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11 November 2009: Eastern Daily Press
Eco-town project takes major step
forward
by David Bale; Ed Foss
The Norfolk eco-town project took a giant leap forward last night
as councillors agreed to put in a £28.4m bid to the government
to help kick start the project.
The 4,150 home 'eco community' at Rackheath could be the country's
first eco town, built by Barratt Homes and with the involvement
of leading names such as the low carbon innovations centre at the
University of East Anglia, Building Partnerships and LSI Architects.
The plan has caused major upset in communities to the north east
of Norwich, with people concerned about overdevelopment, transport
problems and whether the eco claims will turn out to be genuine.
Last night, an extraordinary meeting of Broadland District Council
was called to discuss the multi-million pound bid.
And despite opposition from members of the public at the meeting,
councillors voted by 21 to 7 to put in the bid.
People arriving at the council offices in Thorpe St Andrew had
been met by protesters holding placards, which said 'Stop Norwich
Urbanisation - Consultation means listening not just telling'.
Steven Heard, chairman of Stop Norwich Urbanisation (Snub), spoke
at the meeting, and said: “The overwhelming response from
local residents has been the confirmation that they do not want
to see large-scale developments in this area.
"We all recognise the need for new homes as many of us have families
growing up in the area. However, the overwhelming desire is to
see these new houses dispersed over the existing communities, thus
breathing life and bringing new people into villages and settlements.
"Broadland council seems hell-bent on pushing through plans for
large scale development, despite what local residents tell us they
want. There is a feeling there is a democratic deficiency in Broadland.”
The meeting heard a great amount of detail about the Rackheath
plans, including the suggestion that a 200-home 'exemplar' could
be built on 17 acres of the site as a first phase to show how the
larger town would work.
Building on this initial phase could start as soon as next year,
the meeting was told.
If the £28.4m is successful, it would be used to pay for:
- £5m for the exemplar phase
- £1.92m for a sustainable water strategy study
- £4.84m to 'retrofit' existing Rackheath homes and businesses to
improve their energy efficiency
- £1.25m for biodiversity and green infrastructure
- £5.5m for bus services to employment centres
- £2.5m for walking and cycling links to Norwich and Wroxham.
During the meeting, Andrew Proctor, deputy leader of the council
and portfolio holder for planning policy and conservation, said
they were not discussing the scheme, but just a bidding document
to central government for a share of the millions up for grabs.
In moving the motion, he said: “We are committed to no growth
without the underlying infrastructure.”
However, James Joyce, Liberal Democrat group leader on the council,
said that despite initially being in favour of the plans, he was
now against them.
Liberal Democrat councillor Ben McGilvray , who represents the
Wroxham ward, said: “The residents don't feel they have been
listened to and the people who are supposedly in favour of it,
seem to have vanished into thin air.
"These extra houses will put the existing infrastructure under
strain and damage the quality of life of people in the area. You
could
say that the eco town plan is a bribe from government, giving us
cash in return for building houses.”
Fellow Lib Dem councillor Stuart Beadle called for the plans to
be voted against “lock, stock and barrel”.
However, Christopher Green, Conservative councillor for Wroxham,
John Fisher, portfolio holder for environmental policy development,
and fellow Conservative councillor Kim Davis-Claydon all supported
the plans before the vote was taken.
Afterwards, Snub member Stewart Lindsay said the metering had witnessed “the
death of democracy”.
Meanwhile, Mr McGilvray said that although they had lost the battle,
the war was not over.
Broadland District Council, along with its partners in the Greater
Norwich Development Partnership (GNDP), has been promoting the
area to the north east of Norwich for eco-town status because it
considers this provides the best location for new growth in the
district.
The East of England Plan requires the Greater Norwich area to plan
for a minimum of 37,500 new homes by 2021. Officials say that Broadland's
share is approximately 12,000 homes.
The eco-town would see improved and more visible public transport,
the delivery of a package of low energy, low carbon and water conservation
retro-fit measures, a carbon emissions pledge and monitoring system
to track and monitor community commitments and the production of
community handbooks.
Last night's meeting also looked at the eco-town's need for new
schools, doctors surgeries, dentists, police units, libraries,
sports centres and parks, when they would be built and how big
they would need to be.
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