South Wales Evening Post

Residents say that building site work has caused cracks

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PEOPLE living opposite a constructi­on site in Burry Port have claimed that vibrations have caused cracks in their homes and that the soil where the new properties are being built is contaminat­ed.

Some of them also feel they have lost their privacy as a result of the 22 houses and 10 flats across the road in Glanmor Terrace.

Burry Port councillor John James has asked Carmarthen­shire Council, which is behind the £4m project, to issue inconvenie­nce payments to residents. The request has been turned down.

Residents have also raised concerns about, among other things, traffic, parking and dust, and have commission­ed testing of two soil samples from the constructi­on site. The land was formerly an open space and, before that, railway sidings.

One of the residents, Donna Morris, said: “We’ve had meetings with the council but we feel we are not getting anywhere.”

The council said it had responded to every concern raised and that it would continue to do so.

According to Cllr James, bungalows were initially proposed for the site but the council said they never were. Cllr James pointed to a council press release about wider Burry Port regenerati­on which said work was under way on the Glanmor Terrace scheme “including apartments and bungalows”.

Cllr James said the preparator­y and subsequent constructi­on work on the houses and flats “took its toll on residents from the start” due to the type of heavy machinery used. Work began before the first coronaviru­s lockdown in March last year.

Glanmor Terrace resident Philip

Davies said: “I’ve been in a 7.1 earthquake in Los Angeles and it was like being in an earthquake.”

Another resident, Marc Gower, said: “Fixtures on my wall were vibrating. If I was lying down on my garage floor working on my car I could feel it shaking.”

Mr Gower said his wife was doing three night shifts a week in a care home at the time and that she would be in tears because she couldn’t sleep during the day due to the noise opposite.

Alternativ­e machinery was then used by the contractor­s but, according to some residents, cracks have appeared in their homes.

Surveyors were sent out to investigat­e and the council has indicated that anyone who felt their property has suffered damage should take profession­al advice.

According to the authority, vibrations resulting from the constructi­on work were well below the level which could cause damage.

Resident Dawn Garfoot said: “It has been horrific living here, what with Covid lockdowns. We feel trapped.”

She said she was instructin­g her insurance company’s legal department on the cracks issue, while another resident, Joanne Coyne, said cracks had appeared in two living rooms and her kitchen.

The testing of soil from the edge of the constructi­on site which was commission­ed by residents indicated elevated levels of lead and arsenic.

The council said evidence of contaminan­ts had been identified from the outset and that action to mitigate this was carried out satisfacto­rily and was subsequent­ly monitored.

The 32 houses and flats will be let by the council, which has regularly washed the windows of Glanmor Terrace residents, when completed.

In response to the concerns raised by residents, Cllr Linda Evans, cabinet member for housing, said the council had made extensive efforts to liaise with residents, including appointing a community liaison officer as a point of contact and visiting every home on

Glanmor Terrace.

“We have responded to every concern that has been raised and will continue to offer that level of support,” she said.

She added that the scheme’s developmen­t had been through a thorough planning process.

She said: “The continuous monitoring and mitigation of soil contaminan­ts are part of strict planning conditions for the developmen­t, including a clean cover system to control contaminan­ts present, which is common practice in the regenerati­on of brownfield sites.”

These measures, she said, had been “clearly communicat­ed” with the community.

She added: “The constructi­on phase of any developmen­t can cause some disruption to residents living nearby. However, we have worked carefully with our contractor­s to manage this and try to keep site activity and movements to a minimum.

“When complete this developmen­t will provide 32 good-quality affordable homes for local people.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? A wall crack in Joanne Coyne’s home on Glanmor Terrace. She says the crack wasn’t there before the building work opposite started.
A wall crack in Joanne Coyne’s home on Glanmor Terrace. She says the crack wasn’t there before the building work opposite started.
 ?? ?? A crack in an exterior wall on Glanmor Terrace whose owner said wasn’t there before the constructi­on work opposite got under way.
A crack in an exterior wall on Glanmor Terrace whose owner said wasn’t there before the constructi­on work opposite got under way.
 ?? RICHARD YOULE ?? The new Carmarthen­shire Council homes being built off Glanmor Terrace, Burry Port.
RICHARD YOULE The new Carmarthen­shire Council homes being built off Glanmor Terrace, Burry Port.
 ?? ?? The new Glanmor Terrace homes and (right) the existing ones.
The new Glanmor Terrace homes and (right) the existing ones.

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