A Harrogate walking group has called for public footpaths to be protected from new housing developments.
It is among a new set of proposals issued by the Harrogate Group of the Ramblers’ Association to promote walking in Harrogate and Knaresborough.
The group has suggested that developers should be required to include wide and well-lit public footpaths in all new housing areas and, if possible, link paths with nearby rights of way to provide direct and easy access into the countryside.
It also highlighted how one footpath in Killinghall, which has just reopened after four years of ‘temporary closure’, was an example of “a source of particular concern”. Temporary closure of public rights of way through building sites of new development should be restricted to a minimum amount of time necessary, the group urges.
The proposals, which have been sent to newly elected local councillors at North Yorkshire County Council, also say plans to convert footpaths and footways to shared use with cyclists should be considered on a case by case basis in order “to achieve an outcome that is not detrimental to the interests of walkers and pedestrians”.
This follows concerns about the impact of the new Otley Road cycle path in Harrogate, which includes shared access between walkers and cyclists.
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The letter to councillors says:
Ripon paint specialists turn steam train ‘platinum purple’ for Jubilee“At a time when both walking and cycling are being promoted both locally and nationally as desirable activities, it is particularly important that the needs and interests of the extensive walking and pedestrian community are taken into serious consideration and not just taken for granted.
“Walking is a particularly desirable activity to protect and promote, both for its benefits to the health and wellbeing of people of a very wide range of ages, including the elderly, and for its contribution to the reduction of air pollution by replacing the use of the car for many local journeys. “
Ripon paint specialists T&R Williamson have played a part in painting the popular steam train Taw Valley “platinum purple” ahead of the Queen’s jubilee.
T&R Williamson hold a Royal warrant for their supply of products to the Royal household, used for the Royal mews and Royal carriages.
Group chairman Abubaker Sheibani said:
“We are thrilled to have been able to extend this Royal connection to this unique project. It is a fitting and truly memorable way of commemorating Her Majesty becoming the first British monarch in history to reign for 70 years.”
After a public vote at Severn Valley Railway, it was decided the train will be renamed Elizabeth II during the jubilee celebrations.
The royal project has also attracted the attention of leading British model company, Hornby, who are producing a collector’s model of the new purple locomotive.
T&R Williamson, along with Thomas-Howse Paints and Metprint Ltd, have created a “platinum purple” paint tin to mark the occasion. It will be filled with traditional sweets and transforms into a money-box when empty.
Harrogate estate agent makes historic land sale deal for £4 million
Harrogate estate agent Linley & Simpson has sold a patch of land in North Yorkshire for over £4 million.
The land in Church Fenton has been bought by Yorkshire Country Properties, which plans to build 50 new homes on the residential site.
This sale is the biggest this year for the award-winning land and new homes team at Linley & Simpson, and is one of the company’s most significant deals.
Director David Waddington said:
“Given the coveted location, there was no shortage of interest among developers in the site, which was sold with full planning permission”.
The agency says North Yorkshire house buyers are increasingly turning to new builds post-Covid, particularly for family homes in rural areas. They suggest this is also a result of rising energy costs across the country.
They are hoping this trend will continue, creating more demand among developers for land in prime locations across the region.