Follow up to earlier post showing hot spots in Devon and Somerset.

Follow up to earlier post showing hot spots in Devon and Somerset.

For one week only, adults who are aged 40 and over can visit Exeter’s vaccination centre without having made a pre-booking to receive their second dose of the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine.
Anita Merritt www.devonlive.com
From today (June 21) until Sunday (June 27), drop-in appointments are being offered at Greendale Business Park which became Exeter’s mass coronavirus vaccination centre last month after relocating from Westpoint.
They will be available from 8.30am to 7pm, and are only available for certain people.
Anyone within one of these groups will be eligible:
Those who do attend are being advised that the centre will also be dealing with booked appointments so there will be a wait, and that it is only for second doses of Oxford AstraZeneca.
An NHS spokesperson said: “Please continue to check social media for further information, in particular whether we need to close early due to demand.”
Devon has recorded 132 new positive coronavirus cases in the latest 24-hour reporting period, the newest data has revealed.
The new cases in Devon can be broken down according to council areas as follows: six in East Devon, 45 in Exeter, 10 in Mid Devon, six in North Devon, 40 in Plymouth, two in South Hams, four in Teignbridge, 11 in Torbay, eight in Torridge, and zero in West Devon.
People have been urged to take a lateral flow test twice a week if they are out and about. You can see where they are available by clicking here, and they are free.
Nationally 9,284 new cases have been recorded, making a total of 65,558 new Covid-19 cases in the past week.
Last week, Devon County Council said the largest volume of positive Covid-19 cases are among young people and the younger working age population, 20 to 39 year olds.
A spokesperson said: “It’s probably less to do with the fact they’re working – we’re not seeing an especially high number of outbreaks in workplace settings – and more likely that these age groups are just beginning to be vaccinated, so until now they haven’t been as well protected as older, already vaccinated, age groups.
“It is also likely that this is an age group that tends to mix more socially. We know that increased socialising, particularly indoors, increases the risk of transmission, and with pubs, restaurants and many other places open again, the opportunity for social contact is much more available.
“So, here’s a plea to everyone, including this younger working age population. Please be mindful. We’ve still got to be careful.
“There are still rules, especially around social distancing and face coverings indoors, and we need to follow them. And please take up the vaccination when you’re invited to do so.”
If you are eligible and wish to book a first vaccine appointment, please visit www.nhs.uk/conditions/coronavirus-covid-19/coronavirus-vaccination/book-coronavirus-vaccination
Tower House Market Square Axminster EX13 5NJRef. No: 21/1642/LBC | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
11 Warren Close West Hill Ottery St Mary EX11 1XBRef. No: 21/1635/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
22 Feniton Gardens Feniton Honiton EX14 3DGRef. No: 21/1634/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Bixley Haven Broadway Woodbury Exeter EX5 1NRRef. No: 21/1614/TCA | Validated: Wed 09 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
12 Knowle Village Knowle Budleigh Salterton EX9 6ALRef. No: 21/1620/FUL | Validated: Wed 09 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Railway Station Lympstone Village The Strand LympstoneRef. No: 21/1626/TCA | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
8 Essington Close Exmouth EX8 4QYRef. No: 21/1606/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
4 Alma Terrace Coburg Road Sidmouth EX10 8NQRef. No: 21/1604/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
4 Alma Terrace Coburg Road Sidmouth EX10 8NQRef. No: 21/1605/LBC | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
43 St Andrews Road ExmouthRef. No: 21/1592/FUL | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Pamos Farm Upottery Honiton EX14 9PBRef. No: 21/1590/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
23 Oak Close Ottery St Mary EX11 1BBRef. No: 21/1588/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Atlantis Sowden Lane Exmouth EX8 5ADRef. No: 21/1587/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
52 Canterbury Way Exmouth EX8 5QQRef. No: 21/1581/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
2 Phillipps Avenue Exmouth EX8 3HYRef. No: 21/1578/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Sea Views Common Hill Beer Seaton EX12 3AQRef. No: 21/1577/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
The Cottage Rocombe Lyme Regis DT7 3RRRef. No: 21/1571/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Slewton Two Whimple Exeter EX5 2QPRef. No: 21/1563/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
52 Pine Park Road Honiton EX14 2HRRef. No: 21/1561/FUL | Validated: Wed 09 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Higher Musgrove Dunkeswell Abbey Honiton EX14 4RPRef. No: 21/1548/CPE | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Hill Barn Gore Lane Uplyme Lyme Regis DT7 3RJRef. No: 21/1550/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
10 Beeches Close Woodbury Exeter EX5 1JNRef. No: 21/1555/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
34 Cranford Avenue Exmouth EX8 2QARef. No: 21/1537/VAR | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Stanley House Kilmington Axminster EX13 7SHRef. No: 21/1538/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
1 The Red Lodge 11 Elwyn Road Exmouth EX8 2ELRef. No: 21/1532/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
10 Brimpenny Road Exmouth EX8 4NHRef. No: 21/1530/FUL | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Little Winters Rocombe Lyme Regis DT7 3RRRef. No: 21/1533/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Wayside Branscombe Seaton EX12 3BARef. No: 21/1521/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Hay Close Bungalow Stockland Honiton EX14 9DXRef. No: 21/1525/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Whiteslade Farm Dalwood Axminster EX13 7EURef. No: 21/1515/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Wayside Branscombe Seaton EX12 3BARef. No: 21/1522/LBC | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Nethercombe Lodge Barline Beer Seaton EX12 3LWRef. No: 21/1511/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Land West Of Burnside Gamberlake AxminsterRef. No: 21/1501/FUL | Validated: Wed 09 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Crealy Theme Park And Resort Sidmouth Road Clyst St Mary Exeter EX5 1DRRef. No: 21/1481/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
East Devon Log Bank Land At Knapp Copse SidburyRef. No: 21/1493/FUL | Validated: Wed 09 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Wilmington White Sand Pit WilmingtonRef. No: 21/1483/OUT | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Payhembury Vc School Payhembury Honiton EX14 3HTRef. No: 21/1494/LBC | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Burrows Cottage Upottery Honiton EX14 9QTRef. No: 21/1468/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Land Opposite Hill Farm Gore Lane UplymeRef. No: 21/1466/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
3 Lyme Street Axminster EX13 5AURef. No: 21/1428/FUL | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Unit 1 Pound Lane Exmouth EX8 4NPRef. No: 21/1426/FUL | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
9 Lower Wheathill Sidmouth EX10 9UARef. No: 21/1424/FUL | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
29 Marions Way Exmouth EX8 4LFRef. No: 21/1434/FUL | Validated: Wed 09 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Park Farm Farringdon Exeter EX5 2JDRef. No: 21/1436/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Field View And Hunters Croft Charmouth Road Axminster EX13 5STRef. No: 21/1362/CPE | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Underhill House Underhill Lympstone Exmouth EX8 5HHRef. No: 21/1361/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Land At Oak Lodge Holcombe Lane Ottery St Mary EX11 1PQRef. No: 21/1357/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Flat 2 Sidbury House Buckley Road Sidbury Sidmouth EX10 0SLRef. No: 21/1341/FUL | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
The Garden House Yarcombe Honiton EX14 9AERef. No: 21/1334/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Flat 2 Sidbury House Buckley Road Sidbury Sidmouth EX10 0SLRef. No: 21/1342/LBC | Validated: Fri 11 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
1A And 1B Gibson Close Exmouth EX8 4BSRef. No: 21/1199/FUL | Validated: Mon 07 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
Greencore Food Togo Exeter Airport Business Park Clyst Honiton Exeter EX5 2LJRef. No: 21/1100/ADV | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
The Pines Toadpit Lane West Hill Ottery St Mary EX11 1TRRef. No: 21/0872/FUL | Validated: Thu 10 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision
1-8 Burroughs Almshouses Church Lane Broadclyst EX5 3EQRef. No: 21/0314/LBC | Validated: Tue 08 Jun 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision“New student flats, cinemas, thousands of new homes, river restoration works, health centres, new roads, hotels, Dawlish railway line works and town centre regeneration schemes are all among the list of plans that have either been put forward or seen councillors cast votes for approval or rejection.”
New cinema and giant indoor climbing centre for Exeter
Daniel Clark www.devonlive.com
It may not necessarily feel like it, but we are nearly half-way through 2021.
And with lockdowns, coronavirus restrictions, and a slow return towards normality, you can easily be forgiven for missing some of the bigger stories that have happened in the past six months.
New student flats, cinemas, thousands of new homes, river restoration works, health centres, new roads, hotels, Dawlish railway line works and town centre regeneration schemes are all among the list of plans that have either been put forward or seen councillors cast votes for approval or rejection.
But the Local Democracy Reporting Service has taken a look back at the biggest planning applications that have both been submitted, and determined, by councils, so far this year.
Plans to demolish an historic Exeter city centre pub and replace it with student flats have been resubmitted to planners after the time limit for work to begin expired.
Back in October 2017, Exeter City Council’s planning committee granted approval for the major student flats plan for Exeter’s The King Billy, which would also see a commercial unit and a restaurant/pub at street level.
But as more than three years later, work on the redevelopment of the Longbrook Street site has not begun, the extant planning permission has expired, forcing developer Rengen to go through the planning process again.
It has resubmitted the application, which is identical to the one that was given the go-ahead by planners more than three years ago.
The student flats plans would see 108 bed space student accommodation above a retail unit and a pub/restaurant on the ground floor, over 6 and 7 storeys.
The King Billy pub in Exeter closed in July 2018
When the scheme was recommended for, and subsequently granted, planning permission in 2017, officers in their report said: “It is considered that the scheme represent an opportunity for the site, which has remained, in part, vacant for many years to be developed for uses which are appropriate for this location.”
Fresh plans to open a new indoor climbing centre in Exeter have been unveiled after a previous bid fell through.
Last June, Grip UK Ltd’s plans to convert a vacant building in Mallard Road, in the Sowton Industrial Estate, into an indoor climbing centre, were approved by Exeter City Council under delegated powers.
But discussions with the freeholder of the building did not proceed further and therefore alternative premises have had to be considered to accommodate the use, a statement with the new planning application says.
And new plans to convert a vacant warehouse building and two-storey office accommodation at 6 Marsh Green Road, Exeter, into an indoor climbing centre have now been submitted to Exeter City Council.
The venture would be operated by the Climbing Hangar, which already has a site in Plymouth and which provides a unique leisure experience comprising a centre for climbers of all levels to practice bouldering.
Plans for new student flats right in the heart of Exeter city centre which would also see vacant shops brought back to life have been lodged.
SJR has submitted plans to Exeter City Council which would see the upper floors of 36, 37 and 38 High Street converted into student accommodation, with the reconfiguration of the ground floor retail units.
Numbers 36 and 37 were previously occupied by Paperchase, while 38 is currently occupied by Mountain Warehouse, with retail space spread over three storeys.
The plans would see the unoccupied basements brought back into use to support the retail uses, while the redundant upper floors would be converted into affordable student accommodation, with a total of 24 bedrooms configured within eleven self-contained student apartments.
A key objective of the proposal is to invest in the building to maintain retail uses on the ground floor and bring life back into this area of the high street, documents with the planning application state.
Artist impression of the student flats plan for Exeter High Street (Image: Willmore Iles Architects)
It is proposed that the building will be named ‘Martin’s Gate’, in reference to one of seven historic gates used to enclose Cathedral Close, one of which was located in Martin’s Lane itself which will get an improved entrance under the scheme.
Long-awaited plans for the demolition and replacement of a huge building widely considered to be one of the ugliest in Devon have finally been unveiled.
The Civic Centre on the banks of the River Taw in Barnstaple has been sat empty since 2016 when owners Devon County Council withdrew its staff from the property. That followed the relocation of North Devon Council staff to new premises at Brynsworthy on the outskirts of Barnstaple back in 2015.
The 10-storey 1960s-built office block has been empty ever since, but Churchill Retirement Living Limited has now submitted plans for the site at North Walk.
Artist impression of the proposed redevelopment of the North Devon Civic Centre (Image: NPA Visuals)
Its scheme, submitted to North Devon Council planners, would see the building partially demolished and then redeveloped into a five and six-storey retirement living development comprising 77 retirement apartments including communal facilities, access, car parking and landscaping.
The proposed development comprises of 49 one-bedroom and 28 two-bedroom apartments, with a statement in support of the application saying that it is acknowledged that there is a “critical’’ need for the delivery of older people housing and a significant pressing need within the administrative boundary of the council, to which the proposal will contribute towards delivering these much needed homes, including older people housing.
Grand plans for the refurbishment of the Decoy Country Park play park to provide excitement, fun, movement and adventure have been unveiled.
The play park in Newton Abbot will be closed from June 6 for approximately eight weeks while Teignbridge District Council carry out the works.
Last year, councillors agreed to spend a six-figure sum on refurbishing the three play zones at Decoy Country Park, with the cost of the refurbishment funded by the Community Infrastructure Levy and Section 106 funds gained through the planning process.
The works have been delayed as a result of the coronavirus crisis with them initially set to be carried out in 2020, but when complete, it aims to ensure the provision of an updated exciting facility which maintains Decoy Park as a popular outdoor attraction.
And while most of the scheme doesn’t require formal planning permission, the provision of a new 5.4m high timber tree house to replace the existing 5.62m high castle unit does, and the council has submitted a planning application for the works.
The new tree house will be of a similar timber construction to the existing castle unit, will feature a multi deck at a height of 1.45m and a twisting tube side that descends from the tallest deck on the structure at 2.8m, and will feature multiple routes up to the highest platform to ensure good safe movement around the play equipment.
Artist impression of the proposed refurbishment of Decoy Play Park
Documents with the planning application also reveal further details of what the refurbishment to the play park will consist of, with the overall design aimed at providing as naturalistic a play area as possible, while recognising the need to provide robust play equipment and safety surfacing that can be used all year round.
There will be a junior area, a toddler area and an adventure area as part of the works, with new hard landscaping to make it more usable by removing some of the worst mud spots, while new seating areas will also be included in the improvement scheme.
Revised plans for the demolition of a former hospital which would see custom built housing in its place have been unveiled.
Bovey Tracey Hospital dates back to 1931, but was closed by health officials in 2017, although the inpatient ward at the hospital had closed in December 2015.
Artist impression of the housing plans for the former Bovey Tracey Hospital (Image: H2land Ltd)
The Furzeleigh Lane building had been registered with Teignbridge Council as an asset of community value, but no viable use or community group came forward with a bid for the site.
Last year, plans by H2land Ltd on behalf of the Torbay and South Devon Foundation Trust, which owns the site, were submitted to Teignbridge District Council to demolish the building and build six new homes in its place.
Those plans have now been superseded by a revised scheme which would see four self and custom-build new homes provided on the site so that homeowners can tailor their properties to suit specific individual requirements.
Plans for Teignmouth’s new health and wellbeing centre as part of a town centre regeneration project have been submitted.
The £8 million Health and Wellbeing Centre is to be built by Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust in the heart of Teignmouth and is due to open in 2022, subject to planning permission.
The South Devon Health Innovations Partnership has put forward the formal planning application for the scheme which would see the demolition of redundant building on Brunswick Street and a new health centre built in its place.
Artist impression of the new Teignmouth health and wellbeing centre (Image: KTA Architects Ltd)
The Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust proposes to re-provide and co-locate a number of health services at the site, and the centre will accommodate two GP surgeries (Channel View Medial Practice and Teignmouth Medical Group) together with community nurses, therapists and lifestyles and prevention services as well as voluntary services and a pharmacy.
The inclusion of an on-site pharmacy is important since it allows GPs to liaise with the pharmacist easily and directly about the best drugs regime for patients and it provides patients with a one-stop shop alongside consultation and treatment, a statement with the application submitted to Teignbridge District Council planners says.
The building will include 25 specialist consulting rooms, six healthcare assistant rooms, seven specialist treatment spaces, musculoskeletal assessment, an audiology room, a podiatry room, as well as space for Volunteering in Health, the integrated pharmacy, a main reception space, four waiting areas and admin, office, staff hub and interview spaces.
Some of the services proposed for the new health and wellbeing centre are set to be transferred from Teignmouth Hospital, for which the Devon CCG in December 2020 gave approval, although councillors subsequently asked independent experts to look again at the decision.
Plans have been unveiled to convert Exeter’s closed Debenhams store into a new cinema.
Montagu Evans LLP, on behalf of Purple Investment Management LLP, has submitted a scheme for the former department store in Princesshay that would “contribute to the vitality and economy of the city centre”.
The four-screen cinema would be situated on the third floor of the building, with the applicants seeking tenants for the ground, first and second floors of the Bedford Street premises.
Artist impression of the proposed new cinema for the Exeter Debenhams site (Image: Chapman Taylor)
A large foyer on the top floor area would also be provided, including a seating area and a bar, with the application stating that the views to the cathedral is a key consideration for the cinema operator when selecting the site for its proposed operation in Exeter.
Plans for a new Lidl in Crediton that would also help unlock land for a new housing development have been unveiled.
The budget supermarket has submitted plans for a new store on the outskirts of the town on land that is currently used by Crediton Rugby Club.
Under the proposals, Lidl would provide a £400,000 financial contribution to the club to allow them to move forward with purchasing their new home at Pedlarspool.
This would also unlock the reminder of the site off Commercial Road for housing, with up to 120 new homes allocated as part of the local plan – but with a condition that no development can take place until the rugby club have a new home.
A statement with the planning application says that if approved, the new Lidl will be constructed “at the earliest opportunity” and provide residents with increased choice and competition in food shopping in the town.
Plans for a new Aldi, Costa Coffee and a fast food restaurant at ‘the gateway to Torquay’ have been unveiled.
The supermarket chain submitted plans for a new supermarket to be built on the edge of the town, saying that in light of the current economic uncertainty, the investment is more important than ever.
The scheme for Kerswell Gardens would see the demolition of the existing buildings on the existing Devon Garden Machinery on Newton Road, in Kingkerswell, right next to the end of the South Devon Highway, and the construction of the discount supermarket, drive-through coffee shop, drive-through fast food restaurant, as well as a replacement retail building for Devon Garden Machinery.
A statement with the application said the redevelopment will re-invigorate an under-developed site, help maintain continued investment and jobs within the local area, that the provision of a discount food store and food outlets will provide valuable services to the local community and open up opportunity for future development to the north of the site.
A new single-storey Aldi food store with associated customer parking is proposed in the lower half of the site, and the scheme would provide 106 parking spaces.
Kerswell Gardens new Aldi artist impression
The fast food outlet – an occupier of which is not named – would consist of a unit that would also facilitate drive-through as well as space for a restaurant, kitchen and back of house uses.
The coffee shop – for which Costa Coffee is named – would be a single-storey standalone outlet with a drive-through facility.
A two-storey workshop/showroom and repair bay building for Devon Garden Machinery, a garden, estate and turf maintenance machinery retailer and servicer as well as an area of land reserved for external storage would also be created.
This is a bid to diversify the operation of the Highwaymans Haunt pub on the edge of Chudleigh to accommodate a strategy better suited to the changing needs of the hospitality industry in the countryside.
The application would see a change of use from a public house to mixed use, licensed café and farm shop, and change of use of land from agricultural to tourism to provide a 25-pitch campsite.
The Highwaymans Haunt pub in Chudleigh (Image: Daniel Clark)
It says the strategy will have the potential to increase the current employment by four full-time employees and six part-time staff along with increased employment for local traders and producers
Councillors unanimously backed multi-million pound plans to restore the Otter estuary to its natural and historic flood plains.
East Devon District Council’s planning committee voted to approve the Lower Otter Restoration Project (LORP), which will create 55 hectares of mudflats, saltmarsh and other valuable estuarine habitats.
The £15m project, led by landowner Clinton Devon Estates and the Environment Agency, will see the Big and Little Marsh floodplains around Budleigh Salterton restored, with breaches created in the Little Bank, the Big Bank and the River Otter Embankment to allow water to flow through.
The aim is to avoid the significant risk that a major flood or extreme tidal event could lead to catastrophic failure of the existing embankments, with unpredictable environmental and social impacts, given that in recent years, part of the South West Coast Path that runs along the embankments have been closed to the public for significant periods due to erosion caused by such events.
The committee heard that if nothing was done, then changes to the environment would likely occur, but would be unmanaged and unpredictable, and backed the officer recommendation to approve the scheme.
Mike Williams, from the Environment Agency, told the meeting that its vision is for a nation ready for and resilient to coastal change, today, tomorrow and to the year 2100, and the LORP plays a part in delivering that vision for East Devon.
As part of the plans to restore the historic floodplain of the River Otter, breaches in existing embankments would be created to allow water from both the River Otter and the estuary to inundate the site, creating intertidal saltmarsh and mudflats.
The Lower Otter Estuary in Budleigh Salterton. (Image: PACCo)
In addition, South Farm Road will be realigned and raised at a point just to the south of the existing road, and a small car park created at its western end and a new road bridge will be required, and a new footbridge to the south. Existing footpaths will be realigned and the landfill site capped and planted with grassland and woodland.
The spit to the south will be allowed to evolve naturally, necessitating the removal of the southern part of the loop path known as Donkeys Turn.
The cricket club will be moved from its current location to land off of East Budleigh Road, permission for which has already been granted under a separate planning application. Floods have left part of their current Ottermouth home under water on three occasions in the past 10 years, with a plan to relocate to Janie’s Field on the outskirts of the town having been agreed.
Plans for nearly 350 homes as part of the first phase of the major southern expansion of Ilfracombe have been given the go-ahead.
North Devon Council’s planning committee backed Inox Homes (Ilfracombe) Ltd’s scheme which will see 347 homes built on land to the east of Old Barnstaple Road
Outline plans for up to 750 homes together with a mixed-use centre, extra care housing/facility and primary school the huge 187-acre site off Old Barnstaple Road were approved back in 2017.
Councillors agreed with the officer recommendation to approve the scheme, as well as a related application for playing pitches, a multi-use games area (MUGA) and car parking.
Plans that could see an extra 1,250 bedrooms in student flats to be built on the University of Exeter campus have been given the go-ahead.
The university’s plans for the development of the Clydesdale, Nash and Birks Grange Village Halls of Residence site off Stocker Road, which could deliver an additional 1,250 bedrooms, were overwhelmingly supported by Exeter City Council’s planning committee.
Councillors agreed with the recommendation of approval that planning officers had suggested, saying that purpose-built accommodation on the university’s own campus was the best way to reverse the trend of family homes in the city being occupied by students.
The plans would see the demolition of the existing Clydesdale and Nash Grove accommodation buildings – built in the late 1980s and early 1990s – and the construction of new student accommodation buildings ranging in height from three to eight storeys.
Ancillary services, such as a shop, café and facilities, are to be provided in the ground floor of some of the buildings.
The scheme will also see the existing Birks Grange refectory building demolished and replaced with the construction of a new six-storey student accommodation building, with ancillary social and amenity space on the ground floor.
At the existing Birks Grange Village Student residences, the accommodation blocks would be refurbished to Passivhaus standards and include changing from catered halls to self-catered halls by introducing a kitchen within each flat.
Artist impression of the Clydesdale and Birks Residential student flats development at the University of Exeter
The Estate Services Centre would also be demolished and replaced with the construction of a new three and four-storey student accommodation building, with separate plans to relocate the existing Estate Services Centre to a new location at Rennes Drive also approved.
A net increase of between approximately 1,200 to 1,250 student bedrooms within the university campus would be delivered, a statement with the application says, although the precise number of units is not for determination at this stage given that this was an outline application.
Locals cheered as North Devon Council Planning Committee voted 11 to 2 in favour of rejecting plans to build a multipurpose housing development on the Taw-Torridge Estuary.
There had been more than 900 objections to the proposals – with only two letters of support – but planners had recommended that the scheme for Yelland Quay be approved.
Artist impression of the Yelland Quay regeneration scheme (Image: Woodward Smith Chartered Architects LLP)
The scheme includes 250 new homes, employment land, retail space, cafes and restaurants, indoor sports provision, public halls, with a unique community centre building to be found almost floating at the heart of this mini-development.
But on the grounds that it would not deliver “appropriate” housing requirements, impact on highways and local traffic, the harm it will cause to the landscape and “inadequate infrastructure” that does not meet local needs, councillors refused the scheme.
Plans for a new Travelodge hotel to be built in the heart of Newton Abbot have been given the go-ahead.
Teignbridge District Council’s planning committee backed the council’s own plans, which would see the Halcyon Road car park converted into a 72-bedroom hotel with a restaurant.
Councillors agreed with the recommendation of officers of approval, saying that it was a long-term aspiration for the town, would boost footfall and spending, especially post-Covid, and would have significant net benefits.
The new hotel is the second phase of Teignbridge District Council’s masterplan for the centre of Newton Abbot, with a 25-year lease having already provisionally been agreed with Travelodge.
Artist impression of the Halcyon Road Travelodge plans for Newton Abbot
The five-storey hotel would include a total of 72 bedrooms, as well as a restaurant for 48 covers. There will be 31 parking spaces located to the southern part of the site, with further spaces to be allocated to Travelodge in the multi-storey car park with a voucher ticketing system in the hotel foyer.
Plans to save one of Ottery St Mary’s most important buildings have been approved.
East Devon District Council’s planning committee unanimously agreed to support plans that would see 13 homes built within the grounds of the former Salston Manor on the edge of the town.
The Salston Manor Hotel in Ottery St Mary
The plans would also see an extension to the building constructed for a further two homes and would enable a previously consented but not implemented scheme for the conversion of the main building to form 11 flats to go ahead.
Councillors heard that the site is outside the built-up area boundary of Ottery St Mary and was contrary to local plan policies, particularly as no affordable housing was to be provided, but that the wider benefits from the restoration of the listed building outweigh the negatives of the scheme and thus it was recommended for approval.
Multi-million pound plans for the regeneration of the waterfront area in Bideford have been given the go-ahead.
Torridge District Council’s planning committee almost unanimously supported the redevelopment of the Brunswick Wharf site on the East-the-Water side of the Long Bridge.
The £20m-plus scheme from Red Earth Developments features apartments, design studios, boutique retail and restaurants, as well as 85 apartments and a public square with a riverside walk.
Councillors heard that the scheme aims to breathe new life into this neglected stretch of waterfront, bringing vital long term investment to the East-the-Water area, as for “too many years, the site has sat like an open wound in the heart of Bideford, festering and decaying and blighting the river frontage”.
The scheme includes 85 apartments, a signature restaurant, five design studios with potential for live/work, a café, eight boutique retail units, a public square with a riverside walk, 103 private parking and 45 public parking spaces, 133 private cycle stands and 40 public cycle stands.
A public square and attractive new riverside walk will also be developed as the scheme aims to breathe new life into this neglected stretch of water-front, bringing vital long term investment to the East-the-Water area.
Artist impression of the Brunswick Wharf regeneration plans (Image: Red Earth)
The layout of the development will create three open-sided squares – two private and one public – linked by a quayside walk along the entire frontage of the site.
The public square will have retail, restaurant and design studios around the three edges with different levels giving form and interest for visitors, and a coffee house sits central to the square and its design form references the shipbuilding history of the site
The massive new 1,210-home housing development on the green hills outside Newton Abbot is set to go ahead after the last legal challenge to block the scheme failed.
The Court of Appeal this week has rejected all the arguments put forward by Abbotskerswell Parish Council over whether a High Court ruling that the planning permission for the Wolborough scheme was sound.
The parish council had claimed the judge’s verdict contained errors in law, but in the order made by the Right Honourable Lord Justice Stuart-Smith, it was ruled that none of the grounds for appeal on which Abbotskerswell Parish Council had challenged the initial verdict on were valid, ruling that in his judgement that there is no discernible error and no other compelling reason for an appeal to be heard as the judgement is closely reasoned and successfully applies conventional and established principles to the facts of the present case.
The Wolborough Barton masterplan
The rejection of the appeal means that the challenge to the granting of planning permission which the secretary of state had given can go no further, meaning the outline permission for the scheme, as well as full permission for the Wolborough Barton farmstead element has now been given.
PCL Planning’s scheme, submitted on behalf of the Rew family, for the land at Wolborough Barton, in Newton Abbot includes an outline scheme of 1,210 homes, a primary school, employment land, community facilities, including a day nursery and a health centre, a local shopping centre, play area, allotments and a multi-use games area, as well as a link road connecting the A380 and the A381.
Reserved matters for the detail will need to be submitted and approved before work can begin, but full planning permission to convert the Wolborough Barton farmstead into a boutique hotel, restaurant and bar, has now been granted.
Plans to extend a North Devon shopping centre to create a new seven-screen cinema and refurbishment of retail units have been approved.
The application, granted planning permission under delegated powers by officers, would see big changes made inside the Green Lanes Shopping Centre in Barnstaple.
The space occupied by the former BHS store will stay as retail, but the upper two floors, plus an additional newly-built floor above, would be converted into a seven screen multiplex cinema.
Artist impression of the Green Lanes Shopping Centre Cinema plans
It would be the replacement cinema for the existing four screen Scott Cinema on Boutport Street, the application says.
It adds that there would be clear significant economic benefits for the town and this area of North Devon and the improved cinema facility will be of benefit to both the resident population and tourists/visitors.
Granting planning permission for the scheme, the report of planning officers concluded that the public benefits of the scheme, which includes protecting the vitality and viability of the town centre and overall economic benefits, outweigh the negative impacts on balance.
Work is set to begin this summer of a 200m tunnel to protect trains against falling rocks on the Dawlish railway line.
Teignbridge District Council planners under delegated powers have approved Network Rail’s plans to extend the existing rockfall shelter over the railway line between Dawlish and Holcombe.
Following approval, Network Rail hopes to begin construction work on the 209m extension of the rockfall shelter north of Parsons Tunnel in August which will help protect trains against falling rocks along this section of vital railway that connects communities across the South West with the rest of the country.
Parsons Tunnel was previously extended 100 years ago, and Network Rail will extend that further by providing a rockfall shelter in modern materials, but with open sides rather than the brick built enclosed tunnel extension.
Once started, construction of the £37.4m project is expected to take around a year to complete.
Artist impression for the Parsons Tunnel North rockfall shelter plans (Image: Network Rail)
Preparatory work at the top of the cliffs overlooking this stretch of railway has already begun in March whereby Network Rail engineers started cutting back some of the vegetation. This work is being closely monitored to ensure the least disruption for wildlife habitats and biodiversity.
The rockfall shelter, which is the third phase of works on the Dawlish line, and follows the two sections of new sea wall in Dawlish, is critical to ensuring the resilience of the railway between Dawlish and Teignmouth for generations to come and protecting this critical route from falling debris.
Plans for the installation of a statue of two real-life female ‘Pirates Of The Caribbean’ on Burgh Island have been withdrawn.
Earlier this year, the bid for the art installation on Burgh Island to represent two of Britain’s forgotten pirates – Anny Bonny and Mary Read – was unveiled and a planning application submitted to South Hams District Council.
The pair were among the most notorious pirates as they wreaked havoc throughout the Caribbean during the golden age of piracy in the early 1700s.
Some historians have claimed the two became lovers while others suggest they formed a three-way relationship with Anne’s husband, the English pirate captain Jack Rackham – more commonly known as Calico Jack.
The sculpture would have measured approximately 2.4m high and sat on plinths that would be 50x30cm and 25x30cm, respectively, with the addition intended to be “a gift to the Island that is home to such rich pirate history”.
Anne Bonny, John ‘Calico Jack’ Rackam and Mary Read: Some historians claim the two became lesbian lovers while others suggest they formed a three-way relationship with Anne’s husband, the English pirate captain Jack Rackham – more commonly known as Calico Jack (Image: Getty Images)
But following objections to the proposals from the parish council, the applicant – The Producers Live Ltd – has withdrawn the plans and instead will focus on finding an alternative location for the memorial.
Its statement said: “Following feedback from the parish council, we will be withdrawing our application to install “Inexorable” on Burgh Island. The statue was intended to be a gift to the Island that is home to such rich pirate history. We absolutely respect the decision of the council and will find an alternative home for Anne Bonny and Mary Read.”
Plans for more than 300 homes to be built on the edge of Exmouth have been given the go-ahead despite the scheme “lacking vision and being fit for the 20th, not 21st century”.
East Devon District Council’s planning committee almost unanimously backed the recommendation of officers to approve the scheme for the Goodmores Farm site at Hulham Road.
Outline planning permission for the scheme was granted for up to 350 homes in June 2018, which included only five per cent of the homes being affordable.
And while councillors were upset with the lower than 25 per cent policy requirements, there was nothing they could do to change it as the principle of the development had previously been agreed.
The proposals for 303 homes at the Goodmores Farm site at Hulham Road in Exmouth
The scheme, which was backed by 11 votes to 1, with one abstention, includes 303 homes, 2.3 hectares of mixed use employment land, 1.3 hectares of land for a primary school, a football pitch and a locally equipped area for play.
Plans for Cullompton’s long-awaited and “essential” relief road have been unanimously given the go-ahead. Mid Devon District Council’s planning committee voted in favour of the new road that aims to take traffic out of the town centre.
The £15million relief road scheme, which officers recommended for approval, will see the new road built to connect Station Road to Duke Street near the Meadow Lane junction and to divert traffic away from travelling through Cullompton town centre.
It is primarily proposed to address existing traffic and transport problems within the town and the associated impacts on air quality, environment and amenity.
The route for the Cullompton relief road (Image: Devon County Council)
It would incorporate land currently within Tesco’s ownership, land that is part of the Cullompton Community Association (CCA) fields and sports facilities, including those used by Cullompton football, cricket and bowls clubs, and agricultural land to the south.
It is hoped that phase one works would be able to commence in winter 2021 and the scheme is proposed to be implemented in three phases, allowing for as little interruption to as possible to existing sports facilities, recreation and amenity land, and reducing the wider impacts on other amenities as a result of the construction period.
Councillors have backed plans for 120 homes to be built on the edge of Dartington.
The sites – at Broom Park and Sawmills North – cover two green fields with 120 houses planned and are both allocated for residential development as part of the adopted Plymouth and South West Devon Joint Local Plan.
The outlines schemes – put forward by Baker Estates and the Dartington Hall Trust – would see 80 homes built at Broom Park and 40 at Sawmills North and when South Hams District Council’s development management committee considered them, it agreed with the officer recommendations for approval, despite more than 200 objections to the plans.
The officers, in their report, stated that all statutory consultees and specialist advisers had no objections to the proposals and, as such, they are recommended to go ahead, and councillors voted by 10 votes to 2 in favour of the Sawmills North scheme and by 10 votes to 1, with one abstention, for the Broom Park plan.
Plans for a new village on fields near Paignton have been given permission by a planning inspector. The government-appointed official has allowed an appeal by the developer for the site known as Inglewood.
The scheme was opposed by Torbay Council because of its impact on the landscape.
Evidence for the appeal was heard at an online planning inquiry in January.
In a published decision, inspector Andrew Dawe has given outline permission for up to 373 homes, a pub and primary school on land alongside Brixham Road near White Rock.
Objectors said the development would cause unacceptable harm to the setting of the protected landscape and the open space between Paignton and Brixham.
The inspector accepted the scheme would cause some harm to the landscape character and appearance of the area.
Indicative image of the Inglewood development, proposed between Paignton and Brixham (Image: Stride Treglown)
It would also go against local planning policies by filling part of the “settlement gap” of open countryside.
But he said the limited harm to the landscape was not enough to justify rejecting the application.
Plans for nearly 250 new homes for the ‘Topsham Gap’ have been given the go-ahead by councillors.
Exeter City Council’s planning committee unanimously approved three separate applications for the edge of the town.
The Clyst Road site where 155 homes in the Topsham Gap will be built
Outline plans for 61 residential units for land at Broom Park Nurseries and Five Acres on Exeter Road, and outline plans for 24 homes at an adjacent site off Exeter Road were given the go-ahead in line with the officer recommendation for approval.
And councillors also granted the reserved matters approve for 155 homes at Clyst Road, a site that they have previously refused planning permission for, only to see a planning inspector overturn the site on appeal.
Plans for 200 homes on the edge of Exeter which include safeguarding land for the potential Monkerton railway station have been approved.
Exeter City Council’s planning committee almost unanimously backed the scheme that will be up to 200 homes built on land at Hill Barton Farm.
The site is allocated for development within the Monkerton and Hill Barton Strategic Residential Allocation and previous outline planning permission for a scheme had been granted but lapsed as work had not begun.
Planners had initially recommended refusing the scheme as only 10 per cent of the houses were due to be affordable, but following late negotiations, that had been increased to a policy-compliant 35 per cent.
They subsequently changed their recommendation to approval, and councillors backed the plans by 12 votes to 0, with one abstention, when they met.
Planning officers had told the committee that it was accepted that the site meets the principle for housing as sustainable development, that the council does not have a current five year housing land supply, and it was clear that the scheme as submitted for 200 dwellings would contribute towards the council’s shortfall of deliverable housing sites in the area.
And following the confirmation that their proposed offer of 10 per cent affordable housing has been increased to a policy-compliant 35 per cent affordable housing, they said that it was recommended the plan be approved.
Controversial plans to redevelop Exeter’s Harlequin Shopping Centre into co-living apartments will go ahead after the secretary of state for housing, communities and local government decided against calling the application in.
Exeter City Council approved plans to turn the centre into co-living apartments, along with a hotel and other facilities, back in October.
The redevelopment will see two blocks built on the site – block 1 would see a total of 251 co-living bedrooms – which involves a number of flats being built for students but can be rented by non-students as well – with 116 hotel bedrooms in Block 2.
The plans will also see the creation of a pocket park, significant improvements to the urban realm of Paul Street, enhancing the environment for pedestrians and cyclists and the replacement of the pedestrian bridge over Paul Street with a modern, lightweight bridge.
New artist impression of the Harlequin Shopping Centre redevelopment scheme (Image: Curlew)
However, requests were then made to the government calling on the secretary of state, Robert Jenrick, to make the final decision because of the impact on the historic environment.
But Mr Jenrick has said he is satisfied that in this case it was appropriate that the decision was made at local level.
In deciding not to call the application in, the government said: “The secretary of state has carefully considered this case against call-in policy, as set out in the written ministerial statement by Nick Boles on 26 October 2012. The policy makes it clear that the power to call in a case will only be used very selectively.
“The Government is committed to give more power to councils and communities to make their own decisions on planning issues, and believes planning decisions should be made at the local level wherever possible.”
Works to create a brand new free-to-use Exmouth car park will begin on Monday, 21 June.
Authored by Mary www.thedevondaily.co.uk
East Devon District Council (EDDC) will be creating the 12-space parking area in Phear Park.

The authority will also be resurfacing the area’s access road, from Withycombe Road to the Rifle and Pistol Club.
The access road has been in a deteriorating condition for several years, requiring regular pothole repair. It is hoped the resurfacing works will help to reduced ongoing maintenance costs.
The new parking area will be built on the grass verge near to the vehicle entrance of Phear Park, providing a further dozen parking bays and a dedicated area for manoeuvring.
Although a parking area is currently provided at the far end of the access road, there have been historic issues with vehicles parking on the pavement near the entrance of the park.
This has prevented other vehicles from passing, as well as restricting the width of the pavement available to pedestrians and causing damage to the footways, grass verges and tree roots when manoeuvring.
It is hoped the new car park will help to reduce the issues.
As well as this, EDDC will also be installing steel reinforced recycled plastic posts as parking prevention measures on the footway edge between the park entrance and shelter to further prevent anti-social parking.
The works will take place in four consecutive phases, starting on Monday 21 June.
Phase 1 is the construction of the new parking area, which is anticipated to take approximately two and half weeks and to be completed by Wednesday 7 July.
The access road will remain open throughout this phase of the works, and businesses within the park will be unaffected.
Phase 2 is the resurfacing of the far end of the access road and existing parking area, while Phase 3 is resurfacing the rest of the access road and Phase 4 construction of the speedhumps.
Phases 2-4, starting on Wednesday 5 July, are expected to last eight working days and therefore should be complete by Friday 16 July, weather permitting.
During these phases, it will be necessary to close the access road to all public transport and during Phase 2 of the Works, the public toilets and other buildings adjacent to the access road will be inaccessible. There will therefore temporarily be no public toilets available within Phear Park during this period and further notification will be provided via social media.
Sustainability of materials and construction methods used has been key throughout design of this project. The access road will be resurfaced using a type of asphalt referred to as ‘warm mix’ which is manufactured at a temperature up to 35°C lower than conventional asphalt through incorporation of a micro-foaming process.
This lower production temperature also produces safer working conditions for those laying it, due to the reduction in volatile fumes. The product selected offers carbon reductions of up to 50 per cent compared to conventional asphalt, and also uses 5 per cent recycled aggregates, reducing the carbon impact associated with quarrying aggregates for construction.
The new parking area will be constructed from a permeable cellular concrete system, often known as ‘grasscrete’.
The use of this lower carbon material is in line with the council’s Climate Change Action Plan, which aims to make the council and its activities carbon neutral by 2040.
EDDC’s Engineering Department who will oversee the works, will continue to use more sustainable materials within their projects and have taken measures, such as including compulsory carbon reduction questions within tenders, in order to ensure future works are more environmentally friendly.
Councillor Geoff Jung, EDDC’s Portfolio Holder Coast, Country and Environment said: “There have long been issues with vehicles parking on the footway in Phear Park, making access difficult for pedestrians and vehicles.
“The 12 additional spaces provided in the new parking area should go some to way alleviating this and will utilise an underused area of the park. It is good to see officers making every effort to reduce the environmental impact of construction where possible through use of modern and recycled materials, contributing to the council’s aim to be carbon neutral by 2040.”
Rural house prices in England and Wales are increasing twice as fast as in cities, triggering a fresh affordability crisis for young people, with hot spots flaring up across the country from Lincolnshire to Lancashire as people seek more space post-pandemic.
Robert Booth www.theguardian.com
Prices are rising 14.2% a year in countryside locations on average compared with less than 7% in urban areas, figures analysed by Hamptons estate agency for the Guardian show. It is compounding existing affordability problems in places such as Cornwall and Devon, but the biggest percentage increases of up to 30% were in Broxtowe in Nottinghamshire, around Lancaster, in Arun in West Sussex and Amber Valley in Derbyshire.
Hamptons said registrations to buy in its rural offices were up by 50% on the same period for 2019, while city buyer registrations rose just 9%.
“People struggle to stay because of the affordability and there is not much turnover of housing,” said Elizabeth Williamson, an independent councillor in Broxtowe, whose three children aged 24 to 30 have have left the area partly due to local housing being unaffordable.
The average rural house price in the borough rose from £234,150 last May to £303,780 a year later.
In Arun, close to the West Sussex coast and the South Downs National Park, Chris Morgan, 46, a sales manager who rents and has a budget to buy of about £200,000, said people moving from London and working from home on higher salaries than locally had driven prices further out of reach. Rural house prices in the area rose more than 29% to £387,510 in the last year.
“The only way I will get on the housing ladder is when my parents are no longer alive and I inherit their house,” she said. “I could be in my sixties by then.”
Merryn Voysey, 32, a gardener who has lived in a Renault minibus for the last two years in Cornwall, where already high prices have increased a further 12% in the year to May, said he has no prospect of housing unless he moves to an urban area like Plymouth.
“I saw a bedroom in a shared house for £650 per month, but that wouldn’t be affordable for me at the moment,” he said. “I could probably afford housing if I worked every day of every week but I want to enjoy my life.”
Research by the Labour party suggests that even before the pandemic young people in the countryside were struggling most to get on the housing ladder outside London. Rural house prices were nearly nine times higher than a person’s annual earnings, whereas in predominately urban areas outside London they were seven-and-a-half times higher. By 2020, it was estimated there were 132,000 fewer young homeowners in rural areas in England than in 2010.
The party has also said that standards of housing are lower in rural settings, with official figures showing the number of homes classed as non-decent is more than double in suburban residential areas.
“It is fundamentally unfair that so many young people who want to live and work in rural areas are priced out of staying in their community,” said Luke Pollard, the shadow environment, food and rural affairs secretary. “People should not be forced to move away from where they grew up to get on the property ladder, and nor should they have to live in below standard housing in order to stay.”
Jenny Fox, 31, a community support worker and parish councillor in Kingsand on the Rame peninsula in south-east Cornwall, said villages in the area had become “totally unaffordable for local families”. House prices have been soaring and there is a new shortage of rental properties as more owners turn to more lucrative short-term holiday lets on platforms like Airbnb.
She lives with her partner in a shared house at below market rent, but if she had to find a home on the open market she said she would “have to move back with my parents and hope something comes available in line with local wages”.
“Most friends who grew up in the village are already priced out having moved to neighbouring villages,” she said. “The impacts of second homes and holiday lets are starting to become apparent there too. I am early thirties and want to have children soon but I am worrying about where I am going to live and whether my children will be able to live down here.”