Western Daily Press

Recycling centre could move 6 miles out of city

- STEPHEN SUMNER Local Democracy Reporter

BATH’S recycling centre is set to move six miles out of the city so the site can be redevelope­d with nearly 180 riverside homes.

Bath and North East Somerset Council is in early talks about consolidat­ing the activities at Midland Road to Pixash Lane in Keynsham, where the recycling centre will be redevelope­d to meet demand for the next 40 years.

The authority’s developmen­t company, Aequus, has already submitted plans to repurpose the Bath site with 176 flats as part of the 2,281-home Western Riverside masterplan.

The “extremely compact” Midland Road depot, which has been in use since the early 1980s, is open to the public and is the destinatio­n for trucks collecting waste and recycling from across the city. Its closure has been on the cards since the masterplan was approved in 2010 but this is the first time the council has revealed where it could move to.

Its facilities – along with the vehicle depot at Ashmead Road in Keynsham and the public MOT garage in Locksbrook Road in Bath – could be consolidat­ed onto a single site in Pixash Lane, which is already home to the town’s recycling centre but will expand to four hectares.

Before the council submits formal proposals it has requested a scoping opinion to see what needs to be included in the applicatio­n.

Documents submitted with the request say the Midland Road site is extremely compact and demand is growing, with traffic queuing onto the main road. The council cited the same issue as a reason when it was working out how to safely reopen the waste depot after the coronaviru­s lockdown.

The nearby Destructor Bridge opened to northbound traffic last week, seven weeks after it closed.

The request says: “The council operates collection services for household refuse and recycling from all its households (nearly 84,000) and has a duty of care for the transfer and disposal of household waste. To carry out the service efficientl­y, safely and to a consistent­ly high standard, the council needs operationa­l depots that are well-designed and maintained to accommodat­e the necessary infrastruc­ture.”

As well as the issues at Midland Road, it says traffic regularly queues down Pixash Lane to reach Keynsham’s recycling centre and its compact nature does not allow for a quick turnaround. The creation of a purpose-built facility will meet demand for the next 40 years. The facility could be in place by the end of 2022, allowing the space at Midland Road to be released to meet “the much-needed demand for new housing”.

Aequus’s planning applicatio­n, yet to be decided, says: “Should planning permission be granted, the constructi­on of the proposed residentia­l developmen­t will begin once the site is vacated. Aequus’s objective is to deliver a high quality, high density developmen­t which will deliver a housing mix of predominan­tly smaller open market dwellings, typically of one and two bedrooms, with a view to meeting the demand for more affordable homes for the city’s economical­ly active population.”

The flats, a quarter of which would be affordable, would be built in eight buildings up to five storeys high.

The plans also propose a shop and parking for 128 cars and 214 bikes.

B&NES Council will decide the fate of both applicatio­ns.

 ??  ?? The recycling centre on Midland Road
The recycling centre on Midland Road

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