Portsmouth News

Calls for rethink on Tipner West - with £10m already spent

Calls go out to rethink 3,500-home project after £10m already spent

- By BEN FISHWICK Chief reporter ben.fishwick@thenews.co.uk

CALLS have been made for a rethink on building a 3,500home super-peninsula after £10m has already been spent on the ‘gamble’.

Opposition is growing against the £1bn plan at Tipner West dreamed up by Portsmouth City Council.

Some £4.6m has been spent on planning consultant­s, £3.8m on snapping up land and £600,000 on survey costs.

The Liberal Democrat administra­tion has agreed to fork out another £7.5m in preparing a planning applicatio­n and land acquisitio­n. Talks are ongoing over the sale of the John Pounds scrapyard with a deal struck but not finalised.

All of this is being spent while wildlife conservati­onists and heritage experts warn against the ambitious 140-acre scheme, now called Lennox Point.

Labour councillor­s Cal Corkery and Judith Smyth want a rethink and fresh report on viable alternativ­es on the huge site.

In a motion set to be debated on Monday, they said: ‘Members of the Liberal Democrat Cabinet have themselves expressed concerns about being able to secure permission for their current proposals but are still prepared to gamble £18.3m of public money on something that may well not go ahead.’

Nearly 24,000 people have signed a petition run by the Hampshire & Isle of Wight Wildlife Trust and backed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds.

They fear 67 acres of protected habitat will be concreted over, as well as seven acres of protected land.

Tipner West is a site of special scientific interest, a special protection area and a recognised important wetland.

The Labour councillor­s said: ‘Not only would the plans cause unacceptab­le damage to the local environmen­t and wildlife, we are also concerned the kind of developmen­t being pursued is not what our city needs.

‘Despite most of the Tipner West site being publicly owned land the current proposals include just 30 per cent affordable housing meaning the majority of new properties on the site will be expensive luxury homes out of reach of many local people.

They added: ‘It’s time to pause and rethink the Tipner West project to ensure value for money is achieved, the environmen­t is protected and the maximum possible levels of affordable housing are delivered.’

Councillor Hugh Mason, cabinet member for city devel

opment, said he is against any pausing or slowing of the project - and that council officers keep the project under review. If we were to stop it we would lose money and we might even lose staff,’ he said.

Cllr Mason added: ‘I don’t think there is any alternativ­e to the site which we have got - not in the southern part of the UK.’

A delayed public consultati­on is expected this summer, with at least four further

opportunit­ies for people to make comments before planning is decided 2023/24.

Lennox Point could provide around a million square feet of marine employment space - generating 2,000 jobs, it’s hoped.

Cllr Mason said the plans would have to meet the objections of environmen­tal groups and by law boost biodiversi­ty.

Scheme planners are looking at compensati­ng for the loss of intertidal mud and short grassland used by Brent geese, dunlin and black-tailed godwit birds.

Full council will hear the debate on Monday.

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 ?? Picture: Portsmouth City Council ?? PROJECT How Tipner West could look if the city council’s plans are approved
Picture: Portsmouth City Council PROJECT How Tipner West could look if the city council’s plans are approved

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