
Our village is under threat from ‘Rave King's' plan to save his £2.5m mansion – we don't want celebs partying next door
Music promoter, James Perkins, is renovating his 16th-century home dubbed the "Buckingham Palace of Dorset" after it was destroyed by a fire eight years ago.
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Perkins bought the Grade-1 listed Parnham House for £2.5 million in 2020.
Scaffolding bills have soared to £1.7 million, the snooker room roof is falling in and the walls are crumbling.
To fund the renovations, Perkins intends to construct 85 homes on 25 acres of the estate's fields subject to planning approval from Dorset Council.
If successful, the mansion could host weddings, parties and overnight guests in sixty bedrooms.
But residents, who were already furious with the council granting the venue a 24-hour alcohol license, have formed a group against the application.
They told The Times that it would "destroy" local wildlife and the Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and remove centuries-old footpaths.
Locals also say that the site plan drawn up four years ago, which originally proposed 20 homes, has ballooned into proposals for dozens of dwellings across the green space.
One resident also added that Perkins stood to benefit from a large capital increase on his private property while the council and villagers lost out.
The previous alcohol license application faced so much backlash that the council meeting was forced to run for two days with the local Conservative MP saying it was not appropriate for the estate.
But Perkins hopes he will be granted permission to build under "enabled development" laws.
Our pretty town has become a ghetto plagued by machete-wielding yobs
This means permission will be granted if the project generates funds that outweigh the harm caused by the development.
He is confident that he has brought Historic England onside with the plans which initially stated it would not support the application but they are now due to advise the council committee.
The application alone has cost approximately £1.5 million to submit.
Celebrities such as Noel Gallagher, Kate Moss, Madonna and Bono have all attended lavish gatherings at Perkins' former property, Aynhoe Park.
The wild parties at the stately home on the Northamptonshire-Oxfordshire border cemented Perkins reputation as the "rave king".
Perkins was just 15 when he began staging home parties in his home town of Cheltenham.
He went on to establish the rave music promoter Fantazia and in 1992, aged 22, he attracted nearly 30,000 people to a rave in Castle Donington.
Parts of Parnham House date back to the mid-1500s when it was owned by the Strode family who lived at the property for more than 200 years.
Over the centuries it has been used as a private home, nursing home, country club and woodwork school.
During the Second World War, it was used by the US army as the headquarters for General Patton before the D-Day landings.
A spokesman for Parnham House said: 'Through intensive planning and design work involving many consultants, including extensive talks with Dorset council, Historic England, and their subsidiaries, it was acknowledged that Enabling Development is the only solution to save this nationally important Grade 1-listed treasure.
'The enabling development application will raise the equity needed to save and restore the building to the minimum required factor and once again make Parnham something our neighbours and Dorset can be proud of.'
The spokesman added that the plans would "increase the biodiversity of the estate" as well as restore nature highways along the River Brit and reopen the original drive and entrance.
Both Perkins and Dorset Council have been approached for comment.
What are your planning permission rights?
Planning disputes are often troublesome, here are your rights in the matter.
The first and cheapest route is to talk to your neighbour and try to come up with a solution.
The Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors offers a boundary mediation service, and neighbours can access 30 minutes of free advice from a chartered surveyor.
Your local council may also offer a mediation service.
Under permitted development rights, it's possible to extend your house by up to four metres at the rear without having to apply for planning permission, or consult your neighbours.
So if your neighbours want to do that, they can.
Similarly, they can put up a fence up, as long as it's on their land, although it would probably be subject to a height restriction, depending on where you live and what your local council's rules are.
If you suspect that it doesn't match these criteria you should object to the local planning authority immediately.
Legal action
A homeowner is supposed to get a legal document called a party wall agreement signed if they are carrying out works near or on a property boundary.
This sets out the work being carried out and the times it can be done.
According to Gov.uk, building works must avoid causing unnecessary inconvenience and protect a neighbour's property from damage.
A homeowner must also fix or pay for damage that they cause.
Notice of between two months and one year usually needs to be given depending on the circumstances.
You can find out more about getting a party wall agreement on the Gov.uk website.
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Raymond James French, rugby league player, journalist and sports commentator, born 23 December 1939, died 26 July 2025