Plans for 68 retirement flats in Knaresborough have been recommended for approval, despite objections from residents and the town council.
Adlington Retirement Living, part of the Gladman group, wants to build the flats with additional care facilities on land adjacent to the single-track Grimbald Bridge on Wetherby Road, alongside the River Nidd.
The scheme was initially refused by Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee in February 2021 over concerns that the development was “overpowering” and intrusive.
However, a fresh application by Adlington has now been recommended by council officers to be given the go-ahead.
The developer has made changes to the original plans, including removing four apartments from the top of the building to reduce its height and adding 10 electric vehicle car parking spaces. The housing mix will be changed to regain the lost apartments.
It said the need to provide this type of accommodation for older people in the area was “critical” due to an ageing population.
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Despite the revised proposal, the plan has still been met by objections.
In a letter to the council, Knaresborough Town Council said:
“Knaresborough Town Council strongly objects to this latest application. This new development is still over intensive with poor access.
“The 68 proposed dwellings constitute an over-intensive development of the site due to design, height and massing.”
Councillors on Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee will make a decision on the plan on Tuesday next week.
Knaresborough Bed Race extend entry period due to low numbersOrganisers of Knaresborough Bed Race have extended the entry period after failing to get its usual number of entrants.
The historic event which sees teams take part in a 2.4 mile course through the town in fancy dress, pushing a bed, before finishig with an icy swim through the River Nidd.
Each year more than 90 teams enter the race however this year just 83 teams have signed up to take part.
Bed Race chairman Kevin Lloyd said after two years away, due to covid, the organisers want to make sure this event is better than the last so will keep the entry period open until they get 90 teams:
“We are keeping the doors open on a first-come, first-served basis. But teams should be sharpish as we need only a few to reach the 90 figure.
“We normally have more than 90 teams enter, sometimes as many as 140 or 150, and we hold a lottery to decide on the 90 who can run. This year will be different. We have just over 80 and this gives us the opportunity to keep receiving entries for a few more weeks.”
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As many as 30,000 people line the streets for the event which is due to return on June 11. Since the first in 1966 the tradition has been picked up across the world with similar events being held in USA, Germany and New Zealand.
This year’s competitors will have to base their costume and bed design on the theme ‘The Environment: Reduce, Reuse and Recycle’.
Long Lands Common ponds ready for habitationThree ponds have been built and filled at Long Lands Common with the hopes of encouraging newt habitation.
The ponds began construction in late January after planning permission was granted for the project.
It is unclear how long it will take before the ponds become inhabited by Great Crested Newts as migration will occur naturally over time.
The project was completed in collaboration with the Wildlife Trust and Natural England which helped to fund it.
It is part of a larger scheme which began in 2020 when a group of stakeholders bought the land to create Harrogate’s first common wildlife area between Bogs Lane and Bilton Lane and prevent development.
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The common was opened to the public in summer 2021.
Long Lands Common secretary Chris Kitson said:
“The pond building was the first step to transform the area from a farm to a nature reserve, we’ve got a lot lined up to make the area more biodiverse.”
The group has also just finalised their woodland creation plan which involves the planting of trees and a variety of plants. They hope to begin a large scale scheme of planting in Autumn of this year.
In 2020, around 3,000 people bought shares in the land. The appeal raised £375,000 to purchase 30 acres of land near the Nidderdale Greenway and protect it from development.
An official open day was held on the land for people who pledged money in July.
Bid to open scuba diving pool in KnaresboroughA businessman has resubmitted plans for a bespoke scuba diving training pool in Knaresborough.
Tim Yarrow, owner of Harrogate-based DiveShack UK, has lodged the plans in a bid to give the district a “truly unique” facility.
The plan would see the training pool built at land at Thistle Hill in Knaresborough and see the site changed from agricultural land to a deep water diving centre.
Mr Yarrow, who has been a a scuba instructor around the world for 30 years, said the move would help to draw people in from the area and improve access to the sport.
He added that his club, which has been open since 2018, currently trains young and upcoming divers. He said the facility would help to expand this.
He said:
“Our youngest diver is now 11, having completed her course at 10 and is currently spearheading an environmental charity campaign.
“This involves eight of her school peers coming and doing try dives with us and all money is going toward the British Divers Marine Life Rescue Association. These guys are the future and the potential saviours of our planet.”
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Mr Yarrow added that he hoped the proposed facility would be sympathetic to the local area. He has resubmitted the plan after withdrawing a previous proposal following concern from Knaresborough Town Council.
He said:
“The facility proposed will allow access for Diveshack to promote courses tailored to individual needs and timings, taking very little of the land for change of use and no negative impact on the close neighbours of whom all have been consulted and are in support.
“It has been drawn up in a sympathetic way to the environment with materials and energy usage and aims to be the best, most eco designated scuba training facility in the North.
“It will allow access to an amazing sport to numerous people who would maybe never have thought they could ever give it a try.”
Harrogate Borough Council will make a decision on the proposal at a later date.
Drainage concerns at Goldsborough housing site following Storm FranklinResidents in Goldsborough have raised concerns over drainage on land earmarked for 36 homes following Storm Franklin.
Heavy rainfall last week caused puddles to appear on a site off Station Road in the village (pictured above), which is a mile from Knaresborough. This has renewed concerns from residents of water run off into nearby properties.
The development was approved by Harrogate Borough Council in October 2021.
However, residents say they are concerned that the surface water may affect nearby homes and that they have repeatedly warned Stonebridge Homes, the developer, and the council over flood risk.
Noel Evans, who lives next to the site, said:
“Residents have frequently over the past four years stated that the change of this field from agricultural land, where there has been recorded flooding problems, will be immensely worse once the site is filled with hard surfaces such as roofs, pathways and roadways.”
In a letter to the council, local resident Beverley Jackson added:
“These heavy rainfall events now occur every year so we cannot treat them as occasional hazards.”
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Since the heavy rainfall last week, multiple residents have submitted comments via the council’s planning portal about their concerns.
The developer lodged a drainage plan as part of its proposal, but is still awaiting approval as part of its conditions with the council.
Mr Evans said the plan would need to be “superlative” in order to reduce the risk of flooding.
New sewer system
The Stray Ferret asked both Stonebridge Homes and its parent company, Henry Boot Ltd, for comment on the concerns raised by residents at the Goldsborough site, but did not receive a response by the time of publication.
However, in a letter to the council in January this year addressing public comments on drainage, Katie Purdam, senior planner at Stonebridge Homes, said drainage at the site would “not contribute to the flood risk noted by residents”.
She said:
£13 million Knaresborough Leisure Centre plans to go to vote on Monday“We have carried out the detailed technical analysis and soakaway tests to the required standards by an independent consultant, which has shown that we can provide sufficient permeability rates and therefore the development can be accommodated.
“The cause of the historic flooding noted by residents is likely the old-style sewage system which runs through the gardens on the west and east sides of Station Road, which may be poorly maintained.
“We will be providing a new sewer system, which will bypass the existing unadopted sewer system in the gardens of properties either side of Station Road. Our new foul sewer will be laid down the site access, north along Station Road and then east to connect directly into the adopted sewer at Princess Mead.
“The drainage from our site will therefore not contribute to the flood risk noted by residents.”
Plans for a £13 million leisure centre in Knaresborough will go to the vote on Monday after a decision was previously delayed due to a “technical error”.
Harrogate Borough Council’s planning committee was recommended to approve the controversial plans last week, but an error meant residents were not invited to speak at a meeting.
The council apologised and has now rescheduled a decision for 2pm on Monday.
Residents and campaign groups are expected to speak against the plans which include the demolition of the existing Knaresborough Swimming Pool at Fysche Field and building the new leisure centre over a play area to the rear.
Several concerns have been raised over the environmental impacts of demolishing a large building to replace it with another, as well as whether the new facility is needed.
Knaresborough Civic Society has repeatedly called on councillors to reject the plans in favour of rival proposals from the ‘Not on Fysche Field’ campaign group which has produced designs to upgrade the existing 30-year-old swimming pool.
A civic society spokesperson said:
“Knaresborough Civic Society is extremely concerned that the planning committee is in danger of making a decision on the say so of council officers that will result in unnecessary and unequivocal damage to the environment and the gateway to the town.
“On behalf of future generations, members of the planning committee must show the necessary governance and be prepared to take full responsibility for the outcome of such a huge decision.”
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A public consultation on five potential locations for the proposed leisure centre was held in 2020 and referred to locating the facility “on the site of the existing pool”.
However, it was only several months after this that the council revealed it wants to build the leisure centre over a play area to the rear.
The other locations previously considered included Knaresborough House, Hay-a-Park, Conyngham Hall and a plot of land at Halfpenny Lane.
The council has hailed its proposals for Fysche Field as an opportunity to provide a “modern” and “fit-for-purpose” facility for Knaresborough’s growing population.
And if approved, the council said the new leisure centre could be built by the end of 2023.
Monday’s decision will be followed by a cabinet meeting on Wednesday when councillors will be asked to approve a £28million contract for Bristol-based firm Alliance Leisure to build the new leisure centre in Knaresborough and refurbish Harrogate Hydro.
This comes after plans for a two-storey extension of the Hydro were approved in October 2021.
These proposals include demolishing the existing entrance and replacing it with a larger reception area on the ground floor, as well as a new fitness suite on the first floor.
Safety urged after Knaresborough wall collapsesResidents in Knaresborough have been urged to be careful after a section of a wall near to the town’s High Street collapsed.
The wall on Vicarage Lane next to Knaresborough House collapsed yesterday and has since been reported to the council.
The road is just off the town’s High Street and serves as a route to St John the Baptist Church.
In a post on its social media, Knaresborough Business Collective urged people to take another route.
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Knaresborough Museum to open doors for first time in June
Knaresborough Town Museum will open its doors for the first time this summer to give visitors a sneak peek at the museum.
Knaresborough Museum Association will hold a community history festival on June 2-4 as part of the town’s the Queen’s platinum jubilee celebrations.
The museum, based at the former Castle Girls’ School near Knaresborough Castle, has been in the works since late 2020 but with the building lease set to be signed on April 1, the group can begin to plan events.

Some of the museum’s volunteers. Left to right: Sam Roberts, Clare Joia, Kathy Allday and Suzanne Coulson
The museum won’t be fully ready for the festival but it will have had a fresh lick of paint and will host stalls from numerous local groups, including the Royal British Legion Knaresborough branch and the Knaresborough Historical Society.
There will also be activities for children, including a mock-Victorian classroom for craft activity. The group hopes to have people teach heritage crafts, such as cotton spinning.
The museum itself is set to officially open in February 2023. A planning application has been submitted to Harrogate Borough Council but chair of the association, Kathy Allday, said due to a delay in contractors works won’t be able to start until autumn.
She said:
“It’s a shame we’ve had to push back the opening date but after the festival we can hit the ground running and get works underway.
“We’ll be unveiling artefacts at the festival and a 3D model of how the museum will look. We will also be trialling our history trail which walks around the town, the hopes is we can do these regularly once the museum is open.”
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The museum is being funded by public donations and grants, it will include eight exhibition zones covering periods of history from the Jurassic age to the World Wars.
The association is currently looking for business sponsors to come on board to support the museum as it opens, to get in touch click here.
Harrogate district small businesses and families prepare to ‘get stung’The owner of a family-run nursery chain, which is set to launch a new setting in Harrogate, says he is preparing to “get stung” by rising energy prices.
Matthew Dawson, director of Children’s Corner Childcare, said he had already seen a significant rise in energy bills at his six Leeds nurseries over the last 18 months – including almost double in some cases.
The nursery is set to open a branch at Central House, on Otley Road, in April, when the price hike is introduced.
Mr Dawson said:
“We have several utilities contracts due to run out in the coming months and as such are likely to get stung by the ever increasing costs of keeping our buildings warm.
“This is especially important when looking after young children as we do and not something where corners can be cut.
“Our newest site in Harrogate has a number of obstacles in terms of its energy efficiency which are going to have to be addressed.”
Mr Dawson said the nursery was going to have “the most energy efficient heating system we could find” installed to help mitigate rising costs, as well as investing in insulating the building further.
He added:
“This will not only reduce our ongoing energy bills, but also to reduce our environmental impact as well.
“This will come at a significant cost to the business at a time when margins are squeezed ever tighter by other increasing extraneous costs.”
£80 a month more to pay
For Knaresborough family-of-three, the Hobsons, the energy bills are set to go up by at least £80 per month.
Regional sales director Mike Hobson, who lives with his wife Hannah and their eight-year-old daughter Grace, said:
“This isn’t sustainable and it is now eating into other areas of living costs, especially with all the extra expenditure at the moment, including inflation.
“We were paying £160 a month and we are now paying £240 – for a family-of-three, that’s an extra £1,000 a year.”

From left to right, Grace, Hannah and Mike Hobson, from Knaresborough.
However, the price hike is not just set to hit families and homeowners, with the majority of residents across the Harrogate district set to feel the pinch.
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Catherine Aletta, a junior digital designer at Cloud Nine, which is based at Hornbeam Park, rents a two-bedroom flat near Harrogate town centre with her partner.
She said:
“Energy prices are already a big chunk of monthly outgoings. As prices are set to rise even further, we are both concerned that it will have a big impact on us. The monthly bills are already a consideration to our lifestyle and if they do go up, we will have to start looking at how we possibly cut back on other things.
“We are both very conscious of our energy consumption and do our best to reduce our usage to keep the monthly bills manageable. We use the timer to restrict the amount of time the heating is on, we turn off lights as we leave rooms and make sure we don’t leave the TV on when we are not watching it.
“We have lived in our apartment for six months and we have noticed that the prices have already gone up. Obviously we have had the heating on quite a lot in recent months due to the cold weather, but it is a concern for next winter. If the prices go up even further, we will start to struggle.”

Catherine Aletta.
The price rise comes after the energy regulator, Ofgem, lifted the maximum rate that suppliers can charge for an average duel-fuel energy tariff by £693 — an increase of 54 per cent.
This is to reflect the fourfold increase in energy market prices over the last year.
Knaresborough man jailed for historic sexual abuse*Warning — this article contains details some readers may find disturbing.
A 64-year-old man has been jailed for three years for the sexual abuse of a young girl in the 1970s and 80s.
David Weatherald, from Knaresborough, waged what amounted to a campaign of sexual abuse of the girl in Harrogate when he was in his 20s.
The victim, now middle-aged, was so traumatised by the abuse she tried to take her own life, York Crown Court heard.
Prosecutor Kitty Colley said that despite the offences happening so long ago, Weatherald’s previous conviction for possessing indecent images of children in 2019 showed that he had “harboured a (sexual) interest in young children” for many years.
The victim of the sexual abuse, which occurred about 40 years ago, did not make disclosures to police until September 2019 after an article appeared in the press about Weatherald’s conviction for possessing indecent images.
Ms Colley said:
“She herself contacted police and reported (that) she had been sexually abused by him as a child.
“She said that having read about him in the paper, she (decided to) come forward.”
The victim, who was just six years old when the abuse began in the 1970s, was sexually assaulted on “many” occasions.
Weatherald, who was 19 or 20 years’ old when it began, vehemently denied the allegations following his arrest and told police they were “all lies”.
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He was initially charged with seven counts of sexual offences but denied them and the case was listed for trial in December last year, but Weatherald ultimately admitted five of those charges, including four counts of indecent assault and one of indecency with a child under 14 years of age. He appeared for sentence on Thursday.
Torrid childhood
The court heard that the victim, who cannot be named for legal reasons, had endured a torrid childhood.
Ms Colley said:
“She said she felt ashamed about what (Weatherald) did to her.”
The victim said the abuse had affected her “very deeply” all her adult life.
She said that at the time of the abuse she had “minimal” understanding of what was happening to her and she was now “reliving the trauma through this case”.
She said the abuse made her “feel like I was not worth anything” and resulted in a suicide attempt.
She added:
“The experiences I have gone through left me physically and mentally shattered.
“My life was stolen from me when I was six years of age and there is nothing that will get those years back.”
Ms Colley said that Weatherald’s previous conviction for possessing indecent images included 11 videos rated Category A – the worst kind – featuring “very young children, some aged seven”. The images included penetrative sexual activity with children.
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Weatherald, of Fossdale Close, was given a 10-month suspended prison sentence and made subject to a 10-year sexual-harm prevention order for those offences in 2019.
Three-year sentence
Nick Cartmell, mitigating, said Weatherald was deeply remorseful and at the time of the sexual abuse he too was an “isolated, immature” young man who had his own difficulties.
Judge Sean Morris, the Recorder of York, told Weatherald:
“This offending came to light as a result of you possessing, or looking at, the most dreadful illegal images of children.
“It’s quite clear that this offending…shows that your interest in children harks back some considerable time.”
Weatherald will serve half of the three-year sentence behind bars before being released on prison licence.
Mr Morris added a further prohibition to Weatherald’s sexual-harm prevention order which bans him having any advertent contact with children under 16 years of age.