logo
South Gloucestershire village to get 250 new homes

South Gloucestershire village to get 250 new homes

Yahoo07-03-2025
A bid to build 250 homes in a growing village north of Bristol has been given the go-ahead.
The new estate will be built in Charfield, South Gloucestershire, after South Gloucestershire councillors approved the plans on Thursday.
More than 200 residents lodged objections to the development over concerns of a lack of local infrastructure to support the population growth.
Developer Bloor Homes said it would invest £9.4m in local infrastructure.
More news stories for Bristol
Watch the latest Points West
Listen to the latest news for Bristol
A decision on 525 homes in another part of the village proposed by a different developer is set to be made at an unknown date.
If approved, it would mean the village's population would increase by a third, the Local Democracy Reporting Service reported.
The approved development will be built on land north of Wotton Road and will be called Charfield Meadows.
Speaking in the meeting, Charfield councillor John O'Neill said: "In its current form, this is not place-making or plan-making, it is still premature.
"It is unfair to sell homes for families when there are insufficient places at primary schools. This would just overwhelm everything.
"I would expect you to impose a planning condition that no homes are occupied until there are additional places at Charfield Primary School."
A council officer said they are "comfortable" about their being enough school places from 2029, when the new homes are built.
"We have scheduled an expansion of the school to be opened by 2029," they said.
"However, there is a possibility of opening a reception class in 2028. There will be only a few houses there by 2027.
"Charfield School is full, absolutely, but it's full at the moment with people coming from as far as 2.6 miles away because the birth rate was so low [in Charfield].
"Whereas there was a year five years ago when we couldn't accommodate all the pupils in the village, currently we can."
Bloor Homes South West senior planning manager Jonathan Dodd said £1.6m will be spent on expanding Charfield Primary School, as well as road upgrades and community spaces.
Mr Dodd said: "Charfield is a thriving village, and we are committed to delivering a development that not only provides high-quality homes but also enhances local services, infrastructure, and green spaces."
The developers will also contribute towards improvements to junction 14 of the M5, as well as public transport, including money towards reopening Charfield Station in 2027.
Follow BBC Bristol on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.
Building permission for £22m rail station granted
Tears and frustration as 28,000 new homes approved
Locations of 100 new gypsy pitches chosen
South Gloucestershire Council
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meta Outlines Performance Improvements Based on its Evolving AI Systems
Meta Outlines Performance Improvements Based on its Evolving AI Systems

Yahoo

time16 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Meta Outlines Performance Improvements Based on its Evolving AI Systems

This story was originally published on Social Media Today. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Social Media Today newsletter. Meta's going all-in on AI, with CEO Mark Zuckerberg now driven to reach his new goal of automated 'superintelligence,' which could see Meta eventually crack the code on enabling truly transcendent machine learning systems. But it's not only in large-scale applications that Meta's seeing gains from AI, with the company also applying its AI models to more elements of its apps, and powering improved algorithmic matching to keep people using Facebook, Instagram and Threads for longer. Indeed, within its Q2 performance report, Meta noted that AI recommendations have continued to boost video engagement across its apps. As per Meta: 'In Q2, Instagram video time was up more than 20% year-over-year globally. We're seeing strong traction on Facebook as well, particularly in the U.S. where video time spent similarly expanded more than 20% year-over-year.' In broader terms, Meta also notes that its AI recommendations have led to a 5% increase in time spent on Facebook, and a 6% on Instagram this year. But video remains the key focus for IG and Facebook engagement, with Meta also reporting back in April that Reels clips now make up 50% of all time spent on IG. If you're looking to maximize your Facebook and/or Instagram engagement, video content needs to be a consideration, with its AI recommendation systems now pushing more relevant video to more users. This shift is also notable because earlier in the year, as part of Meta's defense against an FTC antitrust case, the company admitted that Facebook's and Instagram's share of time spent among social media apps had declined significantly, with most personal interaction shifting to messaging platforms instead. The latter part here is nothing new, as we've covered the broader shift to messaging pretty extensively. But it is interesting to note that AI, and AI-recommended video content specifically, is now helping Meta to right the ship in this respect, and keep more people around in its apps for longer. 'These gains have been enabled by ongoing optimizations to our ranking systems to better identify the most relevant content to show. We expect to deliver additional improvements throughout the year as we further scale up our models and make recommendations more adaptive to a person's interests within their session.' Meta has also been able to promote more original content, which was another major focus of its algorithmic advancements. Last month, Meta announced an algorithm update which is designed to demote 'unoriginal' content, in order to boost material from original creators, while last year, Instagram removed aggregator accounts from recommendations, and has since sought to replace re-posts with original content in the same where possible. And according to Meta, those efforts are seeing more traffic being driven to original creators: 'On Instagram, over two-thirds of recommended content in the U.S. now comes from original posts. In the second half, we'll be focused on further increasing the freshness of original posts so the right audiences can discover original content from creators soon after it is posted.' This is critical for Meta to maintain its connection with creators, and without them, it's simply not going to be able to capitalize on its opportunities. If original creators go elsewhere, they take their audiences with them, and as Meta moves into the next stage of its Metaverse/AR/VR plan, it's going to need original content creators to maximize audience interest in these new experiences. As such, ensuring that original creators get priority is an important shift, and Meta says that its systems are getting better on this front. Meta also says that it's been using its evolving AI tools to improve content recommendations on Threads: 'The incorporation of LLMs are now driving a meaningful share of the ranking-related time spent gains on Threads.' While it also continues to update its AI-powered ad tools, including automated targeting. 'This quarter, we expanded our new AI-powered recommendation model for ads to new surfaces and improved its performance by using more signals and a longer context. It's driven roughly 5% more ad conversions on Instagram and 3% on Facebook.' So it's not just superintelligence, and Meta's massive investment in the bigger picture AI projects that's driving its approach, it's also applying its AI models to all elements of its apps, and driving notable performance improvements in each. Which is also notable for advertisers, and those looking to make best use of Facebook and Instagram for marketing. Now, Meta's systems are getting better at showing your content to just the right audiences, based on an evolving array of algorithmic indicators, as assessed by AI. That could present new opportunities within your approach. Recommended Reading Meta Shares Ad Tips Based on 1M+ Ad Creatives Sign in to access your portfolio

Downtown Aurora road, sidewalk still closed after bricks fell off building over the weekend
Downtown Aurora road, sidewalk still closed after bricks fell off building over the weekend

Chicago Tribune

time18 hours ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Downtown Aurora road, sidewalk still closed after bricks fell off building over the weekend

One side of the sidewalk and roadway on Galena Boulevard in downtown Aurora remained closed Monday after bricks fell off a nearby building over the weekend. On Saturday at around 6 p.m., reports came into the city about bricks falling off the building at 102 and 104 E. Galena Blvd, according to Aurora Director of Development Services Josh Ream. He said about 200 bricks fell from the building's face, but the damage did not appear to be structural, and no injuries were reported. At the time of the incident, 11 apartments and two businesses were evacuated, Aurora police said in a Facebook post Saturday evening. The sidewalk outside those two businesses, Superjumbo Records and Leon's Barber Shop, remained closed on Monday. The two lanes of traffic closest to the building, which head toward Stolp Island, were also closed between Broadway and Lasalle Street on Monday. The sidewalk and those two lanes are expected to stay closed until scaffolding is put up on the site, according to Ream. He said the sidewalk is set to open alongside one of the two closed lanes before the end of this week, with the other lane being reopened sometime in the following weeks. The bricks that fell from the building were part of a nonstructural outer layer that did not appear to be connected to the main body of the building, Ream said. Codes have changed since the construction of the building, and now that design would not be allowed, he said. Once the scaffolding is up, city staff, an engineer and a mason are expected to look at the damage to determine how to best repair the building, according to Ream. He said the outer layer of bricks may need to be taken off entirely or the fallen bricks may just be replaced, depending on what is found. The main entrance to the residences in the building, along with the main entrances to the two businesses, remain closed because of the closed sidewalk. Ream said there is a back entrance that residents can use, but that the scaffolding needs to go up to create a safe pedestrian pathway so the businesses can reopen. Similar incidents have happened in the past. In 2019, bricks fell from the nearby Elmslie Building on the southwest corner of Galena and Broadway, which similarly did not hurt anyone, according to past reporting. According to Ream, this is not an unusual occurrence in downtown Aurora due to the age of the buildings and the construction methods used at the time.

New York Post to expand to California with separate daily tabloid
New York Post to expand to California with separate daily tabloid

UPI

time19 hours ago

  • UPI

New York Post to expand to California with separate daily tabloid

Aug. 4 (UPI) -- A daily tabloid version of the New York Post is heading west, parent company News Corp announced Monday. The California Post, which will include staff based in Los Angeles, will debut early next year as a separate entity under the New York Post Media Group, the public company led by Rupert Murdoch said. The expansion comes as circulation continues to decline among newspapers nationwide. The California newspaper's content will include a version of Page 6 now featured in the New York Post. The New York Post displayed a mock images of Page 1 and the gossip page, including on Facebook . "Los Angeles and California surely need a daily dose of The Post as an antidote to the jaundiced, jaded journalism that has sadly proliferated," News Corp Chief Executive Robert Thomson said. "We are at a pivotal moment for the city and the state, and there is no doubt that The Post will play a crucial role in engaging and enlightening readers, who are starved of serious reporting and puckish wit. I am also pleased that [editor] Keith Poole's remit is expanding, as he will now be responsible for covering not just New York, but California, the U.S., the world and, perhaps, Mars." Nick Papps, who has nearly two decades of editorial leadership, was named editor in chief of the California newspaper. He was New Corp Australia's West Coast correspondent for three years. "This is the next manifestation of our national brand," Poole said. "California is the most populous state in the country, and is the epicenter of entertainment, the AI revolution and advanced manufacturing -- not to mention a sports powerhouse. Yet many stories are not being told, and many viewpoints are not being represented. "With The California Post, we will bring a common-sense, issue-based approach to metropolitan journalism. We'll tell the stories that our readers care about the most, but others overlook, and we'll do so with clarity and our trademark conviction, across print, digital and the platforms where audiences live today." The Post Digital Network, with 90 million unique visits in June, attracts 90% of its readers from outside the New York media market. Los Angeles, with 3.5 million unique visitors, and California, with 7.3 million, has the second concentration of Post readers. The newspaper circulates in South Florida but not as a separate edition. Overall, there are 13 million digital news readers in the region, including the Los Angeles Times, Orange County Register, and TV and radio stations. Newspapers' circulation has been dramatically declining. The Los Angeles Times was purchased by Patrick Soon-Shiong, a biotech billionaire, in 2018 for $500 million from Tronc. The purchase also included the San Diego Union, which was later sold to MediaNews, and several community newspapers. Tribune Publishing, based in Chicago, had adopted the name Tronc in 2016. Two weeks ago, Murdoch said he "would take the paper" public next year during an interview on The Daily Show with John Stewart. The New York Post is the oldest continuously published daily newspaper in the United States, founded by Alexander Hamilton in 1801. Murdoch purchased the New York Post in 1976. News Corp, with revenue of $10.1billion in 2024, owns The Wall Street Journal, Barron's, papers in Britain and Australia, Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network. Fox Corp owns the TV network with the Murdoch family holding 39% of the voting shares.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store