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    09

    Feb 2022

    Last Updated: 08/02/2022
    Environment
    Environment

    Traffic plan sparks concerns over 1,300-home Ripon Barracks scheme

    by Tim Flanagan

    | 09 Feb, 2022
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    Ripon City Council is calling for residents to have more time to have their say on the biggest new homes scheme in Ripon's history after a transport assessment was published after the consultation began.

    ripon-barracks-2
    A computer generated image of the proposed Ripon Barracks site

    Ripon City Council has called for a new consultation on plans to build 1,300 homes at Ripon Barracks after a transport assessment was belatedly published.

    Harrogate Borough Council's 30-day consultation on the Homes England scheme is due to close on February 17.

    But Ripon City Council agreed this week to urgently contact Harrogate Borough Council, asking it to 'reset the clock' to give local residents more time to make their views known.

    City council leader Andrew Williams, received unanimous support from fellow councillors after he said:

    "Important information, most notably the transport assessment executive summary, was added to the Harrogate Borough Council planning portal after the consultation period began — and anybody who commented on the outline planning application prior to February 3 would not have seen the crucial transport document."


    In April, the city council called for the Clotherholme development to be scaled back to 800 homes because of concerns about the impact of more traffic on Ripon's road network.

    At Monday's full city council meeting, Cllr Williams said:

    "This is the biggest single development in Ripon's history and while we welcome, in principle, new homes for the city, it is clear that we don't have the roads infrastructure to support this many, which will come on top of the 390 homes at West Lane and other schemes.
    "The addition of a further 1,300 homes will have a negative impact across Ripon.
    "We're asking to reset the clock, so that people have the opportunity to read the documents on the planning portal."


    David Walpole, a consultant commissioned by the city council to report on the traffic implications of Clotherholme scheme, has been asked by councillors to 'object in the strongest possible terms'.




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    The transport assessment in support of the Homes England development says:

    "The proposed mitigation measures for the Ripon Barracks site include a wide range of improvements not just in the vicinity of the development itself, but also throughout the western side of the city and into the city centre itself.
    "These measures include; the implementation of pedestrian and cyclist improvements by implementing mitigation measures such as traffic calming on Clotherholme Road and Kirkby Road; the introduction of a one way system involving Kirkby Road, College Road and Trinity Lane to accommodate on road cycling while maintaining car parking along College Road; the provision of a gateway junction including segregated cycling facilities at the primary Kirkby Road access to the site; junction mitigation measures to alleviate traffic congestion at key city centre junctions and provide enhanced pedestrian crossing facilities; measures to prevent rat running; and proposed contributions to public transport bus services.
    "As a consequence of the mitigation measures identified to support the proposed development (it) will meet the requirements of the NPPF (National Planning Policy Framework) ensuring there will be no unacceptable impact on highway safety or severe cumulative impacts and that sustainable modes of transport will be pro-actively prioritised both to and from the development and across the west of Ripon city centre."