The woman behind a campaign to stop Harrogate Spring Water’s expansion into Rotary Wood has launched a crowdfunder to raise money for site surveys, monitoring equipment and printing flyers.
The Danone-owned water company has lodged plans with North Yorkshire Council to expand its bottling plant on Harlow Moor Road.
The planning application is expected to be considered by Harrogate and Knaresborough councillors this year.
The firm says a bigger factory will mean it can create 50 new jobs and boost economic output by around £2.3m a year to £6.2m a year.
But Sarah Gibbs, who regularly wears a tree costume to highlight her opposition to the plans, argues the company will destroy a “well-used and well-loved” woodland that is enjoyed by the local community.
Rotary Wood is part of the Pinewoods and was planted by schoolchildren in the 2000s. Ms Gibbs’ GoFundMe crowdfunder has a goal of £3,000 and is currently at £200. You can read more about it here.
Ms Gibbs said:
“Rotary Wood supports a variety of flora and fauna, including protected species and local priority species. Our woodland is now at the stage for optimal carbon sequestration, supporting a sustainable future.
“Our woodland is still under threat from Harrogate Spring Water’s development plans. Harrogate Spring Water intends to expand its existing single-use plastic water bottling plant into our community woodland.”
Harrogate Spring Water secured outline planning permission for the scheme in 2017, which remains valid, but the reserved matters stage deals with its appearance, size and crucially — trees.
Around 450 trees planted by local schoolchildren in an area of the Pinewoods called Rotary Wood would be chopped down to make way for the expansion.
This led to a previous reserved matters application being refused by the council in 2021 amid widespread public opposition and negative attention in the national press.
This time, the company hopes to win over critics in a new reserved matters application by planting an additional 1,200 trees on two acres of land next to Rotary Wood and to the rear of the existing Harrogate Spring Water HQ.
Richard Hall, managing director at Harrogate Spring Water, said he hopes the new woodland will become a “valued resource” for the local community for years to come.
Read more:
- Harrogate Spring Water denies claims it could expand again
- Council asked to reconsider Fountains Earth school closure
Harrogate Spring Water denies claims it could expand again
Harrogate Spring Water denied claims it could expand again at a feisty public meeting this week.
Managing director Richard Hall and colleagues were quizzed for over an hour at Pinewoods Conservation Group‘s annual general meeting.
The company wants to expand its bottling plant, which would involve felling about 450 trees in a section of the Pinewoods known as Rotary Wood.
As part of the ecological mitigation strategy, it has agreed to buy two acres of land from an unnamed individual to create a publicly accessible wood with 1,200 trees — if the scheme is approved.
But this has sparked fears Harrogate Spring Water, which is part of French multinational Danone, could seek to expand again on its newly acquired land.
Mr Hall was asked if the company would consider gifting the land to the community as a gesture of goodwill and to prove it had no further expansion ambitions.
He said the land was “an expensive asset we have bought on behalf of the community” and it was “not considering at the moment” to hand over ownership.
But he added:
“We have no plans to expand the factory further. This is not a mass market brand — it’s a premium niche product.”
Sarah Gibbs, who is leading the Save Rotary Wood campaign, told the meeting Harrogate Spring Water had made a similar pledge many years ago before it was bought by Danone.
Arnold Warneken, who represents Ouseburn for the Green Party on North Yorkshire Council, said the sum involved would be “insignificant” for a company the size of Danone.

Wednesday’s meeting
An audience member called Terry Byrne added:
“Unless you donate that two acres we will have the sword of Damocles over our heads. I don’t see how Danone, with its size, is not capable of doing that.”
No green roof
The company was also under fire at the meeting on Wednesday (March 20) for failing to include a green ‘living roof’ on the proposed new building, which has been criticised for its “industrial” appearance by Harrogate Civic Society.
Nick Pleasant, the planning consultant from Stantec, said there were “certain challenges around delivering a green roof”, including the weight of the extra load.

The proposed extension building.
He added the company had listened to concerns and would produce a “fully compliant ecological mitigation plan”.
This includes working with an unnamed charity to plant another 1,500 trees around Harrogate, which along with the new woodland would mean any trees lost will be replaced on a 6:1 ratio. Harrogate Spring Water has also said the scheme will create 50 jobs plus 20 more during construction.
However, Mr Pleasant said a biodiversity report wasn’t a formal requirement at this stage and the company was “unlikely” to produce one.
Attendees also raised concerns about water extraction and the impact of extra lorries using the highways around Harlow Moor Road in Harrogate while Shan Oakes, the Green Party parliamentary candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough, said it was simply “unethical” to sell water in plastic bottles.
Tom Gordon, the Liberal Democrat candidate for Harrogate and Knaresborough who has spoken against the scheme, questioned why Harrogate Spring Water could not go “above the bare minimum” by only buying two acres of land for a woodland — the same amount of land its new building will require.

Pinewoods Conservation Group chair Neil Hind
Jemima Parker, chair of Zero Carbon Harrogate, asked what Harrogate Spring Water would do with the income from the timber of felled trees.
Mr Hall said:
“I can assure you that we have no intention of profiting from the wood.”
The issue is unlikely to come before North Yorkshire Council’s planning committee anytime soon.
Public consultation has been extended and another 21-day consultation is expected after Harrogate Spring Water publishes further documents after North Yorkshire Council’s arboricultural officer Alan Gilleard said he was “not in a position to support” the plans as they stood.
Pinewoods Conservation Group chair Neil Hind concluded the meeting by saying he thought the planning application might not be determined until at least late summer.
Even that is unlikely to be the end of the matter because if approval is granted, the council must then decide whether to sell or lease the land in Rotary Wood to Harrogate Spring Water.
Harrogate Spring Water received outline planning permission for the scheme in 2017, which remains valid. The current reserved matters stage deals with its appearance, size and landscaping. Councillors rejected a previous reserved matters application in 2021,
You can view planning documents and comment on the application by visiting the council’s planning portal here and typing in reference number 20/01539/REMMAJ where it says ‘enter a keyword’.
Read more:
- Council tree expert ‘not in a position to support’ Harrogate Spring Water
- Harrogate Spring Water submits controversial expansion plans
- Harrogate Spring Water plans reignite debate on trees and plastic
Editor’s Pick of the Week: Flying debris at Tesco, tree protests and New Park news
With its roundabouts, belching traffic and building sites, few would claim New Park to be the loveliest suburb of Harrogate.
But it could have been renamed News Park this week due to its constant appearances on the Stray Ferret — not all for good reasons.
On Friday, we revealed how contractors grinding tree stumps at the Tesco site somehow propelled a lump of concrete through the window of a house on Electric Avenue.
Work on the nearby Ripon Road site where the charity Harrogate Skills 4 Living is building supported living flats has also not gone entirely smoothly. The charity said this week it hopes the flats will be up by Christmas after partially-built apartments on the site were recently demolished.
Elsewhere at the ‘crossroads of North Harrogate’, as New Park has been dubbed (by me), plans to build 135 homes off Skipton Road look set to be approved and, in perhaps the only New Park news to be celebrated this week, the local primary school was rated ‘good’ by Ofsted.
Good news was, however, plentiful elsewhere. You could barely move in Harrogate town centre last Saturday night because the Beam Light Festival was so popular. And Knaresborough Tractor Run, that infectious parade of joy, attracted a record 401 tractors and raised £27,500 for Yorkshire Air Ambulance.
Drone photographer Colin Corker joined me at the start and then hotfooted it around the route to capture some amazing footage. Check this out.
Channel 4 captured the somewhat earthier footage of a room of people squabbling when it attended the parish meeting in Ripon called to discuss the cathedral’s plans to build an annexe.
Our man on the ground in Ripon, Tim Flanagan, sent this photo of Channel 4’s chief correspondent Alex Thomson with tree campaigner Jenni Holman alongside the veteran beech tree at risk of being felled.
Knaresborough Town Council was unusually convivial on Monday night, but there was plenty of crackle in the room when Harrogate Spring Water managing director Richard Hall, flanked by helpers, fielded questions for almost 90 minutes on the company’s plans to expand its bottling plant, which would involve felling 450 trees.
A resolution to this saga seems some way off.
Read more:
- Cycling infrastructure in Harrogate and Knaresborough ‘absolutely terrible’
- French brasserie Côte to close Harrogate restaurant
- No date for completion of £18 million Ripon leisure scheme
Council tree expert ‘not in a position to support’ Harrogate Spring Water
North Yorkshire Council‘s tree expert has said he is “not in a position to support” Harrogate Spring Water‘s bid to expand into woodland alongside its headquarters.
Arboricultural officer Alan Gilleard raised a series of concerns in his response to the consultation on the company’s planning application.
Mr Gilleard said “normally an application includes a tree survey though I cannot find one”. He added he could also not find any evidence detailing the species to be removed.
He raised several other issues that required further information before concluding:
“Reading through the documentation we seem to be light on detail and some way off a position where we could support. At the moment I am not in a position to support.”
The company, which is part of French-owned multi-national Danone, wants to fell trees in a section of the Pinewoods known as Rotary Wood to make space for a new building. It has agreed to plant 1,500 saplings to create a community woodland as mitigation for the loss of trees.

Rotary Wood in the Pinewoods
The public consultation was due to end on Sunday (March 10) but has been extended following a request from Pinewoods Conservation Group, which does not feel it has sufficient information to give its view. Representatives from Harrogate Spring Water are due to attend the group’s annual general meeting on Wednesday, March 20.
So far the consultation has attracted 590 objections and six expressions of support.
Concerns about ‘large scale industrial’ building
In another blow for the company, Helen Golightly, the council’s principal landscape architect, has said the “planting details are incomplete for the stage of the proposals” and requested further details.
Ms Golightly said it was “essential” for Harrogate Spring Water to produce a landscape visual appraisal that “should account for the loss of woodland and the consequences of this on both visual amenity and the character of the area”.
She said there needed to be “a rudimentary tree survey” and raised concerns about the latest designs for the proposed new building. which she described as a “very large scale industrial building”. She said:
“The reserved matters application shows a building which is much more monolithic than the outline proposal which had a series of components which helped to provide some relief along elevations and incorporated areas of glazing along the north elevation.
“There was also a suggestion of a green roof which now appears to have been removed from the proposals.”
Harrogate Spring Water has pledged to replace any trees lost on a 3:1 ratio. It has said the scheme will create 50 jobs plus 20 more during construction.
Richard Hall, managing director at Harrogate Spring Water, previously said the new community woodland “will be fully accessible to the public and we hope will become a valued resource for the local community for many years to come”.
Harrogate Spring Water received outline planning permission for the scheme in 2017, which remains valid. The current reserved matters stage deals with its appearance, size and landscaping. Councillors rejected a previous reserved matters application in 2021,
You can view planning documents and comment on the application by visiting the council’s planning portal here and typing in reference number 20/01539/REMMAJ where it says ‘enter a keyword’.
Read more:
- Harrogate Spring Water submits controversial expansion plans
- Harrogate Spring Water campaigners step-up plans to save trees
The 4 biggest decisions for North Yorkshire Council in 2024
2024 is the first full year for North Yorkshire Council after it took over from Harrogate Borough Council, the other six district councils and the former county council in a huge shake-up of local government last year.
The Local Democracy Reporting Service looks at four key decisions it is set to make that will all have a big impact for residents living in the Harrogate area.
Harrogate Convention Centre’s £40m redevelopment
Ever since what is now known as the Harrogate Convention Centre opened in 1982 there have been questions over its future.
The facility has struggled to return a profit with successive council administrations wrestling with what to do with it, conscious of its cost to council tax payers.
A council report two years ago said it is the largest driver of economic impact in the area with many bars, restaurants and hotels depending on the business through conferences and exhibitions.

Harrogate Convention Centre.
However, critics have long argued the convention centre would perform better under private ownership.
In recent years, new conference venues have opened up in the north so Harrogate Borough Council announced plans for a transformative £40m upgrade to help it keep up with the competition.
A decision on whether the redevelopment goes ahead was passed over to North Yorkshire Council but it won’t be an easy one for the cash-strapped authority.
It’s facing a budget shortfall of £25m this year and has other priorities such as adult social care, schools and housing.
Ripon Cathedral’s new song school and cafe
A storm has been brewing since Ripon Cathedral unveiled plans for a new two-storey building on its public open space known as Minster Gardens.
The cathedral remains one of the city’s best-loved attractions but the plans have left a sour taste for some local business owners and residents.
The Dean of Ripon says the new building is much-needed and will provide a new song school for its choir, a cafe, toilet facilities and disabled access.

Ripon Cathedral viewed from the air.
Controversially, the plans include chopping down a veteran beech tree as well as 10 other trees on the gardens which has energised campaigners.
There have also some business owners have said they fear the scheme could “funnel” tourists away from city centre, taking away income from cafes and shops.
All eyes will be on councillors in the Skipton and Ripon parliamentary constituency area who will make a decision on the plans soon.
Harrogate Spring Water’s expansion
Over the last 25 years, Harrogate Spring Water has grown to become perhaps the town’s best-known international brand.
Some in Harrogate look at the Danone-owned company’s success as a badge of pride whereas others wince at the town’s association with plastic water bottles.
The firm’s success means it wants to produce more water bottles at its factory on Harlow Moor Road and create 50 more jobs.
Three years ago, councillors rejected a bid to chop down trees in Rotary Wood next to its headquarters in order to expand the factory.
It captured the imagination of the national media and was billed as a battle between business and the environment.
Read more:
- New settlement plans ‘paused’ after land withdrawn near Cattal
- Concern over lack of secondary school at new Harrogate district town
- Almost half of 4,000-home Maltkiln scheme removed
The previous plans became a PR nightmare for Harrogate Spring Water so since then, the company has been carefully drawing up new proposals in at attempt to win over councillors and the Harrogate public, particularly around the emotive subject of trees.
Late last year it published new plans for the expansion and is proposing to plant 1,200 young trees in an area behind the Pinewoods to replace the 450 that will be chopped down at Rotary Wood.
The area will be open to the public and the new proposal goes much further than what was previously being offered on land behind RHS Harlow Carr.
The company hopes the application will be decided by Harrogate & Knaresborough councilllors as early as February.
The new settlement Maltkiln
Controversy over a potential “new settlement” near Cattal, Green Hammerton, Kirk Hammerton and Whixley has rumbled on for almost a decade.
Thousands of homes and two new primary schools could be built there to change the face of the rural villages forever.
The future of the scheme was thrown into disarray last January when a farmer which owns fields around Cattal train station, making up around half of the proposed site, pulled out of an expected deal to sell land to developer Caddick Group.
It has left North Yorkshire Council scrambling to try and rescue the troubled scheme.
As Maltkiln will deliver so many new homes, the council has a say in how it’s being developed and officers have been working on a Development Plan Document (DPD) for several years ahead of a submission to government who will inspect the plans to judge if it’s still viable.
Last month, the authority said it would even be willing to use a compulsory purchase order (CPO) as a “last resort” to ensure that Maltkiln is built.
If it came to that, it would likely cost millions of pounds and would be an unprecedented step for North Yorkshire Council.
Stray Views: I can suggest only two solutions to Harrogate’s traffic congestionDear Editor,
I read repeatedly of North Yorkshire Council councillors and others stating that recent consultations on Harrogate’s traffic congestion have rejected any road building projects and instead have supported more active travel schemes as the preferred solution. [Council quashes hopes of west Harrogate bypass]
Whilst I do not have a copy of the consultations to refer back to, my memory is that there never was a question along the lines of “Would you like to see further bypasses built? ”. The questions were more vague and designed to obtain the preferred council outcome. For example “Would you support the encouragement of more active travel?”. It is almost impossible to say “No” to such a question. The health benefits alone make “Yes” the only sensible answer.
But active travel will not remove Harrogate’s congestion at anytime in the near future, or even the medium term. The station gateway as originally proposed would not have improved the journey from, for example, Oatlands to Asda nor the journey back with a week’s shopping – wobbling up Leeds Road on a bicycle!
I can suggest only two solutions to Harrogate’s traffic congestion – one would be to complete the bypass around Harrogate, on a route that avoided sensitive areas of countryside. The other would be to ban all non-electric vehicles and all large cars from journeys into and within Harrogate. This second solution would need to be coupled with a scheme to provide small electric vehicles to all residents at a much subsidised cost (which would be demonstrably cheaper than building a bypass!), together with 2 or 3 Park and Ride schemes.
We could be pioneers! Think of Harrogate leading the way and being ahead of other towns in its innovative approach to reducing traffic congestion.
Yours
Andrew Dodd, Harrogate
We’ve also had a number of emails from readers getting in touch with us after we ran a story about the new parking payment system at Harrogate District Hospital, run by private firm Parkingeye. Harrogate hospital defends criticism of new parking payment system. We will be doing a follow up story including some of your experiences this week. Get in touch with your views contact@thestrayferret.co.uk.
Read More:
- VIDEO: First look at new £17.5m Knaresborough leisure centre
- Campaigners shocked as Harrogate district has highest number of fatal accidents in county
- EXCLUSIVE: Stray Ferret reveals not a single litter fine in Harrogate district for past three years
Stray Views: Harrogate Spring Water plans a ‘total tree wash’
Litter bin removal is rubbish
Walking from Harrogate through the Dragon Road car parks towards Bilton on the Nidderdale Greenway, it was disappointing to see five waste bins have now been removed from use.
There is now no general waste bin on the conference centre exhibitors off site Dragon Road car park.
Rubbish is strewn along the Nidderdale Greenway footpath, shopping trolleys over the railway fencing, street lights are out on both the Dragon Road car parks and along the Nidderdale Greenway footpath.
The first bin was located just before the Nidderdale Greenway passes over the railway line, and then another immediately on the other side of the railway line!
Likewise upon reaching the Woodfield Road / Dene Park junction at the Woodfield Park playing fields entrance, there was another pair of bins, one on either side of the Woodfield Road!
What thought has been put into removing existing bins, locating the news one and why the abhorrent OTT dalek design fabricated from plastic, when the simple metal “stand” seen in use would suffice all round!
North Harrogate Resident
Read More:
- EXCLUSIVE: Stray Ferret reveals not a single litter fine in Harrogate district for past three years
- Council spends £478,000 on halving number of litter bins
- Review: Dick Whittington is thigh-slapping, side-splitting fun
Wonderful Harrogate panto
Our 40-something son Dan has been over from the States for a few days and expressed a wish to see the pantomime.
The three of us went to Harrogate Theatre’s Dick Whittington and were not disappointed. It’s a treat for all ages, with great sets, music, comedy, dancing and costumes. And the best Dame I’ve seen in ages.
I urge you all to book now!
Barbara Coultas, Harrogate
Do you have an opinion on the Harrogate district? Email us at letters@thestrayferret.co.uk. Please include your name and approximate location details. Limit your letters to 350 words. We reserve the right to edit letters.
A group of protesters demonstrated outside Harrogate Spring Water’s public consultation event this evening in opposition to the company’s latest expansion plans
Members of the Save Rotary Wood Again group stood outside the Crown Hotel, in Harrogate, to campaign against the company’s revised plans to expand its bottling plant off Harlow Moor Road, which involve felling 450 trees planted by schoolchildren to combat climate change.
It comes after the company, which is part of Danone, announced it is in a contractual agreement with a landowner to buy two acres of land and plant 1,200 saplings – which it said would equate to around a 3:1 replacement of those removed during expansion – to offset the impact if the reversed matters planning application is accepted.
It claims this would deliver a 10% increase in current biodiversity levels in the area, as well as boost the level of economic output generated by the company to around £6.2 million per year.
However, one member of the group, Sarah Gibbs, who wore a tree costume at the protest, feels the new community woodland is “just a tick box exercise”.
She added:
“They’ve done it to tick boxes and get public access. We just want our woods safe.”
When asked about what alternative plans the group feels may be suitable, Ms Gibbs said:
“We just don’t want to develop into the woodland.
“They could take it into the car park and get a coach to work to be considered ‘green’.”
Another campaigner, Matt Jacobs, added:
“We’re at a point in life whereby we must reconsider single use plastic – it shouldn’t event be legal to sell it.”

An artist impression of the revised plans.
However, despite the group opposing the plan, Harrogate Spring Water already has outline planning permission, and it is now preparing the reserved matters planning application to agree and finalise the details.
At the event, managing director Richard Hall told the Stray Ferret:
“Following last year’s public consultation, we listened and we knew people were concerned about the loss woodland.
“I hope people will see this evening we’ve listened and worked on their feedback, and that this an opportunity for the community.”
Mr Hall said the company understands people’s concerns and said the campaigners “have the right to protest”.
He added that Harrogate Spring Water had “worked hard” to balance investment into the community, jobs, and the environment.
The company said the expansion will create more than 50 jobs and at least 20 construction jobs during the development phase.
In addition, it says it is working alongside local forestry experts to identify other locations in Harrogate where an additional 1,500 trees will be planted to further improve the replacement rate.
The Stray Ferret has reported on Harrogate Spring Water’s plans extensively. You can read more on the topic here.