Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

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Object

Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

Policy SP5: Countryside and Green Belt

Representation ID: 3650

Received: 29/11/2016

Respondent: Letchworth Garden City Society

Legally compliant? No

Sound? No

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:

Object to SP5: Removal of Green Belt to north and east of Letchworth, SA does not consider undesignated heritage asset status of Green Belt around Letchworth, Green Belt Review flawed,

Full text:

Policy SP5 Countryside and the Green Belt
Policy SPG15 Site LG1 North of Letchworth Garden City
Paragraph 13.215 LG3 Land East of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way
Where a large areas of existing Metropolitan Green Belt North and East of Letchworth has been re-designated as residential development land and proposals for the use of these sites (LG1 and LG3) for housing development.
These policies are not Legally Compliant as the Sustainability Assessment does not form a suitable assessment of the sustainability of the council's proposals. The SA does not consider the undesignated heritage asset status of the Green Belt which was an integral part of the design of Letchworth, and the first designed Green Belt in England. The Green Belt is an important factor in the setting of the Heritage Asset which is the town of Letchworth.
These policies are not Sound as:
a) They are not positively prepared as they are not consistent with achieving sustainable development as set out in NPPF. 7 pg 2
"There are three dimensions to sustainable development: economic, social and environmental. These dimensions give rise to the need for the planning system to perform a number of roles:"

"an environmental role- contributing to protecting and enhancing our natural, built and historic environment;......"
They are not justified or consistent with national policy as they do not comply with the following sections of NPPF:
a) 9 Protecting Green Belt Land
79 The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80 The Green Belt serves five purposes:
to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built up areas
to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another
to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment
to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns
to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land."
The proposals in SP5, SP15 and para 13.215, to re-designate the Green Belt land north of Letchworth, do not recognise or conform to all of the above five purposes.
83"...Once established Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances..."
MP Brandon Lewis confirmed in his letter to Boris Johnson of January 2015, that the need to meet Housing Targets did not constitute exceptional circumstances.
"NPPF is clear that Green Belt should be given the highest protection in the planning system and is an environmental constraint which may impact on the ability of authorities to meet their housing need. This Department published guidance on 6 October 2014 which re-affirms that Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional cases, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. The guidance also states that the housing need alone does not justify the harm done to Green Belt by inappropriate development when drawing up a Local Plan."
The exceptional circumstances have not been demonstrated and reasonable alternatives to the use of sites LG1 and LG3 have not been identified, described and evaluated before the choice was made. The sites included in the appraisal were only those which owners put forward and the Draft Sustainability Appraisal document sets out in para 5.2.1 that to be considered a site had to be available for development. No alternative sites which would not cause such harm to the significance of Letchworth and its Green Belt were sought.
b) 11 Conserving and enhancing the natural environment

109 " The planning system should contribute to and enhance the natural and local environment."
110 "...Plans should allocate land with the least environmental or amenity value, where consistent with other policies in this framework."
The Green Belt Review Study, sets out a scoring process for the sites put forward by owners which aims to establish which sites make the most significant contribution to the Green Belt. This system is flawed in the following ways and therefore not justified or consistent with national policy:
a) It says on page 30, para 44. "Letchworth Garden City has a relatively strong relationship with the surrounding countryside, particularly to the south where there is a clearer connection to the original footprint of the town."
This statement is not justified, the "original footprint of the town" quoted is simply the first area developed, from Norton Road in the north to Baldock/Hitchin Road in the south. This was by no means the intended size of the Garden City, Howard designed it to have 32,000 residents, that number has only recently been achieved with the addition of the Grange, Jackmans, Lordship, Manor and Westbury Estates. The town's relationship with the surrounding countryside is equally as strong in the north as in the south.
The following quote from Ebenezer Howard's book, Garden Cities of Tomorrow 1902 is relevant:
"Garden City has, we will suppose, grown until it has reached 32,000. How shall it grow? How shall it provide for the needs of others who will be attracted by its numerous advantages? Shall it build on the zone of agricultural land which is around it and thus forever destroy its right to be called a "Garden City"? Surely not. This disastrous result would indeed take place if the land around the town were, as is the land around our present cities, owned by private individuals anxious to make a profit out of it. For then as the town filled up, the agricultural land would become ripe for building purposes, and the beauty and healthfulness of the town would be quickly destroyed. But the land around Garden City is, fortunately not in the hands of private individuals: it is in the hands of the people: and is to be administered not in the supposed interests of the few, but in the real interests of the whole community."
b) Page 25, Parcel 22, under heading "Preserve setting and special character of historic towns"
"Forms part of countryside between Letchworth and Stotfold in Beds. Performs a more limited function due to landform resulting in limited views of any historic towns".
This analysis is far too simple, the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first garden city, and its integral Green Belt is completely ignored. The built up boundaries of Letchworth are clearly visible and its surviving Green Belt still performs its original design function to allow residents access to the countryside and for the grade 2 agricultural land to be farmed, and to provide the countryside setting for the Garden City as envisaged by Howard.

c) Page 117 section 5.3. Assessment of Potential Development Sites Land East of Talbot Way, and Land North of Croft Lane.
These sites adjoin Norton Conservation Area and Norton should be assessed as a village whose built boundaries should not be extended (in the same way that Willian the village to the South of the town, has been assessed). The statement in the Local Plan 2011-2031 page 181 para 13.209, that Willian has not been absorbed into the Garden City whilst Norton has, is not correct, Norton retains 3 sides of the village in contact with the countryside and it is only the houses on the East side of Norton Road which link it to the Garden City. Willian has a similar link along Willian Road from Letchworth Gate.
d) Page 118 North Letchworth
We do not consider the assessment to be accurate, this potential development site has 3 sides (North, East and West) which do not have development adjacent, if this had been used for analysis, rather than how many sides have development adjacent, then this site would have scored more highly. The wildly different shape of sites means that this method of assessment is not accurate.
There is no mention in the NHDC Local Plan or any background documents, of the proposed 22.5 hectares of residential sites to the East of Hitchin Road, in Central Beds Draft Local Plan, (work has already started on some of the houses). These proposals will bring the proposed development of North Letchworth closer than 500m to this Central Beds development, which as an extension of the Fairfield development will almost link Letchworth and Fairfield. The effect on the Green Belt has not been taken into account and this should result in a higher score under Towns Merging heading. The proposed development would also reduce the Green Belt between Letchworth and Stotfold to 500m in places. It is evident that the development of this North Letchworth site would result in the unrestricted sprawl that Green Belt designation is designed to prevent. The issue of co-operation on strategic and cross-boundary issues is relevant here.
Under the heading of "Preserve setting of historic town" this analysis says "site not within or affecting setting of a conservation area of a historic town". This is not a correct assessment of the importance of Letchworth's Green Belt as an integral part of the town's design and an important factor in its setting. The significance of the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first Garden City, would be seriously harmed by the loss of this area of Green Belt. A higher score should have been given here.
There is no Heritage Assessment Document for Letchworth prepared as part of the Background Papers, although Baldock Hitchin etc. have such assessments. A well informed Heritage Assessment for Letchworth would have identified the special historic character and significance of the World's First Garden City and its Green Belt, the first designed Green Belt in England.

Whilst Letchworth has its designated heritage assets in the form of listed buildings and Conservation Areas, it is also of local heritage importance in its entirety, as designed, with its Green Belt. This has not been considered in this Local Plan exercise.

Policy SP17 Site HT1 Highover Farm Hitchin
This policy is not Sound as it is not consistent with national policy.
NPPF says that green belt should only be altered in exceptional circumstances. Here the green belt between Hitchin and Letchworth will be reduced to 500m if this development goes ahead. No exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated.
The development will result in the unrestricted sprawl that the green belt is designed to prevent.

The modifications we would like to see are the removal of LG1, LG3 and HT1 from the list of proposed development sites and an exercise to identify sites to provide the housing needed in locations which do not harm the significance of Letchworth Garden City and its Green Belt.

We would like to participate at the oral part of the examination.

Object

Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

Policy SP15: Site LG1 - North of Letchworth Garden City

Representation ID: 3651

Received: 29/11/2016

Respondent: Letchworth Garden City Society

Legally compliant? No

Sound? No

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:

Object to SP15: Green Belt (sprawl, coalescence, setting of historic town), contrary to environmental role of planning, SA does not consider undesignated heritage asset status of Green Belt around Letchworth, exceptional circumstances not demonstrated, Green Belt Review flawed, contrary to original Garden City vision, loss of Grade 2 agricultural land, loss of countryside setting, proximity to development sites and settlements in Central Bedfordshire, no heritage assessment

Full text:

Policy SP5 Countryside and the Green Belt
Policy SPG15 Site LG1 North of Letchworth Garden City
Paragraph 13.215 LG3 Land East of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way
Where a large areas of existing Metropolitan Green Belt North and East of Letchworth has been re-designated as residential development land and proposals for the use of these sites (LG1 and LG3) for housing development.
These policies are not Legally Compliant as the Sustainability Assessment does not form a suitable assessment of the sustainability of the council's proposals. The SA does not consider the undesignated heritage asset status of the Green Belt which was an integral part of the design of Letchworth, and the first designed Green Belt in England. The Green Belt is an important factor in the setting of the Heritage Asset which is the town of Letchworth.
These policies are not Sound as:
a) They are not positively prepared as they are not consistent with achieving sustainable development as set out in NPPF. 7 pg 2
"There are three dimensions to sustainable development: economic, social and environmental. These dimensions give rise to the need for the planning system to perform a number of roles:"

"an environmental role- contributing to protecting and enhancing our natural, built and historic environment;......"
They are not justified or consistent with national policy as they do not comply with the following sections of NPPF:
a) 9 Protecting Green Belt Land
79 The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80 The Green Belt serves five purposes:
to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built up areas
to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another
to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment
to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns
to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land."
The proposals in SP5, SP15 and para 13.215, to re-designate the Green Belt land north of Letchworth, do not recognise or conform to all of the above five purposes.
83"...Once established Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances..."
MP Brandon Lewis confirmed in his letter to Boris Johnson of January 2015, that the need to meet Housing Targets did not constitute exceptional circumstances.
"NPPF is clear that Green Belt should be given the highest protection in the planning system and is an environmental constraint which may impact on the ability of authorities to meet their housing need. This Department published guidance on 6 October 2014 which re-affirms that Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional cases, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. The guidance also states that the housing need alone does not justify the harm done to Green Belt by inappropriate development when drawing up a Local Plan."
The exceptional circumstances have not been demonstrated and reasonable alternatives to the use of sites LG1 and LG3 have not been identified, described and evaluated before the choice was made. The sites included in the appraisal were only those which owners put forward and the Draft Sustainability Appraisal document sets out in para 5.2.1 that to be considered a site had to be available for development. No alternative sites which would not cause such harm to the significance of Letchworth and its Green Belt were sought.
b) 11 Conserving and enhancing the natural environment

109 " The planning system should contribute to and enhance the natural and local environment."
110 "...Plans should allocate land with the least environmental or amenity value, where consistent with other policies in this framework."
The Green Belt Review Study, sets out a scoring process for the sites put forward by owners which aims to establish which sites make the most significant contribution to the Green Belt. This system is flawed in the following ways and therefore not justified or consistent with national policy:
a) It says on page 30, para 44. "Letchworth Garden City has a relatively strong relationship with the surrounding countryside, particularly to the south where there is a clearer connection to the original footprint of the town."
This statement is not justified, the "original footprint of the town" quoted is simply the first area developed, from Norton Road in the north to Baldock/Hitchin Road in the south. This was by no means the intended size of the Garden City, Howard designed it to have 32,000 residents, that number has only recently been achieved with the addition of the Grange, Jackmans, Lordship, Manor and Westbury Estates. The town's relationship with the surrounding countryside is equally as strong in the north as in the south.
The following quote from Ebenezer Howard's book, Garden Cities of Tomorrow 1902 is relevant:
"Garden City has, we will suppose, grown until it has reached 32,000. How shall it grow? How shall it provide for the needs of others who will be attracted by its numerous advantages? Shall it build on the zone of agricultural land which is around it and thus forever destroy its right to be called a "Garden City"? Surely not. This disastrous result would indeed take place if the land around the town were, as is the land around our present cities, owned by private individuals anxious to make a profit out of it. For then as the town filled up, the agricultural land would become ripe for building purposes, and the beauty and healthfulness of the town would be quickly destroyed. But the land around Garden City is, fortunately not in the hands of private individuals: it is in the hands of the people: and is to be administered not in the supposed interests of the few, but in the real interests of the whole community."
b) Page 25, Parcel 22, under heading "Preserve setting and special character of historic towns"
"Forms part of countryside between Letchworth and Stotfold in Beds. Performs a more limited function due to landform resulting in limited views of any historic towns".
This analysis is far too simple, the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first garden city, and its integral Green Belt is completely ignored. The built up boundaries of Letchworth are clearly visible and its surviving Green Belt still performs its original design function to allow residents access to the countryside and for the grade 2 agricultural land to be farmed, and to provide the countryside setting for the Garden City as envisaged by Howard.

c) Page 117 section 5.3. Assessment of Potential Development Sites Land East of Talbot Way, and Land North of Croft Lane.
These sites adjoin Norton Conservation Area and Norton should be assessed as a village whose built boundaries should not be extended (in the same way that Willian the village to the South of the town, has been assessed). The statement in the Local Plan 2011-2031 page 181 para 13.209, that Willian has not been absorbed into the Garden City whilst Norton has, is not correct, Norton retains 3 sides of the village in contact with the countryside and it is only the houses on the East side of Norton Road which link it to the Garden City. Willian has a similar link along Willian Road from Letchworth Gate.
d) Page 118 North Letchworth
We do not consider the assessment to be accurate, this potential development site has 3 sides (North, East and West) which do not have development adjacent, if this had been used for analysis, rather than how many sides have development adjacent, then this site would have scored more highly. The wildly different shape of sites means that this method of assessment is not accurate.
There is no mention in the NHDC Local Plan or any background documents, of the proposed 22.5 hectares of residential sites to the East of Hitchin Road, in Central Beds Draft Local Plan, (work has already started on some of the houses). These proposals will bring the proposed development of North Letchworth closer than 500m to this Central Beds development, which as an extension of the Fairfield development will almost link Letchworth and Fairfield. The effect on the Green Belt has not been taken into account and this should result in a higher score under Towns Merging heading. The proposed development would also reduce the Green Belt between Letchworth and Stotfold to 500m in places. It is evident that the development of this North Letchworth site would result in the unrestricted sprawl that Green Belt designation is designed to prevent. The issue of co-operation on strategic and cross-boundary issues is relevant here.
Under the heading of "Preserve setting of historic town" this analysis says "site not within or affecting setting of a conservation area of a historic town". This is not a correct assessment of the importance of Letchworth's Green Belt as an integral part of the town's design and an important factor in its setting. The significance of the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first Garden City, would be seriously harmed by the loss of this area of Green Belt. A higher score should have been given here.
There is no Heritage Assessment Document for Letchworth prepared as part of the Background Papers, although Baldock Hitchin etc. have such assessments. A well informed Heritage Assessment for Letchworth would have identified the special historic character and significance of the World's First Garden City and its Green Belt, the first designed Green Belt in England.

Whilst Letchworth has its designated heritage assets in the form of listed buildings and Conservation Areas, it is also of local heritage importance in its entirety, as designed, with its Green Belt. This has not been considered in this Local Plan exercise.

Policy SP17 Site HT1 Highover Farm Hitchin
This policy is not Sound as it is not consistent with national policy.
NPPF says that green belt should only be altered in exceptional circumstances. Here the green belt between Hitchin and Letchworth will be reduced to 500m if this development goes ahead. No exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated.
The development will result in the unrestricted sprawl that the green belt is designed to prevent.

The modifications we would like to see are the removal of LG1, LG3 and HT1 from the list of proposed development sites and an exercise to identify sites to provide the housing needed in locations which do not harm the significance of Letchworth Garden City and its Green Belt.

We would like to participate at the oral part of the examination.

Object

Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

LG3 Land east of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way

Representation ID: 3652

Received: 29/11/2016

Respondent: Letchworth Garden City Society

Legally compliant? No

Sound? No

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:


Object to LG3: Green Belt (sprawl, coalescence, setting of historic town), contrary to environmental role of planning, SA does not consider undesignated heritage asset status of Green Belt around Letchworth, exceptional circumstances not demonstrated, Green Belt Review flawed, contrary to original Garden City vision, loss of Grade 2 agricultural land, loss of countryside setting, no heritage assessment

Full text:

Policy SP5 Countryside and the Green Belt
Policy SPG15 Site LG1 North of Letchworth Garden City
Paragraph 13.215 LG3 Land East of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way
Where a large areas of existing Metropolitan Green Belt North and East of Letchworth has been re-designated as residential development land and proposals for the use of these sites (LG1 and LG3) for housing development.
These policies are not Legally Compliant as the Sustainability Assessment does not form a suitable assessment of the sustainability of the council's proposals. The SA does not consider the undesignated heritage asset status of the Green Belt which was an integral part of the design of Letchworth, and the first designed Green Belt in England. The Green Belt is an important factor in the setting of the Heritage Asset which is the town of Letchworth.
These policies are not Sound as:
a) They are not positively prepared as they are not consistent with achieving sustainable development as set out in NPPF. 7 pg 2
"There are three dimensions to sustainable development: economic, social and environmental. These dimensions give rise to the need for the planning system to perform a number of roles:"

"an environmental role- contributing to protecting and enhancing our natural, built and historic environment;......"
They are not justified or consistent with national policy as they do not comply with the following sections of NPPF:
a) 9 Protecting Green Belt Land
79 The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80 The Green Belt serves five purposes:
to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built up areas
to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another
to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment
to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns
to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land."
The proposals in SP5, SP15 and para 13.215, to re-designate the Green Belt land north of Letchworth, do not recognise or conform to all of the above five purposes.
83"...Once established Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances..."
MP Brandon Lewis confirmed in his letter to Boris Johnson of January 2015, that the need to meet Housing Targets did not constitute exceptional circumstances.
"NPPF is clear that Green Belt should be given the highest protection in the planning system and is an environmental constraint which may impact on the ability of authorities to meet their housing need. This Department published guidance on 6 October 2014 which re-affirms that Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional cases, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. The guidance also states that the housing need alone does not justify the harm done to Green Belt by inappropriate development when drawing up a Local Plan."
The exceptional circumstances have not been demonstrated and reasonable alternatives to the use of sites LG1 and LG3 have not been identified, described and evaluated before the choice was made. The sites included in the appraisal were only those which owners put forward and the Draft Sustainability Appraisal document sets out in para 5.2.1 that to be considered a site had to be available for development. No alternative sites which would not cause such harm to the significance of Letchworth and its Green Belt were sought.
b) 11 Conserving and enhancing the natural environment

109 " The planning system should contribute to and enhance the natural and local environment."
110 "...Plans should allocate land with the least environmental or amenity value, where consistent with other policies in this framework."
The Green Belt Review Study, sets out a scoring process for the sites put forward by owners which aims to establish which sites make the most significant contribution to the Green Belt. This system is flawed in the following ways and therefore not justified or consistent with national policy:
a) It says on page 30, para 44. "Letchworth Garden City has a relatively strong relationship with the surrounding countryside, particularly to the south where there is a clearer connection to the original footprint of the town."
This statement is not justified, the "original footprint of the town" quoted is simply the first area developed, from Norton Road in the north to Baldock/Hitchin Road in the south. This was by no means the intended size of the Garden City, Howard designed it to have 32,000 residents, that number has only recently been achieved with the addition of the Grange, Jackmans, Lordship, Manor and Westbury Estates. The town's relationship with the surrounding countryside is equally as strong in the north as in the south.
The following quote from Ebenezer Howard's book, Garden Cities of Tomorrow 1902 is relevant:
"Garden City has, we will suppose, grown until it has reached 32,000. How shall it grow? How shall it provide for the needs of others who will be attracted by its numerous advantages? Shall it build on the zone of agricultural land which is around it and thus forever destroy its right to be called a "Garden City"? Surely not. This disastrous result would indeed take place if the land around the town were, as is the land around our present cities, owned by private individuals anxious to make a profit out of it. For then as the town filled up, the agricultural land would become ripe for building purposes, and the beauty and healthfulness of the town would be quickly destroyed. But the land around Garden City is, fortunately not in the hands of private individuals: it is in the hands of the people: and is to be administered not in the supposed interests of the few, but in the real interests of the whole community."
b) Page 25, Parcel 22, under heading "Preserve setting and special character of historic towns"
"Forms part of countryside between Letchworth and Stotfold in Beds. Performs a more limited function due to landform resulting in limited views of any historic towns".
This analysis is far too simple, the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first garden city, and its integral Green Belt is completely ignored. The built up boundaries of Letchworth are clearly visible and its surviving Green Belt still performs its original design function to allow residents access to the countryside and for the grade 2 agricultural land to be farmed, and to provide the countryside setting for the Garden City as envisaged by Howard.

c) Page 117 section 5.3. Assessment of Potential Development Sites Land East of Talbot Way, and Land North of Croft Lane.
These sites adjoin Norton Conservation Area and Norton should be assessed as a village whose built boundaries should not be extended (in the same way that Willian the village to the South of the town, has been assessed). The statement in the Local Plan 2011-2031 page 181 para 13.209, that Willian has not been absorbed into the Garden City whilst Norton has, is not correct, Norton retains 3 sides of the village in contact with the countryside and it is only the houses on the East side of Norton Road which link it to the Garden City. Willian has a similar link along Willian Road from Letchworth Gate.
d) Page 118 North Letchworth
We do not consider the assessment to be accurate, this potential development site has 3 sides (North, East and West) which do not have development adjacent, if this had been used for analysis, rather than how many sides have development adjacent, then this site would have scored more highly. The wildly different shape of sites means that this method of assessment is not accurate.
There is no mention in the NHDC Local Plan or any background documents, of the proposed 22.5 hectares of residential sites to the East of Hitchin Road, in Central Beds Draft Local Plan, (work has already started on some of the houses). These proposals will bring the proposed development of North Letchworth closer than 500m to this Central Beds development, which as an extension of the Fairfield development will almost link Letchworth and Fairfield. The effect on the Green Belt has not been taken into account and this should result in a higher score under Towns Merging heading. The proposed development would also reduce the Green Belt between Letchworth and Stotfold to 500m in places. It is evident that the development of this North Letchworth site would result in the unrestricted sprawl that Green Belt designation is designed to prevent. The issue of co-operation on strategic and cross-boundary issues is relevant here.
Under the heading of "Preserve setting of historic town" this analysis says "site not within or affecting setting of a conservation area of a historic town". This is not a correct assessment of the importance of Letchworth's Green Belt as an integral part of the town's design and an important factor in its setting. The significance of the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first Garden City, would be seriously harmed by the loss of this area of Green Belt. A higher score should have been given here.
There is no Heritage Assessment Document for Letchworth prepared as part of the Background Papers, although Baldock Hitchin etc. have such assessments. A well informed Heritage Assessment for Letchworth would have identified the special historic character and significance of the World's First Garden City and its Green Belt, the first designed Green Belt in England.

Whilst Letchworth has its designated heritage assets in the form of listed buildings and Conservation Areas, it is also of local heritage importance in its entirety, as designed, with its Green Belt. This has not been considered in this Local Plan exercise.

Policy SP17 Site HT1 Highover Farm Hitchin
This policy is not Sound as it is not consistent with national policy.
NPPF says that green belt should only be altered in exceptional circumstances. Here the green belt between Hitchin and Letchworth will be reduced to 500m if this development goes ahead. No exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated.
The development will result in the unrestricted sprawl that the green belt is designed to prevent.

The modifications we would like to see are the removal of LG1, LG3 and HT1 from the list of proposed development sites and an exercise to identify sites to provide the housing needed in locations which do not harm the significance of Letchworth Garden City and its Green Belt.

We would like to participate at the oral part of the examination.

Object

Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

Policy SP17: Site HT1 - Highover Farm, Hitchin

Representation ID: 3653

Received: 29/11/2016

Respondent: Letchworth Garden City Society

Legally compliant? Not specified

Sound? No

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:

Object to SP17: Green Belt (sprawl, coalescence), proximity to Letchworth, exceptional circumstances not demonstrated

Full text:

Policy SP5 Countryside and the Green Belt
Policy SPG15 Site LG1 North of Letchworth Garden City
Paragraph 13.215 LG3 Land East of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way
Where a large areas of existing Metropolitan Green Belt North and East of Letchworth has been re-designated as residential development land and proposals for the use of these sites (LG1 and LG3) for housing development.
These policies are not Legally Compliant as the Sustainability Assessment does not form a suitable assessment of the sustainability of the council's proposals. The SA does not consider the undesignated heritage asset status of the Green Belt which was an integral part of the design of Letchworth, and the first designed Green Belt in England. The Green Belt is an important factor in the setting of the Heritage Asset which is the town of Letchworth.
These policies are not Sound as:
a) They are not positively prepared as they are not consistent with achieving sustainable development as set out in NPPF. 7 pg 2
"There are three dimensions to sustainable development: economic, social and environmental. These dimensions give rise to the need for the planning system to perform a number of roles:"

"an environmental role- contributing to protecting and enhancing our natural, built and historic environment;......"
They are not justified or consistent with national policy as they do not comply with the following sections of NPPF:
a) 9 Protecting Green Belt Land
79 The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80 The Green Belt serves five purposes:
to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built up areas
to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another
to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment
to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns
to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land."
The proposals in SP5, SP15 and para 13.215, to re-designate the Green Belt land north of Letchworth, do not recognise or conform to all of the above five purposes.
83"...Once established Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances..."
MP Brandon Lewis confirmed in his letter to Boris Johnson of January 2015, that the need to meet Housing Targets did not constitute exceptional circumstances.
"NPPF is clear that Green Belt should be given the highest protection in the planning system and is an environmental constraint which may impact on the ability of authorities to meet their housing need. This Department published guidance on 6 October 2014 which re-affirms that Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional cases, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. The guidance also states that the housing need alone does not justify the harm done to Green Belt by inappropriate development when drawing up a Local Plan."
The exceptional circumstances have not been demonstrated and reasonable alternatives to the use of sites LG1 and LG3 have not been identified, described and evaluated before the choice was made. The sites included in the appraisal were only those which owners put forward and the Draft Sustainability Appraisal document sets out in para 5.2.1 that to be considered a site had to be available for development. No alternative sites which would not cause such harm to the significance of Letchworth and its Green Belt were sought.
b) 11 Conserving and enhancing the natural environment

109 " The planning system should contribute to and enhance the natural and local environment."
110 "...Plans should allocate land with the least environmental or amenity value, where consistent with other policies in this framework."
The Green Belt Review Study, sets out a scoring process for the sites put forward by owners which aims to establish which sites make the most significant contribution to the Green Belt. This system is flawed in the following ways and therefore not justified or consistent with national policy:
a) It says on page 30, para 44. "Letchworth Garden City has a relatively strong relationship with the surrounding countryside, particularly to the south where there is a clearer connection to the original footprint of the town."
This statement is not justified, the "original footprint of the town" quoted is simply the first area developed, from Norton Road in the north to Baldock/Hitchin Road in the south. This was by no means the intended size of the Garden City, Howard designed it to have 32,000 residents, that number has only recently been achieved with the addition of the Grange, Jackmans, Lordship, Manor and Westbury Estates. The town's relationship with the surrounding countryside is equally as strong in the north as in the south.
The following quote from Ebenezer Howard's book, Garden Cities of Tomorrow 1902 is relevant:
"Garden City has, we will suppose, grown until it has reached 32,000. How shall it grow? How shall it provide for the needs of others who will be attracted by its numerous advantages? Shall it build on the zone of agricultural land which is around it and thus forever destroy its right to be called a "Garden City"? Surely not. This disastrous result would indeed take place if the land around the town were, as is the land around our present cities, owned by private individuals anxious to make a profit out of it. For then as the town filled up, the agricultural land would become ripe for building purposes, and the beauty and healthfulness of the town would be quickly destroyed. But the land around Garden City is, fortunately not in the hands of private individuals: it is in the hands of the people: and is to be administered not in the supposed interests of the few, but in the real interests of the whole community."
b) Page 25, Parcel 22, under heading "Preserve setting and special character of historic towns"
"Forms part of countryside between Letchworth and Stotfold in Beds. Performs a more limited function due to landform resulting in limited views of any historic towns".
This analysis is far too simple, the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first garden city, and its integral Green Belt is completely ignored. The built up boundaries of Letchworth are clearly visible and its surviving Green Belt still performs its original design function to allow residents access to the countryside and for the grade 2 agricultural land to be farmed, and to provide the countryside setting for the Garden City as envisaged by Howard.

c) Page 117 section 5.3. Assessment of Potential Development Sites Land East of Talbot Way, and Land North of Croft Lane.
These sites adjoin Norton Conservation Area and Norton should be assessed as a village whose built boundaries should not be extended (in the same way that Willian the village to the South of the town, has been assessed). The statement in the Local Plan 2011-2031 page 181 para 13.209, that Willian has not been absorbed into the Garden City whilst Norton has, is not correct, Norton retains 3 sides of the village in contact with the countryside and it is only the houses on the East side of Norton Road which link it to the Garden City. Willian has a similar link along Willian Road from Letchworth Gate.
d) Page 118 North Letchworth
We do not consider the assessment to be accurate, this potential development site has 3 sides (North, East and West) which do not have development adjacent, if this had been used for analysis, rather than how many sides have development adjacent, then this site would have scored more highly. The wildly different shape of sites means that this method of assessment is not accurate.
There is no mention in the NHDC Local Plan or any background documents, of the proposed 22.5 hectares of residential sites to the East of Hitchin Road, in Central Beds Draft Local Plan, (work has already started on some of the houses). These proposals will bring the proposed development of North Letchworth closer than 500m to this Central Beds development, which as an extension of the Fairfield development will almost link Letchworth and Fairfield. The effect on the Green Belt has not been taken into account and this should result in a higher score under Towns Merging heading. The proposed development would also reduce the Green Belt between Letchworth and Stotfold to 500m in places. It is evident that the development of this North Letchworth site would result in the unrestricted sprawl that Green Belt designation is designed to prevent. The issue of co-operation on strategic and cross-boundary issues is relevant here.
Under the heading of "Preserve setting of historic town" this analysis says "site not within or affecting setting of a conservation area of a historic town". This is not a correct assessment of the importance of Letchworth's Green Belt as an integral part of the town's design and an important factor in its setting. The significance of the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first Garden City, would be seriously harmed by the loss of this area of Green Belt. A higher score should have been given here.
There is no Heritage Assessment Document for Letchworth prepared as part of the Background Papers, although Baldock Hitchin etc. have such assessments. A well informed Heritage Assessment for Letchworth would have identified the special historic character and significance of the World's First Garden City and its Green Belt, the first designed Green Belt in England.

Whilst Letchworth has its designated heritage assets in the form of listed buildings and Conservation Areas, it is also of local heritage importance in its entirety, as designed, with its Green Belt. This has not been considered in this Local Plan exercise.

Policy SP17 Site HT1 Highover Farm Hitchin
This policy is not Sound as it is not consistent with national policy.
NPPF says that green belt should only be altered in exceptional circumstances. Here the green belt between Hitchin and Letchworth will be reduced to 500m if this development goes ahead. No exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated.
The development will result in the unrestricted sprawl that the green belt is designed to prevent.

The modifications we would like to see are the removal of LG1, LG3 and HT1 from the list of proposed development sites and an exercise to identify sites to provide the housing needed in locations which do not harm the significance of Letchworth Garden City and its Green Belt.

We would like to participate at the oral part of the examination.

Object

Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

Policy SP8: Housing

Representation ID: 6211

Received: 29/11/2016

Respondent: Letchworth Garden City Society

Legally compliant? Not specified

Sound? No

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:

Object to SP8: Housing distribution will result in harm to heritage asset of Letchworth, alternative sites required

Full text:

Policy SP5 Countryside and the Green Belt
Policy SPG15 Site LG1 North of Letchworth Garden City
Paragraph 13.215 LG3 Land East of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way
Where a large areas of existing Metropolitan Green Belt North and East of Letchworth has been re-designated as residential development land and proposals for the use of these sites (LG1 and LG3) for housing development.
These policies are not Legally Compliant as the Sustainability Assessment does not form a suitable assessment of the sustainability of the council's proposals. The SA does not consider the undesignated heritage asset status of the Green Belt which was an integral part of the design of Letchworth, and the first designed Green Belt in England. The Green Belt is an important factor in the setting of the Heritage Asset which is the town of Letchworth.
These policies are not Sound as:
a) They are not positively prepared as they are not consistent with achieving sustainable development as set out in NPPF. 7 pg 2
"There are three dimensions to sustainable development: economic, social and environmental. These dimensions give rise to the need for the planning system to perform a number of roles:"

"an environmental role- contributing to protecting and enhancing our natural, built and historic environment;......"
They are not justified or consistent with national policy as they do not comply with the following sections of NPPF:
a) 9 Protecting Green Belt Land
79 The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80 The Green Belt serves five purposes:
to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built up areas
to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another
to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment
to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns
to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land."
The proposals in SP5, SP15 and para 13.215, to re-designate the Green Belt land north of Letchworth, do not recognise or conform to all of the above five purposes.
83"...Once established Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances..."
MP Brandon Lewis confirmed in his letter to Boris Johnson of January 2015, that the need to meet Housing Targets did not constitute exceptional circumstances.
"NPPF is clear that Green Belt should be given the highest protection in the planning system and is an environmental constraint which may impact on the ability of authorities to meet their housing need. This Department published guidance on 6 October 2014 which re-affirms that Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional cases, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. The guidance also states that the housing need alone does not justify the harm done to Green Belt by inappropriate development when drawing up a Local Plan."
The exceptional circumstances have not been demonstrated and reasonable alternatives to the use of sites LG1 and LG3 have not been identified, described and evaluated before the choice was made. The sites included in the appraisal were only those which owners put forward and the Draft Sustainability Appraisal document sets out in para 5.2.1 that to be considered a site had to be available for development. No alternative sites which would not cause such harm to the significance of Letchworth and its Green Belt were sought.
b) 11 Conserving and enhancing the natural environment

109 " The planning system should contribute to and enhance the natural and local environment."
110 "...Plans should allocate land with the least environmental or amenity value, where consistent with other policies in this framework."
The Green Belt Review Study, sets out a scoring process for the sites put forward by owners which aims to establish which sites make the most significant contribution to the Green Belt. This system is flawed in the following ways and therefore not justified or consistent with national policy:
a) It says on page 30, para 44. "Letchworth Garden City has a relatively strong relationship with the surrounding countryside, particularly to the south where there is a clearer connection to the original footprint of the town."
This statement is not justified, the "original footprint of the town" quoted is simply the first area developed, from Norton Road in the north to Baldock/Hitchin Road in the south. This was by no means the intended size of the Garden City, Howard designed it to have 32,000 residents, that number has only recently been achieved with the addition of the Grange, Jackmans, Lordship, Manor and Westbury Estates. The town's relationship with the surrounding countryside is equally as strong in the north as in the south.
The following quote from Ebenezer Howard's book, Garden Cities of Tomorrow 1902 is relevant:
"Garden City has, we will suppose, grown until it has reached 32,000. How shall it grow? How shall it provide for the needs of others who will be attracted by its numerous advantages? Shall it build on the zone of agricultural land which is around it and thus forever destroy its right to be called a "Garden City"? Surely not. This disastrous result would indeed take place if the land around the town were, as is the land around our present cities, owned by private individuals anxious to make a profit out of it. For then as the town filled up, the agricultural land would become ripe for building purposes, and the beauty and healthfulness of the town would be quickly destroyed. But the land around Garden City is, fortunately not in the hands of private individuals: it is in the hands of the people: and is to be administered not in the supposed interests of the few, but in the real interests of the whole community."
b) Page 25, Parcel 22, under heading "Preserve setting and special character of historic towns"
"Forms part of countryside between Letchworth and Stotfold in Beds. Performs a more limited function due to landform resulting in limited views of any historic towns".
This analysis is far too simple, the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first garden city, and its integral Green Belt is completely ignored. The built up boundaries of Letchworth are clearly visible and its surviving Green Belt still performs its original design function to allow residents access to the countryside and for the grade 2 agricultural land to be farmed, and to provide the countryside setting for the Garden City as envisaged by Howard.

c) Page 117 section 5.3. Assessment of Potential Development Sites Land East of Talbot Way, and Land North of Croft Lane.
These sites adjoin Norton Conservation Area and Norton should be assessed as a village whose built boundaries should not be extended (in the same way that Willian the village to the South of the town, has been assessed). The statement in the Local Plan 2011-2031 page 181 para 13.209, that Willian has not been absorbed into the Garden City whilst Norton has, is not correct, Norton retains 3 sides of the village in contact with the countryside and it is only the houses on the East side of Norton Road which link it to the Garden City. Willian has a similar link along Willian Road from Letchworth Gate.
d) Page 118 North Letchworth
We do not consider the assessment to be accurate, this potential development site has 3 sides (North, East and West) which do not have development adjacent, if this had been used for analysis, rather than how many sides have development adjacent, then this site would have scored more highly. The wildly different shape of sites means that this method of assessment is not accurate.
There is no mention in the NHDC Local Plan or any background documents, of the proposed 22.5 hectares of residential sites to the East of Hitchin Road, in Central Beds Draft Local Plan, (work has already started on some of the houses). These proposals will bring the proposed development of North Letchworth closer than 500m to this Central Beds development, which as an extension of the Fairfield development will almost link Letchworth and Fairfield. The effect on the Green Belt has not been taken into account and this should result in a higher score under Towns Merging heading. The proposed development would also reduce the Green Belt between Letchworth and Stotfold to 500m in places. It is evident that the development of this North Letchworth site would result in the unrestricted sprawl that Green Belt designation is designed to prevent. The issue of co-operation on strategic and cross-boundary issues is relevant here.
Under the heading of "Preserve setting of historic town" this analysis says "site not within or affecting setting of a conservation area of a historic town". This is not a correct assessment of the importance of Letchworth's Green Belt as an integral part of the town's design and an important factor in its setting. The significance of the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first Garden City, would be seriously harmed by the loss of this area of Green Belt. A higher score should have been given here.
There is no Heritage Assessment Document for Letchworth prepared as part of the Background Papers, although Baldock Hitchin etc. have such assessments. A well informed Heritage Assessment for Letchworth would have identified the special historic character and significance of the World's First Garden City and its Green Belt, the first designed Green Belt in England.

Whilst Letchworth has its designated heritage assets in the form of listed buildings and Conservation Areas, it is also of local heritage importance in its entirety, as designed, with its Green Belt. This has not been considered in this Local Plan exercise.

Policy SP17 Site HT1 Highover Farm Hitchin
This policy is not Sound as it is not consistent with national policy.
NPPF says that green belt should only be altered in exceptional circumstances. Here the green belt between Hitchin and Letchworth will be reduced to 500m if this development goes ahead. No exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated.
The development will result in the unrestricted sprawl that the green belt is designed to prevent.

The modifications we would like to see are the removal of LG1, LG3 and HT1 from the list of proposed development sites and an exercise to identify sites to provide the housing needed in locations which do not harm the significance of Letchworth Garden City and its Green Belt.

We would like to participate at the oral part of the examination.

Object

Local Plan 2011-2031 Proposed Submission Draft

Section One - Introduction and Context

Representation ID: 6212

Received: 29/11/2016

Respondent: Letchworth Garden City Society

Legally compliant? Not specified

Sound? Not specified

Duty to co-operate? Not specified

Representation Summary:

Object to SA: Does not consider undesignated heritage asset status of Green Belt around Letchworth, does not consider alternates to sites LG1 and LG3 which would not cause harm to significant of Letchworth and its Green Belt

Full text:

Policy SP5 Countryside and the Green Belt
Policy SPG15 Site LG1 North of Letchworth Garden City
Paragraph 13.215 LG3 Land East of Kristiansand Way and Talbot Way
Where a large areas of existing Metropolitan Green Belt North and East of Letchworth has been re-designated as residential development land and proposals for the use of these sites (LG1 and LG3) for housing development.
These policies are not Legally Compliant as the Sustainability Assessment does not form a suitable assessment of the sustainability of the council's proposals. The SA does not consider the undesignated heritage asset status of the Green Belt which was an integral part of the design of Letchworth, and the first designed Green Belt in England. The Green Belt is an important factor in the setting of the Heritage Asset which is the town of Letchworth.
These policies are not Sound as:
a) They are not positively prepared as they are not consistent with achieving sustainable development as set out in NPPF. 7 pg 2
"There are three dimensions to sustainable development: economic, social and environmental. These dimensions give rise to the need for the planning system to perform a number of roles:"

"an environmental role- contributing to protecting and enhancing our natural, built and historic environment;......"
They are not justified or consistent with national policy as they do not comply with the following sections of NPPF:
a) 9 Protecting Green Belt Land
79 The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80 The Green Belt serves five purposes:
to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built up areas
to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another
to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment
to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns
to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land."
The proposals in SP5, SP15 and para 13.215, to re-designate the Green Belt land north of Letchworth, do not recognise or conform to all of the above five purposes.
83"...Once established Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional circumstances..."
MP Brandon Lewis confirmed in his letter to Boris Johnson of January 2015, that the need to meet Housing Targets did not constitute exceptional circumstances.
"NPPF is clear that Green Belt should be given the highest protection in the planning system and is an environmental constraint which may impact on the ability of authorities to meet their housing need. This Department published guidance on 6 October 2014 which re-affirms that Green Belt boundaries should only be altered in exceptional cases, through the preparation or review of the Local Plan. The guidance also states that the housing need alone does not justify the harm done to Green Belt by inappropriate development when drawing up a Local Plan."
The exceptional circumstances have not been demonstrated and reasonable alternatives to the use of sites LG1 and LG3 have not been identified, described and evaluated before the choice was made. The sites included in the appraisal were only those which owners put forward and the Draft Sustainability Appraisal document sets out in para 5.2.1 that to be considered a site had to be available for development. No alternative sites which would not cause such harm to the significance of Letchworth and its Green Belt were sought.
b) 11 Conserving and enhancing the natural environment

109 " The planning system should contribute to and enhance the natural and local environment."
110 "...Plans should allocate land with the least environmental or amenity value, where consistent with other policies in this framework."
The Green Belt Review Study, sets out a scoring process for the sites put forward by owners which aims to establish which sites make the most significant contribution to the Green Belt. This system is flawed in the following ways and therefore not justified or consistent with national policy:
a) It says on page 30, para 44. "Letchworth Garden City has a relatively strong relationship with the surrounding countryside, particularly to the south where there is a clearer connection to the original footprint of the town."
This statement is not justified, the "original footprint of the town" quoted is simply the first area developed, from Norton Road in the north to Baldock/Hitchin Road in the south. This was by no means the intended size of the Garden City, Howard designed it to have 32,000 residents, that number has only recently been achieved with the addition of the Grange, Jackmans, Lordship, Manor and Westbury Estates. The town's relationship with the surrounding countryside is equally as strong in the north as in the south.
The following quote from Ebenezer Howard's book, Garden Cities of Tomorrow 1902 is relevant:
"Garden City has, we will suppose, grown until it has reached 32,000. How shall it grow? How shall it provide for the needs of others who will be attracted by its numerous advantages? Shall it build on the zone of agricultural land which is around it and thus forever destroy its right to be called a "Garden City"? Surely not. This disastrous result would indeed take place if the land around the town were, as is the land around our present cities, owned by private individuals anxious to make a profit out of it. For then as the town filled up, the agricultural land would become ripe for building purposes, and the beauty and healthfulness of the town would be quickly destroyed. But the land around Garden City is, fortunately not in the hands of private individuals: it is in the hands of the people: and is to be administered not in the supposed interests of the few, but in the real interests of the whole community."
b) Page 25, Parcel 22, under heading "Preserve setting and special character of historic towns"
"Forms part of countryside between Letchworth and Stotfold in Beds. Performs a more limited function due to landform resulting in limited views of any historic towns".
This analysis is far too simple, the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first garden city, and its integral Green Belt is completely ignored. The built up boundaries of Letchworth are clearly visible and its surviving Green Belt still performs its original design function to allow residents access to the countryside and for the grade 2 agricultural land to be farmed, and to provide the countryside setting for the Garden City as envisaged by Howard.

c) Page 117 section 5.3. Assessment of Potential Development Sites Land East of Talbot Way, and Land North of Croft Lane.
These sites adjoin Norton Conservation Area and Norton should be assessed as a village whose built boundaries should not be extended (in the same way that Willian the village to the South of the town, has been assessed). The statement in the Local Plan 2011-2031 page 181 para 13.209, that Willian has not been absorbed into the Garden City whilst Norton has, is not correct, Norton retains 3 sides of the village in contact with the countryside and it is only the houses on the East side of Norton Road which link it to the Garden City. Willian has a similar link along Willian Road from Letchworth Gate.
d) Page 118 North Letchworth
We do not consider the assessment to be accurate, this potential development site has 3 sides (North, East and West) which do not have development adjacent, if this had been used for analysis, rather than how many sides have development adjacent, then this site would have scored more highly. The wildly different shape of sites means that this method of assessment is not accurate.
There is no mention in the NHDC Local Plan or any background documents, of the proposed 22.5 hectares of residential sites to the East of Hitchin Road, in Central Beds Draft Local Plan, (work has already started on some of the houses). These proposals will bring the proposed development of North Letchworth closer than 500m to this Central Beds development, which as an extension of the Fairfield development will almost link Letchworth and Fairfield. The effect on the Green Belt has not been taken into account and this should result in a higher score under Towns Merging heading. The proposed development would also reduce the Green Belt between Letchworth and Stotfold to 500m in places. It is evident that the development of this North Letchworth site would result in the unrestricted sprawl that Green Belt designation is designed to prevent. The issue of co-operation on strategic and cross-boundary issues is relevant here.
Under the heading of "Preserve setting of historic town" this analysis says "site not within or affecting setting of a conservation area of a historic town". This is not a correct assessment of the importance of Letchworth's Green Belt as an integral part of the town's design and an important factor in its setting. The significance of the historic town of Letchworth, the world's first Garden City, would be seriously harmed by the loss of this area of Green Belt. A higher score should have been given here.
There is no Heritage Assessment Document for Letchworth prepared as part of the Background Papers, although Baldock Hitchin etc. have such assessments. A well informed Heritage Assessment for Letchworth would have identified the special historic character and significance of the World's First Garden City and its Green Belt, the first designed Green Belt in England.

Whilst Letchworth has its designated heritage assets in the form of listed buildings and Conservation Areas, it is also of local heritage importance in its entirety, as designed, with its Green Belt. This has not been considered in this Local Plan exercise.

Policy SP17 Site HT1 Highover Farm Hitchin
This policy is not Sound as it is not consistent with national policy.
NPPF says that green belt should only be altered in exceptional circumstances. Here the green belt between Hitchin and Letchworth will be reduced to 500m if this development goes ahead. No exceptional circumstances have been demonstrated.
The development will result in the unrestricted sprawl that the green belt is designed to prevent.

The modifications we would like to see are the removal of LG1, LG3 and HT1 from the list of proposed development sites and an exercise to identify sites to provide the housing needed in locations which do not harm the significance of Letchworth Garden City and its Green Belt.

We would like to participate at the oral part of the examination.

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