Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Land earmarked for car park under water after floods

Critics say spaces would be lost to rainfall

- By Joe Wright

Land controvers­ially earmarked for the Wincheap park and ride expansion was submerged under water this weekend after the Stour broke its banks. Campaigner­s say the divisive project, which would see the car park enlarge by 228 spaces, should be ditched as a result of inevitable floods that will force the site to be out of action. But Canterbury City Council still wants to press ahead with the project and admits flooding will be part and parcel of building a car park beside a river. Authority spokesman Rob Davies said: “It was made clear in the planning committee report that part of the site of the park and ride extension is within the flood zone.

“In the same way as part of the Sainsbury’s car park and the coach park at Kingsmead flood from time to time, the lowest section of the park and ride site particular­ly in the north west corner, covering around 50 spaces, will also flood at certain times of the year.

“All of these issues have been properly considered and the loss of this relatively small number of spaces is certainly not a reason to abandon the whole project.

“It should also be stressed that the internal road linking the western section to the eastern section, which is the main parking area, is higher, meaning access to all these spaces would still be available even at the high water levels seen over the weekend.”

The car park expansion scheme was rubber-stamped by the planning committee in the autumn, but full council deferred making a final decision on the plans until next year. Hundreds of opponents have hit out at the project due to the proposed destructio­n of meadows, and they have now added this weekend’s flooding to their ammunition. Professor Richard Norman said: “If the land was now a car park, it would be unusable. “The heavy rain last week which caused the flooding is by no means unpreceden­ted.

“The planning proposals referred to a one-in-20-year flood risk - experience suggests the flooding we have seen this weekend would be much more frequent than that. Prediction­s for climate change show that flooding events in this country are likely to increase in frequency and severity. “Virtually the whole of the park and ride extension would therefore have been out of action. As is recognised in the Local Plan, strategies to improve climate resilience necessitat­e the avoidance of developmen­t on functional floodplain­s. “Good reason, we suggest, to rethink the plan to locate the park and ride on this site.” Meanwhile, the Conservati­ve parliament­ary candidate Anna Firth has weighed in on the issue this week.

She is calling on the Tory-run council to carry out a formal review of the plans and says campaigner­s have made “compelling” cases against the proposals.

‘The heavy rain last week which caused the flooding is by no means unpreceden­ted’

 ??  ?? Dozens of campaigner­s previously took part in a protest
Dozens of campaigner­s previously took part in a protest

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