Kentish Express Ashford & District

15th century college to be converted into homes

Developer asks Planning Inspectora­te to decide on scheme

- By Charlie Harman charman@thekmgroup.co.uk

A 15th century former college will be converted into homes after a planning appeal – but other sites in the same village will remain undevelope­d for now.

Developer Telereal Trillium asked for a decision on its Wye College plan from the Planning Inspectora­te after Ashford Borough Council failed to decide on the scheme within the 13-week timescale set by the government.

The 100-home plan would have been spread across three separate sites once owned by the college and the Department of Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA).

Inspector David Prentis chaired the public inquiry, which sat for seven days between January 28 and February 5.

And earlier this month, the

Planning Inspectora­te decided to allow one of the three conjoined developmen­ts but quashed the other two.

The approved section, first proposed in 2017, will see the conversion of part of the former college into 38 homes through restoratio­n and alteration­s.

Later structures will be demolished and replaced by developer Telereal, which will comprise some of these houses.

Alongside this will be built two houses, parking courts with car barns, cycle storage and refuse stores.

Ashford Borough Council had previously stated that it would not oppose this section’s appeal, which was lodged in May 2020.

The first section of the overall proposal to be refused was a 2019 scheme which would have seen Telereal Trillium build 40 houses on college land.

Though the land was agreed as a good developmen­t site in principle - and that it wouldn’t seriously affect the area of outstandin­g natural beauty - the report raised concerns over the scheme’s impact on the Stodmarsh Nature Reserve near Canterbury.

Poor water quality levels at the internatio­nally important nature reserve have stalled housing developmen­ts across east Kent in recent months.

Mr Prentis added that “it would also result in an unacceptab­le risk of harm to the Stodmarsh Site of Special Scientific Interest”.

‘I can only hope the developer keeps its promise...’ - Cllr Noel Ovenden (Ash Ind)

Therefore it was refused, alongside the third section which would have seen DEFRA offices demolished and replaced with 20 houses.

The council noted it would have refused this section for four reasons - impact on trees, effect on an area of natural beauty and the lack of developer funding towards infrastruc­ture and highways.

Despite a number of discussion­s with the council and agreeable revisions to the proposal, the inspectora­te also found concern with the Stodmarsh issue.

What do you think? Email kentishexp­ress@thekmgroup. co.uk

 ??  ?? The former Wye College dates back to the 15th century and has been at the centre of a planning debate for years
The former Wye College dates back to the 15th century and has been at the centre of a planning debate for years
 ??  ?? Cllr Noel Ovenden expressed concern over the decisions
Cllr Noel Ovenden expressed concern over the decisions

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