Newbury Weekly News

Concern at plans for 350 homes by A343

Housing site is in ‘green gap’ on floodplain

- By JONATHAN ASHBY jonathan.ashby@newburynew­s.co.uk @jonathana_nwn

HUGE concerns have been raised about plans to build up to 350 homes in a green gap between Hampshire and Newbury.

Housing developer Bewley Homes has put forward proposals to build the homes in Wash Water at the junction of Andover Road (A343) and the A34, just over the border in Basingstok­e and Deane.

The Common Farm site – marketed as Watermill Bridge and bordered by the River Enborne to the north – is located on a floodplain, although most of where the housing would be built is in flood zone 1, the lowest level.

The scheme will, Bewley Homes states, be a low carbon developmen­t, offering solar panels, electric vehicle charging points and air-source heat pumps for all houses, and using the “wetland and wet woodland as key features increasing species and habitat biodiversi­ty”.

Forty per cent of the homes would be affordable, while there would also be allotments, a farm shop and a community building.

There are, however, currently no plans for a school, doctor’s surgery or any other infrastruc­ture, and all traffic from the site would pour out on to Andover Road.

Chris Garrett, who has lived on Enborne Row just north of the river since the mid-nineties, said he had grave concerns about the scheme.

He said: “We’ve objected to the land use being changed from farm land to a housing developmen­t on a number of fronts, but largely because it’s on the floodplain.

“My garden and all those gardens along there flood to some extent every year.

“Right now my house doesn’t flood, but my garden does, and it’s not very far.

“There’s also the traffic – 350 cars coming out on to the A343.

“If Sandleford [a proposed 1,000 home developmen­t on Sandleford Park] happens, it’s going to be madness.”

Mr Garrett, who is also chairman of Enborne Parish Council, has set up a website called ‘Keep Wash Water Rural’ to rally objections to the scheme – which is currently in the consultati­on phase, ahead of a formal planning applicatio­n being submitted.

The 68-year-old also voiced concerns that as the scheme is in Hampshire, it will be decided by Basingstok­e and Deane councillor­s.

The borough currently has a housing shortage – around 850 houses need to be built every year until 2029 to meet the council’s target. The Common Farm site was put forward as a potential housing site by the landowner in 2019 when the borough council put out a call for sites as part of its update to its 2011-2029 local plan.

The site was then included in the council’s Strategic Housing and Economic Land Availabili­ty Assessment (SHELAA), which identifies sites “with realistic potential for future housing”.

Mr Garrett said: “We’re concerned that it will be decided by Basingstok­e and Deane by people who live a long way away and want to hit their housing quota. Everything will be decided by Basingstok­e and Deane and all the problems will be in Newbury.”

The site is split between the East Woodhay and Highclere parishes in Hampshire.

East Woodhay neighbourh­ood plan steering group chairman Paul Hurst said it was vital to maintain the green gap between Newbury and Woolton Hill. He said: “There’s a real fear we’re seeing a nibbling away of the green gap.”

To view the Watermill Bridge consultati­on, head to https://watermillb­ridge.co.uk/ index.html

To view Mr Garrett’s opposition website, visit https://keepwashwa­terrural.co.uk/

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