last 20 years in this part of Carmarthen. The last new house transaction with the last property being at Maes Macsen in September 2021, as shown in Figure 5 below.
Address
Postcode
Last recorded date of ‘New Build’ property being sold
Maes Macsen
SA31 3DA
SA31 3FA
24/09/2021
Ffordd Pendre
SA31 3FD
11/12/2020
Maes Elen
SA31 3FB
24/09/2021
Pen y Cae
SA31 3SD
28/05/1999
Parc y Odyn
SA31 3SE
24/07/1998
Allt Ioan
SA31 3SB
03/03/2000
Maes Pedr
SA31 3BW
SA31 3BR
30/08/2018
Figure 5 – Sales Transactions in West Carmarthen from Rightmove – March 2023
3.3 Therefore, since adoption of the 2014 LDP, only a total of 231 units have been completed, equating to a build rate over that 7-year period of only 33 units per annum. This build rate is considerably lower than the anticipated and much promised
delivery of 1100 units in the Plan Period of 2014 to 2021, which would have expected an annual build rate of 157 units. An actual return of 33 units per annum equates to only a 21% build rate return on that anticipated for delivery in the 2014-21 Plan.
3.4 Only 39 of those units were built in 2017-18 accordingly to the Joint Housing Land Availability Study 2018. The 2019 Study reveals that only a further 5 units were constructed in 2018-19. The August 2019 Study reports that none were under-construction at that time.
During 2020 and 2021 when Covid-19 restrictions were at their peak, more units were constructed than at any other time in that LDP plan period. Therefore, we would submit at this point in our formal objection that low build rates cannot be held, and probably will be subsequently argued by the Council, to be reduced as a consequence of Covid-19 restrictions.
3.5 It is equally noteworthy that at a time when the housing market and sales values were at their most buoyant in 2022, that the only housebuilder with a track record on the site (Permission Homes) had ceased construction and sold their last completion (September 2021). We submit that this is testament to the weak marketability and sales demand of the West Carmarthen Site.
3.6 Only 231 units out of 1100 units of the MU1 Strategic Site have therefore been completed in the 2014-21 LDP period, which equates to only 21% of that allocated total.
4.0 CARMARTHENSHIRE UNITARY DEVELOPMENT PLAN 2001-16
4.1 The Carmarthenshire Unitary Development Plan was adopted in June 2006. The land at West Carmarthen was allocated as a Strategic Site under Policy E15 and referenced as Site PDB2. A Development Brief was to be prepared with an emphasis on a mixed-use including housing, employment, link road and community facilities. Figure 6 below provides an illustration of the Proposals Map from the UDP.
Figure 6 – Unitary Development Plan Extract of West Carmarthen
4.2 It is therefore abundantly clear that the West Carmarthen site has featured as a Strategic Development Site for the last 22 years, and in that time, the number of new housing constructed has amounted to only 241 units at Maes Pedr and Maes Macsen.
5.0 OBJECTION TO OVER-ALLOCATION IN SECOND DEPOSIT DRAFT LOCAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN
5.1 The Replacement LDP seeks to delivery 700 units over a Plan Period from 2018 to 2033. The extract from the Proposals Map for Carmarthen reveals that the figure includes for 90 units constructed between 2018 and 2021, leaving a balance of 610 units envisaged in the remainder of the Plan Period to 2033. That would equate to a build rate of 61 units per annum over a 10-year period. Based upon previous build rates at this site, such a predicted build rate can be described as overly optimistic, being nearly double that actually achieved on the site to date.
5.2 We noted that planning permissions have been granted by the Council on part of the LDP allocation. Figure 7 provides a breakdown of planning applications submitted over the West Carmarthen site over the last 8 years since adoption of the LDP in 2014. The applications are coloured coded, and those colours correspond to the Google Earth extract at Figure 8 overleaf, which illustrates where each application site was situated.
Figure 7 – Planning Applications at Carmarthen West 2014-2023
Figure 8 – Location of Planning Applications 2014-2023
5.3 The details reveal that the initial 110 houses granted in 2015 (red area) have all been completed and are not part of the 700-unit allocation in the Second Deposit Draft. The grey coloured area totals 100 units and has been completed, 90 units of which took place during the current Years 1-5 of the Replacement LDP.
5.4 The orange area and green areas formed part of the larger 1100 units allocated on a larger allocated area under the 2008-21 LDP. They have been subsequently completed totalling 31 units. However, as calculated above, do not form part of the draft allocation for 700 units in the current Second Draft.
5.5 The purple and pink areas to the northern side of the allocation have not been developed, but have been subject to applications for planning permission since 2018.
The purple area achieved outline planning permission in May 2018 under W/27776. It was valid for three years, and therefore lapsed in May 2021 – some two years ago. However, a Section 73 application to extend the time period for receipt of Approval of Reserved Matters was submitted in March 2021, just before it was due to otherwise lapse. The submission was registered as PL/01626. Yet, after a period of some 24 months, it has yet to be determined. We note that the land is owned by the Applicants, “Carmarthen Promotions Limited” based in Nottingham, according to Land Registry Title records.
5.6 The pink land is currently the subject of an application for full planning permission for 92 dwellinghouses by Persimmon Homes. Application PL/04627 was registered on 14th September 2022, yet at the time of writing remains undetermined. If that development does achieve permission and is completed within the Pan Period, it would only raise the build total at West Carmarthen to 182 units since 2018. A figure which represents only 26% of the 700 capacity quoted in Policy HOM1.
5.7 We note that the Council has been marketing their land holdings for sale. Figure 9 below is a reproduction from Sales Particulars where the Council were seeking “Expressions of Interest” on a 3.4-hectare field enclosure north of the red area. That area has never benefitted from any planning permission, let alone application submitted upon it for residential development. It is not clear as to what feedback and actual completed questionnaires were received by the deadline in February 2023. However, it is surprising that it has taken the County Council some 9 years to begin to market their land asset at West Carmarthen. The land has been part of the GA1/MU1 allocation since adoption in 2014, and there has been no attempt to seek a Developer Partner throughout all this time. We submit that such a sales practice is now only emerging as a consequence of the current Second Deposit Draft Plan, which has jolted the landowners into some form of initial action on the site.
The field in question is relatively level and assuming the LDP capacity expectation of 35 units per hectare is achievable, the 3-hectare site could achieve a total of 115 units. Yet, no firm proposals have yet to materialise on this part of the Strategic Site
allocated in the Second Draft. There is uncertainty and lack of progress in bringing this part of the allocated site to fruition.
Figure 9 – Sales Particulars of land north of Maes Pedr
6.0 CONCLUSION
6.1 The Allocated Site at West Carmarthen is substantial in overall size. The Carmarthen Cluster is expected to deliver 1690 units over the Plan Period, and thus the Mixed-Use site contributes 41% towards that overall total. After 5 years of the Plan Period, only 90 units have been completed, representing only 5.3% of the Cluster 1 entire total. If that trend continued over the remaining 10 years of the Plan Period, it would contribute only a further 180 units. None of the site currently benefits from any form of planning permission, despite 9 years of being allocated in the 2008-21 LDP Plan. Only Persimmon Homes have contributed to the site, and only they have prepared and lodged an application for any future housing phase, being the current application for 92 units.
6.2 We submit that the Allocated Site be dramatically reduced in scale to total only 300 units. A total of 90 of those 300 units have been completed, leaving a further 210 units split over two field enclosures, and those being the current northern field, subject of the 2022 Persimmon application (pink area) and the Council’s 3-hectare western enclosure, where another 110 units are achievable. The remaining field enclosures should be omitted from the allocation, that being all land north and east of Ffordd Pentre.
6.3 Clearly, there is no historic demand for a site of this scale in this part of Carmarthen. More physically challenging sites, such as the Roman Park site in Llangunnor by Redrow Homes, and the Mount Pleasant site (Maes Lewis Morris), also in Llangunnor, by Lovell Homes have come forward, and been fully completed, long before West Carmarthen.
6.4 The overwhelming majority of the allocation has underdelivered. We would refer and advocate to the Inspector to heed Welsh Government’s Guidance provided in Development Plans Manual (Edition 3) (March 2020). Page 120 states: “Rolling forward allocations - Allocations rolled forward from a previous plan will require careful justification for inclusion in a revised plan, aligning with PPW. There will need to be a substantial change in circumstances to demonstrate sites can be delivered
and justify being included again. Clear evidence will be required that such sites can be delivered. The sites should be subject to the same candidate site process requirements as new sites i.e., they must be demonstrated to be sustainable and deliverable. If an LPA wishes to retain such sites but cannot evidence, they will be delivered, i.e., for aspirational or regeneration purposes, they can still be allocated in the plan but not relied upon as contributing to the provision. It will not be appropriate to include such sites in the windfall allowance. They should be treated as ‘bonus sites’.”
Disagree, the allocation of the site within the LDP for residential purposes has been subject to full consideration through the site assessment methodology. As part of this assessment process a detailed site pro forma has been prepared.