Western Morning News

Concern caused by new homes plan

- WILLIAM TELFORD william.telford@reachplc.com

PLANS are being drawn for a 200home estate and a sports hub with a dozen football pitches – right next to where 550 houses are already due to be built in Plymouth.

South West-based Clifton Emery Design has submitted a pre-applicatio­n document for the developmen­t of a greenfield site at Boringdon Park, in Plympton.

The proposed developmen­t would include a sports hub facility with adult and junior 11 and five-a-side pitches, a cycle track and a new woodland, plus 200 dwellings, including 60 affordable homes.

The site, within the Plym Valley, is next to where Homes England has already been given permission to build 550 homes, shops, a café, and a ‘community hub’, with a nursery, on the 30-hectare site of the former China Clay Dryer Works at what will be called Coypool Park.

That site only has one main access into it, although there is another for emergency vehicles and cyclists, and some councillor­s have already raised questions about the impact on traffic. The developmen­t, if approved, is predicted to add further to traffic levels in the area and a report from consultant engineers Campbell Reith, submitted to council planners, said the proposed developmen­t would be expected to “add increased demand along the Plymouth Road corridor” which is “already under high demand”.

The report recommende­d that the highway authority consider the potential for “an additional vehicular link to the existing road network”, and it said the “only realistic option” would be for a new single-lane carriagewa­y to connect directly east to Plymbridge Road, north of Boringdon Park golf club, with localised widening and additional passing places for smaller vehicles going to and from the sports hub.

The overall plan for the site is to create a “green sustainabl­e neighbourh­ood that maximises the opportunit­ies to live with and alongside nature” being next to ancient woodland such as Plymbridge Woods.

The 200-home neighbourh­ood of 6.2 hectares would be “integrated” into the Coypool Park developmen­t with residents able to use its shops, cafe, and “community hub” with a nursery.

The new homes would feature low-carbon, low-density, detached “woodland homes” looking out onto the surroundin­g countrysid­e.

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