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17
Nov 2020
A controversial application to build 72 homes in Spofforth was today rejected amid claims it would turn the historic village into a "carbuncle of urban sprawl'.
Harrogate borough councillors voted 6 to 3 to reject the plans, even though a council report had recommended approval.
Developers Vistry Partnerships and Yorkshire Housing won outline planning permission for the scheme in March 2019.
The council's planning committee met this afternoon to consider the appearance, landscaping and layout of the development — but such was the level of concern it rejected the scheme.
The developers will now have to decide whether to appeal — a move that could lead to a costly legal battle.
Andy Paraskos, the Conservative councillor for Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale, called the application "wholly inappropriate". He said:
Since winning outline planning permission, the developers had altered the layout and density of the scheme and raised the level of the homes by over a metre to prevent flooding.
But councillors were unconvinced the scheme was sympathetic to the village.
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Cllr Stuart Martin, who represents Ripon Moorside and voted against the refusal, asked the council's legal officer Peter Atkinson to clarify if a refusal would risk a legal challenge because the council had already granted outline planning permission and the site was allocated for development in the council's Local Plan.
Mr Atkinson confirmed it would and said the council would risk incurring costs.
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