Plans have been submitted to close Crescent Gardens in Harrogate to public traffic.
Harrogate-based property developer Impala Estates bought the former Harrogate Borough Council headquarters alongside the road for £4 million in 2020.
It received planning permission in May last year to turn the building into offices, a roof garden restaurant and gym, and to create a two-storey extension. Work has yet to begin.
The company has now applied for permission to install bollards and planters to convert the public highway into a private road.
If approved, the road would be maintained by Impala Estates for access to the Crescent Gardens development and associated car parking bays.
The area affected would include the Crescent Gardens road and footpath from its intersection with Swan Road to its intersection with Montpellier Road.
According to planning documents submitted to North Yorkshire Council, the application site “excludes the off-carriageway parking bays to the south of the Crescent Gardens roadway with the exception of a small section (essentially two parking bays) located directly between the Crescent Gardens building main entrance and the path opposite into the Crescent Gardens park”.
Planters and retractable bollards, similar to those temporarily installed on Beech Grove in Harrogate, would be installed at either end of Crescent Gardens to prevent public vehicles passing.
The documents add:
“The former Harrogate Borough Council agreed to dispose of the land underlying the Crescent Gardens roadway on the basis that it would be stopped up, with the roadway becoming privately owned and associated with the Crescent Gardens development.
“It is also understood that the local highway authority has no objection in principle to the Crescent Gardens roadway being stopped up.”

An impression of how the redeveloped site would look.
James Hartley, director of Impala, told the Stray Ferret,
“The road was discussed at the time of the sale and has been approved by the council at committee. As part of the process, we have been working with the Department for Transport on the stopping up order and North Yorkshire Council on the submitted planning application.
“The changes to the road will assist in the construction of Crescent Gardens along with providing the building with a well-managed and enhanced setting once the works have been undertaken. This will link the building better with the gardens opposite, achieving a clear public benefit.”
Asked if the company’s plans for the redevelopment of Crescent Gardens had changed, or if a starting date was known, Mr Hartley said:
“Nothing has changed with the broader redevelopment, we are working hard with our design team to develop out the design allowing it to go out to tender.”
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Are the Beech Grove planters set for a comeback?
More than six weeks have passed since Beech Grove in Harrogate reopened to through traffic.
But the planters that blocked the highway remain by the side of the road — prompting speculation that they might be brought back.
Beech Grove was closed to through traffic for 18 months from February last year to encourage cycling and walking in the area.
When the experimental order implementing the measure expired in August, the planters were moved to the side and traffic could once again use the route to travel between Otley Road and West Park.
A no-through road sign also remains in place, prompting questions about whether measures to restrict traffic on Beech Grove could be brought back.
Beech Grove is regarded as a key part of wider plans to create a traffic-free route for cyclists between Harrogate train station and Cardale Park on Otley Road.

The Stray Ferret asked North Yorkshire County Council, the highways authority, why the planters and sign had not been removed and whether there were any plans to once again prohibit traffic on Beech Grove.
Melisa Burnham, highways area manager at the council, said the council was still considering what to do. She said:
“The planters are safely placed at the side of the road but will not be removed until we have considered the potential links from Otley Road to the town centre further.
“The sign was missed in error and we will remove it as soon as possible.”
Last month Cllr Keane Duncan, the council’s executive member for highways and transport, said it would “bring forward a detailed and coordinated plan, connecting active travel initiatives such as Otley Road and Station Gateway together”.
How Beech Grove figures in these plans remains to be seen.
Planters moved as Harrogate’s Beech Grove reopensHarrogate’s Beech Grove has re-opened to through traffic.
North Yorkshire County Council introduced an experimental order in February last year closing the road at the junction with Lancaster Road.
The move was initially brought in as a one-year trial but was later extended to 18 months.
It aimed to encourage cycling and walking and there were suggestions the closure could become permanent.
But the council announced this month the order would end.
The decision proved popular with some residents and motorists, who said it merely increased traffic on neighbouring streets, but upset some cyclists, who had been told Beech Grove would be a central part of plans to create an integrated cycle route between Cardale Park and Harrogate train station.
Today the planters enforcing the closure were removed, two days before the experimental order was due to expire.
A council spokesman said this afternoon:
“Beech Grove and Lancaster Road are now open to vehicles.”
But what happens next is unclear.
North Yorkshire County Council’s executive member for highways and transport, Cllr Keane Duncan, said it will review the situation and then “bring forward a detailed and coordinated plan, connecting active travel initiatives such as Otley Road and Station Gateway together”.
Read more:
- Beech Grove decision leaves Harrogate in slow lane for cycling
- Ex-Harrogate headteacher welcomes end to ‘dangerous’ Beech Grove closure
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Harrogate social distancing planters find a happy home in Starbeck
Six of Harrogate’s social distancing planters now have pride of place on Starbeck High Street.
Andrew Hart, who owns the local post office and recently set up Starbeck Community Group, made a bid to Harrogate Borough Council to take them to Starbeck which was accepted.
After receiving a pavement licence from North Yorkshire County Council, the wooden boxes were delivered to Starbeck yesterday.
They now sit in front of the abandoned former McColl’s building, which was burnt out in a fire three years ago. Planters have also been placed in front of St Andrew’s Church.
Mr Hart paid £40 per planter for HBC to put fresh plants in them.
The planters were removed from James Street and Albert Street last week. They were both loved and loathed and came to symbolise the debate that surrounded not just covid but the high street economy, parking and pedestrianisation.
Read more:
The council bought them after receiving £144,411 from the European Regional Development Fund to boost high streets during the covid pandemic.
A condition of taking the planters is they have to retain ERDF branding, and Mr Hart said the council will be sending over the logos soon. They must be returned to HBC in March 2022.
Mr Hart said:
“I would like to thank North Yorkshire County Council and Harrogate Borough Council for their magnificent support in this project.”


Six of the social distancing planters that were in Harrogate town centre during covid restrictions look set to be moved to Starbeck High Street.
The planters, which occupied town centre parking spaces to the annoyance of some traders, were removed from James Street and Albert Street last week.
Harrogate Borough Council subsequently put out a call to local business owners interested in loaning the wooden boxes.
Andrew Hart, who owns the post office in Starbeck, said the council had agreed this morning to loan him six planters, providing he can get a pavement licence from North Yorkshire County Council, which he hopes will be a formality.
Mr Hart plans to put the planters outside the former McColl’s supermarket building, which was destroyed by fire three years ago. He said it has been an “eyesore” ever since.
Mr Hart said there would be enough space on the pavement for wheelchairs and prams to pass.
He added:
“The planters will distract the eye [from the McColl’s building], especially for people driving through Starbeck.”
Read More:
- What will happen to the James Street planters?
- Harrogate town centre social distancing planters removed
The flowers have been wilting in the sun at the council’s nursery on Harlow Hill in Harrogate because the council said it did not have the resources to water them properly.
Mr Hart has agreed to pay the council £40 per planter to put fresh flowers in the boxes. Once they arrive in Starbeck, they will be watered and maintained by volunteers.
The council bought the planters after receiving £144,411 from the European Regional Development Fund to boost high streets during the covid pandemic.
However, as a condition of using the EU money, the planters cannot be placed on privately-owned land and must be branded with the ERDF and HMG logos before being returned to the council by March next year.
What will happen to the James Street planters?The James Street planters were both loved and loathed and came to symbolise the debate that surrounded not just covid but the high street economy, parking and pedestrianisation.
But now that they’ve gone, what will happen to them?
The planters were installed by North Yorkshire County Council to encourage social distancing at the start of the pandemic and were loaned by Harrogate Borough Council which owns them.
It seems there would be no shortage of takers for the newsworthy wooden boxes. Similar models sell online for between £50 and £100 and don’t even include colourful flora from the council’s award-winning parks team.
Cold Bath Road restaurant William and Victoria sent a tweet to HBC yesterday saying they would “love some for our outside area if going spare.”
Andrew Hart, who owns the post offices in Starbeck and Bilton, told the Stray Ferret he wants some too to “boost morale and community respect”. He’d like to put one outside the burnt-out McColl’s supermarket on Starbeck High Street.
Read more:
- Harrogate town centre social distancing planters removed
- James Street planters in Harrogate could be gone today
HBC bought the planters after receiving £144,411 from the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) to boost high streets during the covid pandemic. It was was one of the final benefits of the UK’s membership of the European Union.
But EU bureaucracy could scupper a happy ending for the planters, which are currently withering in the heat at the council’s nursery on Harlow Hill.
The council sent an email to Harrogate BID members saying that due to “limited space and resources” they are having difficulties watering them.
They’ve now asked businesses interested in putting the planters outside their property if they are interested in taking them. The council warned that time is of the essence to “protect the longevity” of the plants.
However, as a condition of using the EU money, the planters cannot be placed on privately-owned land and must be branded with the ERDF and HMG logos before being returned to HBC by March 2022.
Harrogate town centre social distancing planters removedPlanters in Harrogate town centre, which were put in place for social distancing, have been removed this morning.
Workers were seen removing the planters early this morning on Albert Street, with those on James Street expected to follow.
The measures were implemented at the height of lockdown for shoppers to distance from each other in the town centre.
However, the planters are now being removed in line with the lifting of covid restrictions nationally.
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The move proved unpopular with some town centre businesses which said the loss of parking spaces affected trade.
Cllr Don Mackenzie, executive councillor for access at North Yorkshire County Council, told the Stray Ferret yesterday that all social distancing measures and parking suspensions would be removed this week.
The move would include social distancing cones in Knaresborough.
However, the Ginnel in Harrogate is to remain closed to traffic for an unspecified period of time to support outdoor hospitality.
James Street planters in Harrogate could be gone todayThe planters on James Street in Harrogate and the cones in Knaresborough are to be removed imminently as part of today’s lifting of lockdown restrictions.
However, the Ginnel in Harrogate is to remain closed to traffic for an unspecified period of time to support outdoor hospitality.
The planters and cones were introduced last year as social distancing measures for town centre shoppers.
However, they have proved unpopular with some businesses, which say the loss of parking spaces has affected trade.

Traders opposed to the cones in Knaresborough.
Don Mackenzie, executive member for access at North Yorkshire County Council, which is the highways authority, said:
“It is our intention to remove all the social distancing measures and parking suspensions next week.
“I cannot confirm that it will happen on Monday since there may be some clearance work needed on the highways after the Great Yorkshire Show, which closed on Friday evening, but I do hope it may all be completed on Monday.
“The closure of the Ginnel in Harrogate is the only social distancing measure likely to remain in place.”
Read more:
- Knaresborough businesses call for social distancing cones to go
- Elderly woman waits two hours for ambulance after James Street fall
Asked why the narrow street would stay closed to traffic when the government is lifting all social distancing measures tomorrow, Cllr Mackenzie said:
“The Ginnel is a very narrow, little-used street where closure will remain a little longer to support outdoor hospitality.”
Lucy Gardiner, co-founder of Harrogate Residents Association, said it was “extremely pleased” to hear the planters were going. She added:
New planters installed in Harrogate after fake grass saga“After months of writing to the councillors and expressing the many concerns from the retailers and residents it is absolutely the right thing for them to do, to actually show they are listening.
“Convenience is an integral part to the high street, which was highlighted by Andrew Goodacre, chief executive of the British Independent Retailers Association in his recent presentation to the chamber of commerce.
“There is still demand for traditional shopping methods and Harrogate needs to lead the way for the high street — not became like every other pedestrianised place.”
New planters are being installed on Cambridge Street in Harrogate town centre.
The move comes two months after Harrogate Borough Council placed fake grass in raised flower beds in the town centre.
Workers were seen installing the new planters today.
One worker told the Stray Ferret that the planters would have “flowers in spring and autumn and shrubs other times of year”.
A council spokesperson said:
“Over the years we’ve planted numerous varieties of plants and flowers in the planters. But sadly, nothing has lasted very long due to the trees’ roots structure soaking-up all the moisture and nutrients in the soil.
“These new bespoke plant beds, which sit above the root base, will have their own soil that is full of nutrients and should allow the plants to grow successfully every year.
“For the summer, they will be filled with bright cheerful geraniums (as shown in the photo). And in the winter we will plant spring bulbs and perennials.
“In the coming weeks they will start to compliment Harrogate’s award-winning floral displays that we take enormous pride in looking after.”
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- Extinction Rebellion replaces fake grass with flowers in Harrogate
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It follows a fierce backlash to the artificial grass installed on Cambridge Street in May, which residents and campaigners described as “cheap and tacky”.
Council officials initially claimed the move received “lots of positive feedback”, but later removed the grass and apologised.
It was later revealed that the council had spent £800 on the artificial grass.
However, Cllr Andrew Paraskos, cabinet member for environment, defended the saga at a full council meeting last week.
He said that the fake grass was removed “straight away” and that the authority had to “try new ideas”.
Harrogate’s controversial James Street planters could go after June 21The planters on Harrogate’s James Street could be removed after June 21 — but only if the government proceeds with the final stage of its roadmap out of lockdown.
North Yorkshire County Council closed parking bays on James Street at the start of the pandemic and put in planters to allow pedestrians to conform with social distancing guidance.
Cllr Don Mackenzie, the council’s executive member for access, told the Stray Ferret that “it would be reasonable” to expect the planters to be removed after June 21.
Many traders in Knaresborough are also keen for social distancing cones in the town centre to be removed and parking restored.
However, the June 21 date looks increasingly in doubt due to an increase in Delta variant cases. Cllr Mackenzie said he would be “perfectly happy” to see the planters stay if the government delayed the date.
He added:
“Frankly, I’m relaxed about what happens with the planters either way. If it’s felt social distancing is still needed we’ll keep them up.”
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Anna McIntee, of Harrogate Residents Association, set up a petition against the planters that has received over 800 signatures. She told the Stray Ferret that she wants to see the planters removed as soon as possible.
She said:
“Why is the council singling out retailers only on James Street and Albert Street? You can park freely on Cold Bath Road, Cheltenham Parade and Commercial Street.
“The June 21 reopening date is for nightclubs, theatres and large events, not for walking outside on a street. Please remove the planters and let customers have the same access as they do at our supermarkets and outlying retail parks”.