The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Communal living and tiny homes experiment coming to forest in Fife

- BY DANYEL VANREENEN, LOCAL DEMOCRACY REPORTER

Acommunal living and “tiny housing” experiment will soon be dropped into a forest in Fife. Four families living in 12x3m-wide homes could soon move into a commune in Pitmedden Forest, Auchtermuc­hty.

North East Fife planning councillor­s signed off on the tiny home proposals from Paula Cowie yesterday afternoon.

“It’s a very love and peace type thing – living the hippy dream except that it’s not San Francisco and it’s not quite as sunny,” SNP councillor David MacDiarmid said.

“I’m fully in support of this type of thing, and the more we see of these around Fife the better, as far as I’m concerned.”

Lib Dem councillor Donald Lothian added: “This is certainly an interestin­g and innovative project. We haven’t really seen anything like this before – at least I haven’t.

“It is sort of cutting edge, which is interestin­g.

“As we have a housing crisis in this country, all things should be considered for the future.”

The proposals are for four tiny homes and a communal building to support a small community that “can live within the Earth’s resources”.

The project will give four families the opportunit­y to house their self-built tiny homes near Pitmedden Forest on Reediehill Farm.

These will be small, energy-efficient and moveable houses built to a “high environmen­tal standard”.

They will require minimal heating, water and have no sewage output.

“The families will be committing to natureconn­ected community living,” planning papers said.

“It will be an example of

affordable low-impact living for families and small sustainabl­e communitie­s.”

Residents will be carefully selected by Ms Cowie.

They will each live by a “community agreement” to travel sustainabl­y, develop or maintain sustainabl­e livelihood­s, work together towards self-sufficient food production, and live in harmony with the land.

That community agreement and ethos is a large part of why the applicatio­n was successful.

Planning officers said that under normal circumstan­ces, the National Planning framework forbids housing developmen­t in the countrysid­e. The ecocentric nature of the project makes it acceptable – subject to some rules and conditions.

The council has only granted temporary permission for the next 10 years. Similarly, if Ms

Cowie steps down as project manager, the council will need to reapprove the developmen­t based on her replacemen­t.

These conditions ensure that the site’s “ecocredent­ials are maintained” over time.

Tory councillor Robin Lawson called the developmen­t a “bipolar type of applicatio­n” for the mixed bag of support and objections it has received.

There were nine public objections and 20 letters of public support. Transporta­tion managers also objected to the developmen­t.

The site will be at the end of a single-track isolated public road, which goes against transporta­tion policy. Planning officers argued that this “is not considered to be an orthodox proposal”. They said: “(The developmen­t) seeks to vastly reduce the need for convention­al car ownership and use.”

There is also a bus route two miles away that can “easily be reached by foot or cycle”.

The applicatio­n was ultimately approved unanimousl­y by North East planning councillor­s.

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 ?? ?? PROJECT: An impression of what the homes could look like, and the area of Pitmedden Forest, below.
PROJECT: An impression of what the homes could look like, and the area of Pitmedden Forest, below.

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