Bath Chronicle

Fears of repeat ‘curse’ next to industrial site

- Stephen Sumner Local democracy reporter stephen.sumner@reachplc.com

Fears have been raised that a new industrial estate planned in Keynsham could expose more residents to noise and disruption.

Cllr Andy Wait said homeowners were “cursed” by living next to a concrete plant and Bath and North East Somerset Council risked making the same mistake again.

Almost 150 people have objected to plans for buildings spanning up to 5,700 sqm for business, industrial process, general industrial and storage uses on a site off Bath Road that the authority has allocated as employment land.

Keynsham Town Council said the plans were unacceptab­le as it would harm road safety and create further congestion, while Saltford Parish Council feared the applicants had “grossly underestim­ated” the number of vehicle movements.

Both councils said the developmen­t would add another junction on the busy A4 and should not be built before improvemen­ts were made to local infrastruc­ture.

Cllr Wait, ward member for Keynsham East, said Van Dyke Avenue residents’ lives continued to be “cursed” by the behaviour and attitude of occupiers of an industrial site nearby.

He told planning committee members on November 17: “It appears that B&NES Council are at risk of making the same mistake again.

“As we’ve seen elsewhere in Keynsham, having a B2 site [used for general industrial purposes] so close to many houses is a recipe for disaster.

“Light industrial use should be the maximum allowable activity. The type of industrial activity being considered is inappropri­ate for the site.”

Mike Williams, whose Bath Road home adjoins the site, said the land was only one part of a wider developmen­t and there should be an adequate, long-term primary access route for the whole site.

But Ralph Salmon, director of joint applicant St Congar, told members: “This applicatio­n brings forward employment and will create jobs on a site that’s allocated for employment in your Local Plan.

“There is no highways objection. The new junction into the site is compliant with standards and is safe for all users of the A4.”

Planning officer Chris Griggstrev­arthan said the site had been allocated for employment since 2014, adding: “We’ve already anticipate­d the vehicle movements that would be generated by the wider employment site. There’s 30,000 sqm of industrial floorspace that’s meant to come forward across the whole allocation.

“That’s already been built into assessment­s of what the local network can accommodat­e. There’s not a need for further infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts to come forward.”

Planning committee members were not convinced. Cllr Shaun Hughes suggested the council was seeking the cheapest access, not the best.

Keynsham East’s Cllr Hal Macfie said: “We’ve seen people’s lives severely impacted because a B2 use was put too close to them. We shouldn’t have B2.”

He called for a site visit so members can understand the issues, which Cllr Lucy Hodge said should happen at the start or end of the school day.

The motion was supported by the committee.

 ?? ?? Plans for employment land off Bath Road in Keynsham
Plans for employment land off Bath Road in Keynsham

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