A drone photograph has shown that work on the Harrogate’s first Lidl is taking shape.
The photo, taken by drone photographer Darren Leeming, who lives near the site, shows the roof covered in solar panels.
But a considerable amount of building work still has to take place before the Lidl can open.
The supermarket is being built on the site of the former Lookers car dealership on Knaresborough Road.

How the supermarket will look.
Councillors granted planning permission to the German chain in August and work on site began in February.
It will be the first Lidl in Harrogate, although there is already one on Chain Lane in Knaresborough.
The new store will be open from 8am to 10pm Monday to Saturday and 10am to 4pm on Sunday.
The Stray Ferret asked Lidl for an update on work and an expected opening date but has yet to receive a reply.
Community invited to launch day at Darley boules courtsA French-themed open day will be held to officially launch the new boules courts in Darley this weekend.
Darley Playing Fields Association is inviting the community and visitors from further afield for wine, cheese — and of course, a game of petanque.
Taking place this Saturday, May 21, from 2pm, it will be an opportunity to see the work that has gone into creating Darley’s new community facility at the playing fields.
Association chairman Mark Simpson said:
“It’s aimed at the local community and will be a relaxed affair with the aim of getting the availability of petanque known and getting people to have a go.”
Read more:
The courts have been available to play on since Easter, with a few informal teaching sessions taking place.
They were created by the playing fields association with funding from the National Lottery Community Fund, while Darley and Menwith Parish Council supported the work and funded two benches by the courts to mark the Queen’s platinum jubilee.
Harrogate College art students to showcase their workArtists, sculptors and ceramicists at Harrogate College are preparing to stage their first North Yorkshire Open Studios event.
The artists, who are studying for master’s degrees in creative practice, will showcase their work on June 4. Visitors will be able to view and buy items.
North Yorkshire Open Studios gives artists the chance to open their studios, network, and show and sell their work directly to the public over the first two weekends in June.
The artist-led event is run by a voluntary steering group of North Yorkshire based artists.
Dr Annabel Smith, programme manager, MA creative practice at Harrogate College said the event would give many college students the opportunity to showcase their work, adding:
“The NYOS event has grown to become one of the major events in North Yorkshire’s cultural calendar, as well as one of the north’s most prestigious open studios events.
“The college is honoured to be included this year and is highlighting and showcasing work produced by our year 1 and year 2 MA creative practice students.”
The exhibited work will include ceramics, paintings, printmaking and textiles and will be on view to the public in the college’s canteen.
The show takes place at the college, at Hornbeam Park, from 9am to 5pm.
Read more:
- New group launches for Harrogate women with menopause
- Why are film crews flocking to the Harrogate district?
Ripon MP Julian Smith urges PM not to override Brexit deal
Skipton and Ripon Conservative MP Julian Smith has called on the government to negotiate a settlement over the Northern Ireland protocol rather than make changes unilaterally.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is due to visit Northern Ireland today amid reports that the government is set to introduce legislation that would override part of the Brexit agreement.
The protocol was agreed as part of post-Brexit trading arrangements, but has faced scrutiny following the Northern Ireland Assembly elections on May 5.
Unionist politicians have raised concern about how the measures are working and refused to engage with the assembly, meaning a new administration cannot be formed.
Mr Smith, who was the government’s Northern Ireland secretary from 2019 until 2020, called for ministers to negotiate a settlement.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme this morning:
“The protocol is popular with business.
“There are major technical issues, but business likes the fact that they face both ways to the UK and EU markets.”
He called for both EU and UK government negotiators to come up with a “fudge” over the protocol:
“I think we need the EU and UK negotiators to spend some positive time in a locked room and come up with a deal.
“We need a political deal. We need a fudge.”
Read more:
- Conservative councillor Victoria Oldham nominated as final Harrogate mayor
- Sid Hawke to be Ripon’s next mayor
Car flips on roof after swerving to avoid deer on A1 in Harrogate district
A car flipped on to its roof when it swerved to avoid a deer on the A1 near Boroughbridge in the early hours of the morning.
According to North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service, the vehicle left the road and one person was stuck inside.
Its incident log says firefighters used “stabilisation and extrication gear” to free the trapped person.
Harrogate fire station said this morning that one female was out of the vehicle when firefighters arrived and another female was trapped inside. Both are believed to be unharmed after the second female was freed.
The incident, which occurred at about 2.30am, was one of two serious traffic accidents logged in the Harrogate district last night.
At 9.40pm, Ripon firefighters were called when a car collided with a house on Kingston Avenue in the city.
The incident log says:
“No people were trapped, one male occupant of car was treated for a minor ankle injury by paramedics.
“Crews assisted ambulance and police at the scene and gave advice.”
Read more:
- Sid Hawke to be Ripon’s next mayor
- Parents describe ‘chaotic’ morning after Boroughbridge school bus cut
Why are film crews flocking to the Harrogate district?
Whether it is fantasy films or period dramas, the Harrogate district has become a hotspot for film crews to shoot big productions.
This past year has seen Harrogate town centre and Fountains Abbey play host to major film and television stars, including Simon Pegg and Bridgeton star Phoebe Dynevor.
Earlier this week, Pegg was spotted shooting a scene for his upcoming film Nandor Fodor and The Talking Mongoose on Crown Place.

Simon Pegg filming in Harrogate on Monday.
While the district can offer picturesque scenes for Netflix and film productions, local industry officials say there is more to Harrogate which attracts crews.
Film crews love Harrogate
Chris Hordley is production liaison and development manager at Screen Yorkshire, a body which helps production companies film projects in the region.
The organisation helps major films get off the ground in Yorkshire by giving them location options and helping find crew members to support shooting scenes.
Read more:
- The Witcher: First pictures of Harrogate district filming for major Netflix show
- Simon Pegg shoots new film in Harrogate
- All Creatures Great and Small donates food to Knaresborough charity
Mr Hordley said while Harrogate is a perfect place for fantasy films, period dramas and other series, its hospitality is part of the reason why production teams keep coming back.
“They love it.
“A lot of the feedback we get is that it is well placed for hotels. If they [the crew] are not from Yorkshire, they get places to stay over.
“They will say to us: ‘I loved it so much that I booked a weekend for my family’. We get that a lot.”
He added that the ability to get from the centre of Harrogate to another location, such as Newby Hall near Ripon, in a short space of time was also part of the appeal.
“You can also get to lots of interesting locations in a short time. It’s a good place.”
More productions to come
Areas of the district have hosted many major productions over the years.
The Nidd Gorge viaduct was used to film a scene in Paddington 2 and Plumpton Rocks and Fountains Abbey feature in the The Witcher, a popular Netflix series.

Plumpton Rocks and Fountains Abbey both star in The Witcher.
Mr Hordley said Screen Yorkshire has a database of around 1,500 locations in the region, which they offer to production companies.
This includes landscapes, historic buildings, private businesses and major cities like Leeds and York.
Mr Hordley added that Yorkshire and Harrogate is often used to portray a different place because of the history and heritage locations.
“A lot of what we do is portraying Yorkshire as somewhere else.
“Yorkshire and Harrogate is really good for storytelling for past and present, feature and fantasy.”
All Creatures Great and Small
Mr Hordley pointed to All Creatures Great and Small, which is filmed mainly in Grassington but also in Harrogate as an example of a successful historical series that has put the district on the map.
More recently, Simon Pegg’s upcoming film, Nandor Fodor and The Talking Mongoose is a film based on the story of the para-psychologist from the 1930s and was shot in Harrogate.
When asked whether people in the Harrogate district can expect to be on television screens more in the future, he said:
Bilsdale mast ‘on track to be completed this year’“You absolutely can.
“We have been working hard on more projects. There are projects that will be happening in Harrogate.”
A new 314-metre mast at Bilsdale remains on track to be completed by the end of the year, the company behind the plan has said.
Arqiva chief executive Paul Donovan said the firm was striving to halve the time normally taken to replace such a towering structure on one of the country’s most environmentally sensitive sites at Bilsdale on the North York Moors.
The mast provides television and radio coverage to areas in the Harrogate district, such as Ripon.
Mr Donovan was speaking at North Yorkshire-based firm Severfield’s expansive plant at Dalton Airfield Industrial Estate, near Thirsk, as it was announced the steel firm had won the contract, thought to be worth tens of millions of pounds, to fabricate the 200-tonne structure.
Arqiva is expecting the final of five investigations, from the firm’s insurance company, into the cause of the fire which destroyed the previous mast in August last year to be completed in the next two weeks.
Mr Donovan said:
“That I’m sure will be of great interest to everybody. It’s been a source of frustration for us that it has taken so long, but we had to have due process around something as significant as this.”
Read more:
- Fraudsters offering £200 to fix TVs following Bilsdale fire
- Bilsdale: charity given £50,000 to help vulnerable get TV signal
Severfield, which has previously worked on large-scale projects such as the London Olympic Stadium and the London Shard, said it had been handed “tight timescales” to produce the structure in order that viewers across Yorkshire and the North-East get a full restoration of signals as soon as possible.
The coming months will see the steel fabricated by Severfield, before going away to galvanised and being turned into flat pack-style units and taken to Bilsdale for it to be reassembled in a modular way.
Mr Donovan said:
“I’m very satisfied with the progress we are making on what will ultimately be one of Britain’s top 10 tallest structures at 314m-high, weighing 200 tonnes with lots of very complex electronics and other equipment which needs to be installed upon it.
“At the moment it is on track, but as with all things it is weather dependent, as you can only work at height when the wind is below a certain velocity, so we’re hoping for a good summer.
“Everybody has really pulled the stops out to ensure their normal delivery timeframes get shrunk without any compromise to quality. We all realise the importance to people of getting this project finished so we can have service fully restored to what it was before.”
Different design
When asked if the new structure had been designed to avert a repeat of the catastrophic incident which irreversibly damaged the previous mast, Mr Donovan replied:
“It’s too early to be definitive about that, but if you look at this structure it’s a fundamentally different design.
“The previous mast was a cylindrical structure, but the new mast will be a lattice-based structure which actually has some benefits in its ability to tolerate wind, but also if there were any fire on a lattice-based structure it is potentially less vulnerable to the kind of catastrophic outcomes we saw before.
“The previous tower was 50 years old and technology, construction and aerodynamics have all moved forward tremendously during that time.”
Over the coming months the firm will have to report to both Ofcom and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport about its overall response.
Mr Donovan said:
Are the Tories or Lib Dems calling the shots in Harrogate and Knaresborough?“We have responded many ways in an exemplary way, going way beyond the contractual requirements we have with our customers.
“In terms of processes there are things which we now know we would do better, but there isn’t anything I have seen so far that would have prevented what happened.”
The Liberal Democrats whooped with joy; the Conservative slunk quietly out the door.
To anyone at last week’s election count in Harrogate, it seemed like the Lib Dems had swept to power.
The result appeared to reinforce this, with 10 Lib Dems elected in the Harrogate district compared with nine Tories, one Green and one Independent.

The Lib Dems celebrate at the count.
But at a council meeting on Wednesday, Conservative Carl Les is set to be named leader of the Conservative-controlled North Yorkshire County Council.
Across the county as a whole, the Conservatives won 47 of the 90 seats, meaning they have a majority of three and — by-elections and defections permitting — will hold power for the remaining year of the county council’s life and for the following first four years of North Yorkshire Council’s existence.
But things are not quite that simple.
The Lib Dems took control of the Harrogate and Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee, which is one of six area committees on North Yorkshire County Council that scrutinise the impact of policy decisions on local areas.
There is also the prospect of the Lib Dems repeating their success in elections for a new Harrogate town council if, as expected, one is formed to replace Harrogate Borough Council, which will be swallowed up in 10 months by North Yorkshire Council.
Lib Dems ‘will be able to influence things more’
David Goode, who was the sole Lib Dem on the area constituency committee before the election, said his goal had been to secure seven councillors in Harrogate and Knaresborough to assume control of the 13-person committee. Eight were elected.

David Goode
Matt Walker, who won the Knaresborough West division, said:
“We had a plan and we exceeded that. We planned to take control of the area committee so we can get some proper representation in the district. It means we will be able to influence things more.”
Area constituency committees, however, currently have few powers and are often described as little more than talking shops.
Read more:
- Why election victory means so much for Harrogate and Knaresborough’s Lib Dems
- Labour admits ‘challenging’ elections in Harrogate district
But their powers could be beefed-up under North Yorkshire Council.
Double devolution
Cllr Les pledged to pursue a policy of “double devolution” in the run-up to the elections by handing down some powers, including to the area committees.

Carl Les
Speaking after the vote, he said:
“We are still committed to double devolution. I think it would be dishonest of us to renege on that principle.
“We will continue to work on delivering it.”
But what powers will the new area committees have?
Pat Marsh, the Lib Dem leader on Harrogate Borough Council, said she believed they could include key issues such as planning and highways, and include some funding. She asked:
“if the area committees don’t have power over planning, how will the new council be able to manage the volume of planning applications across the county?”
Conservative Graham Swift, perhaps the highest profile scalp taken by the Lib Dems at the election, used his speech after his result was announced to remind everyone the Conservatives had secured an overall majority — and still held the levers to power.

Graham Swift’s speech at the count.
Paul Haslam, whose large majority in Bilton and Nidd Gorge was one of the few local Conservative highlights, told the Stray Ferret
“It’s about consensus and working with people. I’m quite relaxed about it. The Lib Dems are passionate about our local area, just as much as myself and my fellow Conservatives. I’m willing to work with anyone.”
Harrogate town council
Harrogate and Scarborough are currently the only towns in North Yorkshire without town councils, and their loss of district councils seems likely to precipitate the creation of them.
But town councils usually have no greater powers than parish councils. If North Yorkshire Council ends up making key decisions on Harrogate Convention Centre and the Stray, people in Harrogate could end up railing against policymakers in Northallerton just as many people in Ripon do now about policymakers in Harrogate.
Richard Cooper, the leader of Harrogate Borough Council, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that the Conservatives’ poor showing in the Harrogate district was largely down to voters sending a message to Prime Minister Boris Johnson rather than local issues.
Zombie council
But with Cllr Cooper not seeking re-election, last week’s result marked a sea change in the local Conservative landscape.
His departure and the defeats of key allies such as Graham Swift, Matt Scott, Phil Ireland and Tim Myatt mean there will be a changing of the old guard that has dominated for so long.

Harrogate Borough Council
With abolition looming in 10 months time, Harrogate Borough Council faces the prospect of becoming a zombie council with power ebbing away by the day.
But the new landscape — and to what extent the opposition Lib Dems will be influencing it — remains to be seen.
Harrogate district election results
Bilton and Nidd Gorge
Paul Haslam, Conservatives – WON with 1,017 votes
Andrew Kempston-Parkes, Liberal Democrats – 663
Deborah Havercroft, Labour Party – 285
Bilton Grange and New Park
Monika Slater, Liberal Democrats – WON with 968 votes
Matthew Scott, Conservatives – 677
Andrew Zigmond, Labour Party – 159
Tamsin Worrall, Green Party – 123
Boroughbridge and Claro
Robert Windass, Conservatives – WON with 936 votes
Jon Starkey, Independent – 486
Andy Bell, Liberal Democrats – 433
Clark Pearson, Green Party – 169
Noel Evans, Independent – 96
Coppice Valley and Duchy
Peter Lacey, Liberal Democrats – WON with 940 votes
Graham Swift, Conservatives – 739
Daniel Thompson, Independent – 199
Patricia Foxall, Labour Party – 126
Leighton Regayre, Green Party – 84
Fairfax and Starbeck
Philip Broadbank, Liberal Democrats – WON with 921 votes
Sue Lumby, Conservatives – 442
Christopher Watt, Labour Party – 337
Gordon Schallmo, Green Party – 103
Harlow and St Georges
Mike Schofield, Liberal Democrats – WON with 1,245 votes
Steven Jackson, Conservatives – 805
Sarah Hart, Independent – 345
John Adams, Labour Party – 169
Andrew Rickard, Green Party – 149
High Harrogate and Kingsley
Chris Aldred, Liberal Democrats – WON with 1,019 votes
Tim Myatt, Conservatives – 760
Geoffrey Foxall, Labour Party – 263
Killinghall, Hampsthwaite and Saltergate
Michael Harrison, Conservatives – WON with 1,016 votes
David Goode, Liberal Democrats – 465
Edward Clayson, Labour Party – 251
Bill Rigby, Green Party – 124
Knaresborough East
Hannah Gostlow, Liberal Democrats – WON with 1,169 votes
Ed Darling, Conservatives – 767
Sharon-Theresa Calvert, Labour Party – 276
Knaresborough West
Matt Walker, Liberal Democrats – WON with 1,316 votes
Phil Ireland, Conservatives – 988
David Tom Crosthwaite, Labour Party – 328
Masham and Fountains
Margaret Atkinson, Conservatives – WON with 1,076 votes
Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Independent – 738
Judith Hooper, Liberal Democrats – 620
Oatlands and Pannal
John Mann, Conservatives – WON with 1,175 votes
Justin Chan, Liberal Democrats – 820
Gillian Charters, Green Party – 266
Margaret Smith, Labour Party – 250
Ouseburn
Arnold Warneken, Green Party – WON with 1,328 votes
Richard Musgrave, Conservatives – 586
Pateley Bridge and Nidderdale
Andrew Murday, Liberal Democrats – WON with 1,002 votes
Stanley Lumley, Conservatives – 807
Alison Harris, Yorkshire Party – 65
Ripon Minster and Moorside
Andrew Williams, Independent – WON with 1,453 votes
Tom Cavell-Taylor, Liberal Democrats – 334
Thomas James Averre, Conservatives – 312
Ripon Ure Bank and Spa
Barbara Brodigan, Liberal Democrats – WON with 985 votes
Sid Hawke, Independent – 734
Mike Chambers, Conservatives – 556
Robin Burgess, Green Party – 151
Spofforth with Lower Wharfedale and Tockwith
Andy Paraskos, Conservatives – WON with 929 votes
Alexandra Marsh, Green Party – 630
John Hall, Yorkshire Party – 158
Stray, Woodlands and Hookstone
Pat Marsh, Liberal Democrats – WON with 1,350 votes
John Ennis, Conservatives – 910
Helen Burke, Labour Party – 189
Anna McIntee, Independent – 167
Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate
Sam Gibbs, Conservatives – WON with 871 votes
David Johnson, Liberal Democrats – 545
Andrew Williamson, Labour Party – 275
Lucy Jayne Gardiner, Independent – 331
Paul Ferrigno, Green Party – 162
Washburn and Birstwith
Nathan Hull, Conservatives – WON with 891 votes
Tom Watson, Liberal Democrats – 713
Paul Trewhitt, Green Party – 201
Ian Galloway, Independent – 162
Wathvale and Bishop Monkton
Nick Brown, Conservatives – WON with 1,334 votes
Chris Knight, Liberal Democrats – 559
Hannah Katherine Corlett, Green Party – 455
Ouseburn councillor: ‘pause thoughtless Linton asylum centre’
The new Green Party county councillor for Ouseburn, Arnold Warneken, has called for a pause in ‘thoughtless and careless’ plans to house 1,500 asylum seekers in Linton-on-Ouse.
The government is pushing forward with its plan to house 1,500 asylum seekers for up to six months in a ‘reception centre’ at Linton-on-Ouse.
The site closed in 2020 after being used by the RAF for almost a century.
Although located in Hambleton, the site is only about a mile from the Harrogate district, on the other side of the River Ouse.
It’s close to villages Great Ouseburn, Little Ouseburn and Nun Monkton, which are all part of Cllr Warneken’s new division.
The asylum seekers will not be prisoners and will be free to leave the centre. Cllr Warneken said he is concerned services in the villages will not be able to cope.
Cllr Warneken, who won his seat last week by over 700 votes, said:
“The plan needs to have the brakes put on it. Rural locations are losing shops, pubs and post offices.
“The government has not looked at what the asylum seekers need, whether that’s religious or cultural things or food. They are not prisoners, they are victims.
“The centre will be twice the size of Linton-on-Ouse, three times the size of Great Ouseburn and eight times the size of Little Ouseburn. It’s not been thought through and is careless.”
Read more:
- Stunning Green win in Ouseburn sets blueprint for future collaborations
- Village on fringes of Harrogate district to house asylum seekers
Cllr Warneken said ‘99.9%’ of residents in the villages are “compassionate and understanding about the issue”.
But he fears the centre, which has been dubbed “Guantanamo-on-Ouse” by a Lib Dem councillor, could become a target for far-right protestors.
He added:
“I’ve been out talking to people who were concerned this week. They are saying it’s not right for the asylum seekers or the community.”
Migration crisis
The government has said it hopes the changes will help it crack down on people-smuggling gangs.
According to the BBC, 28,526 people are known to have crossed the channel in small boats in 2021, up from 8,404 in 2020.
Home Secretary, Priti Patel, said:
Almost 200 people in Harrogate district die in poverty each year“The global migration crisis and how we tackle illegal migration requires new world-leading solutions. There are an estimated 80 million people displaced in the world and the global approach to asylum and migration is broken.
“Existing approaches have failed and there is no single solution to tackle these problems. Change is needed because people are dying attempting to come to the UK illegally.”
Almost 200 people in the Harrogate district die in poverty each year, according to new research by end-of-life charity Marie Curie.
Marie Curie revealed the ‘shocking’ statistics in a new report this week based on research from Loughborough University.
The report said that of 7,300 people in Yorkshire who die in poverty each year, 186 are from the Harrogate district.
Marie Curie said the benefits system failed to protect many working age people from falling below the poverty line.
It called for terminally ill people to be eligible for early access to the state pension and to receive other financial support.
Dr Sarah Holmes, medical director at the Marie Curie Hospice in Bradford, said:
“No one wants to imagine spending the last months of their life shivering in a cold home, struggling to feed themselves, their children, and burdened with the anxiety of falling into debt.
“But for over 7,300 people a year in Yorkshire that is their reality. It’s a far cry from the end of life that we’d all hope for.
“We are staggered to see the scale of poverty among dying people. Simply put, it is shocking.
“It is clear that the working age benefits system is failing to prevent dying people from falling into poverty.”
Read more:
- Wheelie bin trial to start in Harrogate district this month
- Funeral next week for Ripon restaurant owner Mario
Juliet Stone, from the Centre for Research in Social Policy at Loughborough University, said:
“Our research, for the first time, not only tells us how many people die in poverty but shines a light on who these people are, where they live in the UK and the triggers, such as terminal illness, which push them below the poverty line.
“Although we expected to find an increased risk of poverty at the end of life, we were shocked to discover the extent to which this is happening across the UK.”
Marie Curie’s report, Dying in Poverty: Examining poverty at the end of life in the UK, also shows how women and people from minority ethnic groups are particularly vulnerable to poverty at the end of life.