Stockport Express

Golf club ‘saved’ from developers as plan rejected

- DECLAN CAREY

ACONTROVER­SIAL plan to build hundreds of new homes on a Stockport golf course has been refused by councillor­s.

Stockport council’s planning committee voted to reject the applicatio­n from Hollins Strategic Land by seven votes to five after more than an hour of debate, despite the plan being recommende­d for approval by planning officers.

It would have seen 278 houses built on the land, half of which would be designated as “affordable”, and included contributi­ons to local sports facilities and green spaces.

The design submitted to the council included creating an urban park, tennis courts, and allotments as part of the developmen­t alongside new homes.

Before the crucial vote, residents in the area campaigned to stop the building work going ahead, with a petition to “save” the club being signed by more than 1,000 people.

The applicant questioned whether the golf club would be financiall­y viable in the future after full membership of the club was closed in 2018, but campaigner­s say there are more than a thousand people who would be interested in joining Gatley Golf Club if they were allowed.

Sharon Lindsay, an organiser of the Gatley Golf Course Action Group, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that she was “delighted” with the decision.

She said: “It was entirely the correct decision.

“1,200 people have said they would be interested in joining the golf club as social or full members, to make sure that this really beautiful open space which is loved and enjoyed by everyone locally [remains].

“That we can now come together and protect this for the future, and everyone can come together to enjoy it as the community facility which it is.”

Coun Anna CharlesJon­es, leader of the Independen­t Ratepayers in the Heald Green ward, voted against the applicatio­n and said: “The points that I keep coming back to are the loss of the green lung, and that phrase once it’s gone it’s gone forever.”

Labour and Co-operative Party Coun Rachel Wise said: “As a councillor I speak to people who are struggling to find somewhere to live.

“I have to give very significan­t weight to the suggestion that we build 140 affordable homes in part of the borough where average sales values are £366,000, that’s an extraordin­ary amount of money for somebody who has a young family, for someone who hasn’t had secure housing and secure work.”

The council’s planning officer said he was satisfied with the access roads to the site, despite it being raised as a potential problem by residents who live in the area.

The applicatio­n was previously discussed by councillor­s in December but the decision was delayed after the chair, Coun Steve Gribbon, asked for more informatio­n about the viability of the golf course.

The rejection will come as a blow to Stockport’s plan to create new affordable homes in the borough, where there is a huge demand for housing.

Much of the council’s focused for new homes is currently based on brownfield sites around the town centre, rather than green spaces across the borough.

While a decision on Gatley Golf Club’s future was reached last night, the applicatio­n could still face an appeal.

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 ?? ?? ●●Gatley Golf Club campaigner­s at the meeting and (right) an impression of houses planned for the site
●●Gatley Golf Club campaigner­s at the meeting and (right) an impression of houses planned for the site

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