Harrogate town centre residents have formed a group to oppose the £10.9m Station Gateway project, which they say will increase traffic and pollution and reduce the value of their homes.
Granville Road Area Residents Association is a long established group representing about 250 homes in the streets close to Cheltenham Parade and Cheltenham Mount.
Members are now setting up a Gateway Action Group to oppose the gateway scheme. They say the consultation has been rushed and fails to take into account their views. They are also upset that a full environmental impact assessment wasn’t deemed necessary for such a major scheme.
Karl Battersby, corporate director, business and environmental services at North Yorkshire County Council, which is leading on the gateway, said it doesn’t think the project will have a significant impact on streets off Cheltenham Parade.
But residents aren’t convinced and formulated plans to act at two meetings at North Bar this week.
Jo Bagley, chair of Granville Road Area Residents Association, said the scheme would push traffic away from the largely commercial Cheltenham Parade into residential areas such as Granville Road, Back Granville Road, Mount Parade, Back Cheltenham Mount and Strawberry Dale Avenue. She said:
“The consultation questions were not relevant for people who live in the area affected. We don’t go into Harrogate — we are in Harrogate,
“A lot of us run businesses and we need to be able to get in and out and I forsee the area being gridlocked.”
Computer data
Colin Anderson, who lives on Granville Road, said his main concern was the volume of traffic that would be diverted on to the narrow Mount Parade if plans to make a section of Cheltenham Mount one way are approved.
He added:
“Traffic will be sitting here with their engines running. Those in charge of the scheme haven’t stood here watching the traffic — they use computer data.”

Traffic on Mount Parade today.
Resident Nick Karpik said those leading the scheme had “manipulated” numbers from the previous consultation to falsely claim the scheme had public support.
Rachel Melvin, who has lived on Granville Road for 28 years, said:
“They are not solving the problem. They are moving it to a residential area and it will increase noise and pollution.”
Ms Melvin added that even if claims traffic would only increase in each street by two cars a minute were correct, that could still amount to more than 2,000 cars per day in the area.
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Residents also face the loss of four parking spaces on Cheltenham Parade, for which they have permits. They say this will make parking more difficult, and the knock-on effects of reduced parking throughout Harrogate would encourage more motorists to use the disc zone area in streets outside their homes.
Rachael Inchboard, who is a member of Harrogate Civic Society as well as a local resident, said the gateway scheme would have a profound impact on Harrogate conservation area yet most residents weren’t aware of it until they received letters from the council on October 22 giving them notice of the intention to develop. They now have just nine days until the consultation ends.
The council’s response
Karl Battersby, corporate director, business and environmental services, said:
“We don’t envisage significant impacts on the streets off Cheltenham Parade. Traffic modelling has assessed the potential impact of the proposed changes. In the worst-case scenario, which is the afternoon peak hour, we do not anticipate a significant increase in vehicles on these streets.
“The streets where the greatest increases are predicted in this hour are Bower Road, with an average increase of two or three vehicles per minute, and Cheltenham Mount, with an average increase of one or two vehicles per minute.
“We are in the middle of a public consultation in which we encourage as many people as possible to make their views known. All views will be taken into account before final decisions are made on how we will take the proposals forward.
“In addition to the online consultation – which I encourage people to complete at yourvoice.westyorks-ca.gov.uk/harrogate – project officers have seen many residents face to face at drop-ins in the Victoria shopping centre. If people have not yet given us their views, I urge them to do so before the consultation ends on 12 November.”
What is the Harrogate Station Gateway?
The Harrogate scheme is one of three projects worth a combined £42m in Harrogate, Skipton and Selby funded by the Leeds City Region Transforming Cities Fund, which encourages cycling and walking.
They are being delivered in partnership by the West Yorkshire Combined Authority, North Yorkshire County Council, Harrogate Borough Council, Craven District Council and Selby District Council.
A consultation is currently taking place on the revised designs. It is anticipated that work in Harrogate will begin by the middle of next year.
Vandals may force Harrogate shop to remove iconic bearsA Harrogate children’s clothing shop may be forced to remove its iconic bears after they became the target of vandals.
Milk and Honey of Harrogate, on Cheltenham Parade, has displayed the bears outside for five years but in the last couple of months they have suffered a lot of damage.
Sarah Elizabeth Wood, the shop manager, takes in the smaller bears overnight and locks the largest bear with a chain locked but even this is not enough to deter troublemakers.
Following the latest attack, which happened just after 3am on Sunday morning, Mrs Wood is considering whether the bears should remain.
CCTV footage from the night showed three people, believed to be teenage boys, attack the bear with a stick before pulling it to the floor and jumping on it.
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Mrs Wood told the Stray Ferret:
“I do think the red carpet and the bears help us get customers because it makes us stand out.
“Everyone who walks past at least comments on the bears or takes a photo with them. So it would just be really sad if we have to take them away.
“I don’t think the bears can take anymore. One more weekend of them being ravaged like that and they will have to go.”
Mrs Wood has tried to repair the broken feet and ears of the bears but she fears that if they are damaged again they may become unstable and fall on people.
She put out a post on Facebook yesterday evening warning that the bears days may be numbered.
The post has had hundreds of reactions, with many people sharing stories of their time with the bears.
Graveley’s fish and chip restaurant to be renamed Catch HarrogateOne of Harrogate’s most famous brands, Graveley’s, is to be renamed Catch Harrogate.
The fish and chips restaurant on Cheltenham Parade is currently being refurbished. It is still open for takeaways.
The restaurant is expected to reopen in May under its new name.
Graveley’s was sold to Catch, which is based in Harrogate and has four other seafood restaurants in Yorkshire, in 2019.
A spokeswoman for Catch confirmed it would reopen as Catch Harrogate, bringing it into line with the ‘Catch’ name used at the company’s other seafood restaurants in Leeds, Holmfirth and Halifax. She added:
“Graveley’s is an institution in Harrogate so we appreciate it is going to be a big thing to change the name.”
She added the new building will have more fresh seafood on the menu, an oyster bar, a licensed bar and more modern decor.
For decades, people have made the pilgrimage to Graveley’s to enjoy fish and chips.
Chat show host Michael Parkinson once said his favourite restaurant was a toss-up between Bettys and Graveley’s in Harrogate.
He described his perfect day as watching Joe Root score a century in an Ashes Test at Headingley followed by a big plate of fish and chips at Graveley’s.
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