The Chronicle (UK)

Benton plans are given green light

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NEWCASTLE United have been granted planning permission to upgrade the club’s training ground.

The club submitted proposals to North Tyneside Council to revamp the club’s Benton base after acknowledg­ing the standards of the facility ‘fall significan­tly below the Premier League and perhaps even Championsh­ip standards.’

The Chronicle understand­s these plans have now been given the green light by planning officers under delegated powers in a private meeting and a decision notice has been issued.

Bulldozers have already been on site in recent weeks carrying out the necessary ground works, which do not require planning permission, so the Magpies can actually start work on extending and improving the actual main building as soon as possible.

Although the owners still plan to build a new state-of-the- art training ground in the future, they were keen to get the absolute most out of the current facility in the interim by introducin­g hydrothera­py and plunge pools; improved changing rooms, new doctor and physio rooms, an updated presentati­on room, a modern players’ lounge and an extended dining area among a number of other new features.

Boss Eddie Howe has had an input on the plans in a bid to create an environmen­t which flows better and enables players and staff to interact easier.

The existing building has had various short-term additions made to it over the years, which has made it feel like a maze as players and staff regularly cross over.

To rectify that, new doctor and physio rooms would be located next to the players’ area and the coaching staff’s offices to take just one example.

We previously revealed the planning committee at North Tyneside Council was working towards a target decision date of today after a host of ecological surveys took place.

Although the main building at the training ground was initially found to have several roosting opportunit­ies for bats, crucially no roosts were discovered during subsequent nocturnal surveys. An ecological impact assessment by Total Ecology did recommend building work took place outside bird nesting season, between March and August inclusive, and this is one of the 25 conditions planning permission is subject to.

However, work can start sooner if a survey by a suitably- qualified ecologist has confirmed the absence of nesting birds immediatel­y beforehand.

The site was also surveyed during an ecological walkover for the presence of invasive non-native species.

Cotoneaste­r was found and it has been recommende­d a specialist company removes it.

Regardless of when the work starts this summer, the news is a huge boost for Howe and his players ahead of the start of pre-season training on Friday.

The Newcastle boss previously said of the plans: “Your day-to-day environmen­t is so important.

“We’re attracting or trying to attract world-class players to the club and you need to give them an environmen­t which matches their status.

“The grass and the playing facilities are excellent here.

“The building itself which we’re changing in and working in needs updating so, fingers crossed, everything goes smoothly and we can make those adjustment­s during the summer with a longer-term plan of moving training grounds.

“I don’t know how long that will take but there are ambitious plans.

“It’s what the club needs to sustain where it wants to go in the future.”

The building, itself, that we’re changing in and working in definitely needs updating so, fingers crossed, everything goes smoothly

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 ?? ?? Newcastle’s training ground is getting upgraded
Newcastle’s training ground is getting upgraded

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