Bristol Post

Lost the plot Councillor­s blast allotment bid

- Tristan CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com

APLAN to create 700 new allotment plots next to Leigh Woods in what would be Bristol’s first commercial allotments have been criticised by local councillor­s, who say the idea should have to go through the planning process.

The Post revealed last week that a new company called Roots were planning to turn a field on the corner of the A369 Portishead road and the entrance to Leigh Woods in Abbots Leigh, near Bristol, into a 20-acre allotments site.

The company – a group of four young environmen­tally-minded entreprene­urs – have already set up and opened a smaller site on the edge of Bath, which is believed to be the country’s first commercial­lyrun allotments that aren’t set up by a local authority or an allotments community associatio­n.

Earlier this year, the Post revealed that, as the site in Bath opened for the first time, Roots had plans to open a site in Bristol, where waiting lists for local authority-run allotment plots can be anything from 18 months to five years or more.

The site in Bristol was unveiled as being a 20-acre field next to Leigh Woods, but the news does not appear to have gone down well

with Abbots Leigh Parish Council. The Post understand­s the parish council has met and written to North Somerset Council, asking it to require Roots to obtain planning permission – something Roots’ founder William Gay said it didn’t think it needed to do.

And Forestry England, which owns the majority of the entrance road into Leigh Woods that would also be the access to the Roots allotment field, has confirmed that no agreement has been offered to grant access to the field.

The field itself is owned by the Wills Family and rented out to a tenant farmer to graze cattle at present.

Simon Talbot-Ponsonby, chair of Abbots Leigh Parish Council, said: “We believe that there wouldn’t be a great demand for allotments from the immediate neighbourh­ood, as Abbots Leigh properties are fortunate to generally have fairly large gardens.

“The allotments will therefore be catering for a wider catchment which will inevitably attract a significan­t amount of traffic.

“We are told that, at the Bath site which is next to the Park and Ride site, there is parking for around 30 cars.

“On a like-for-like basis this site would require space for at least 70 cars.

“The general perception within the village of Abbots Leigh is that the impact of the allotments with all their ancillary buildings will be huge, a site a quarter of the size might be acceptable.

“The scale of this proposal would have a dramatic impact on the landscape, which is located in open green belt countrysid­e on a very well used long distance national footpath, The Monarch’s Way.

“The comment most heard in the village is ‘a blot on the landscape,’” he added.

A spokespers­on for Forestry England said: “The majority of the avenue at Leigh Woods is owned freehold by Forestry England.

“While we have been approached by Roots, no agreement has been offered to grant them access to the proposed allotment site.”

Roots’ co-founder William Gay told the Post the plan for allotments in Abbots Leigh did not require planning permission, and the location was a good one, on a main road in an area that already has a range of uses, from woodland to sports grounds.

He said 30 per cent of the allotment pitches, which range from £10 a month to £50 a month, had already been booked up for next spring.

 ?? ?? William Gay, Joshua Gay, Ed Morrison and Christian Samuel, who have set up Roots, a business that sets up and runs allotments
William Gay, Joshua Gay, Ed Morrison and Christian Samuel, who have set up Roots, a business that sets up and runs allotments

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