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Planning developments from across Cumbria this week
Planning developments from across Cumbria this week

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Planning developments from across Cumbria this week

From the approval of a controversial proposal to build 33 homes just off the A6 to a new optician's practice in Appleby, here are the latest planning applications and developments we've covered across Cumbria. A controversial proposal to build 33 homes just off the A6 in High Hesket after a developer gave legal guarantees relating to concerns raised during the application process. Citadel Homes Ltd submitted an application to Westmorland and Furness Council to build 33 homes on land next to Elm Close in High Hesket. Despite opposition to the scheme by Hesket Parish Council, the planning committee approved the project in September 2024, subject to the completion of a Section 106 agreement between the developer and planning authority. Full story Plans have been submitted for a new McDonald's drive-thru restaurant in Carnforth as part of the growing Carnforth 356 commercial development. The proposals, lodged with Lancaster City Council, seek full permission to build a single-storey 377 square metre restaurant on a 0.52-hectare site off Electric Drive, close to the Porsche Centre South Lakes and Junction 35 of the M6. Full story A relocated optician's practice can be set up in Appleby after plans for the change of use for the site were approved by Westmorland & Furness Council. It was for a flat in Boroughgate and, according to the application form, it will form part of an optometrist practice. The full application was approved with conditions and Appleby town council made no comment on it ahead of the decision. According to a planning statement the property, in common with a great many others in the central part of the town, is Grade II listed. Full story A POPULAR pub is set for a 'necessary' facelift after plans for an extension as part of a wider programme of internal improvements were given the green light. The Pig and Whistle on Aynsome Road in Cartmel has been given permission by Westmorland and Furness Council to build a single-storey extension at the rear of the pub to house a fully accessible toilet facility. The approved proposal comes just over a year after a new management team took over the Frederic Robinson's pub in the wake of the retirement of the long-time former owners. Full story There was an outbreak of 'common sense' at Cumberland Council this week when councillors approved plans for a new hot and cold food takeaway in the Carlisle area - which had been recommended for refusal. Members of the council's planning committee met at Allerdale House in Workington to consider the application for a site on land south of Purdoms Crook in Sandysike, just north of Westlinton, near Carlisle. Marc Gardner, who runs the nearby Gardner's Guns shooting range, had applied to place a wheeled single box trailer where the takeaway would be based in a layby off the A7. Full story A PROPOSAL for the construction of 32 new affordable homes has been submitted to Westmorland and Furness Council. Alderley Partnerships has put forward a proposal for the development on a parcel of land off Manorside in Flookburgh which would bring 32 new homes in a '100 per cent affordable homes' project. Outline permission was granted by South Lakeland District Council in January 2023 for the principle of the development on the land for 'up to 32 dwellings'. Full story Plans to site a shepherd's hut for use with a holiday let in the Carlisle area have been approved by Cumberland Council. The planning application was for a site at Anns Hill in Bewcastle and the form states that the hut would be for ancillary use. Full story The owners of a village pub near Penrith have been handed another planning setback after their latest proposal regarding the use of their outdoor seating area was knocked back. An application to build a single-storey extension to the front of The Strickland Arms in Great Strickland has been refused by Westmorland and Furness Council planners. Full story THE owner of a pub in a Lake District tourist hotspot has applied to extend the hours it can serve alcohol 'in the interest of village prosperity'. The Red Lion Inn, on Main Street in Hawkshead, is the subject of an application to Westmorland and Furness Council to vary a premises licence allowing it to legally serve alcohol every day of the week until midnight. Director Vita Medveda, of Medveda Pubs Ltd, argues in the application that the variation would provide a service not currently available in the village. Full story

More than 50 new public housing units in N.S. to be occupied by fall
More than 50 new public housing units in N.S. to be occupied by fall

CBC

time02-05-2025

  • Business
  • CBC

More than 50 new public housing units in N.S. to be occupied by fall

The Nova Scotia government says 51 two- and three-bedroom modular homes for about 170 low-income seniors, individuals and families will be move-in ready by the fall. On Thursday, Development and Growth Minister Colton LeBlanc toured an eight-plex building that will soon welcome 24 residents in Digby, N.S. "It's going to be a special moment for folks who are on the waitlist that need to find a place to call home, when they can walk into this place and have a roof over their head," LeBlanc told CBC News on Friday. The Digby building is among the 273 new public housing units announced throughout 2023 to be constructed across Nova Scotia that will accommodate more than 700 people. The $103-million plan marked the first significant investment in new public housing since the 1990s, at a time when many Nova Scotians are desperate for an affordable place to live. There were 7,978 people on the public housing waitlist as of March 31. "The challenges that we're seeing in the housing market are not unique to Halifax. We see them right across this province," LeBlanc said. Some of the new units are modular two- and three-bedroom prefabricated homes and multi-unit buildings that can be built more quickly than traditional public housing. One of the builders said the whole process takes a matter of months. "This came in 16 boxes, so 16 boxes. It was sort of like Lego, right? It just stacks together and we tie everything together from there," explained Brad Ross of Citadel Homes. Twenty-five units have already been built in places like Glace Bay, Springhill and Digby, and are occupied, the province said. Like all public housing, residents pay 30 per cent of their income for rent. "This is even that much more special, you know, people who really need housing. To be involved in this kind of gives you some nice motivation to wake up in the morning and go to work knowing that you're really doing something that's going to help," Ross said. The 25 units include two four-plexes in Glace Bay, one four-plex in Springhill and 13 single-family modular homes: One in Glace Bay. One in Ingonish. Two in Port Hawkesbury. Three in Antigonish. Two in Amherst. One in Westville. One in Clyde River. Two in Barrington. As well, 222 public housing units in Glace Bay, Lower Sackville, Kentville, Grand Etang, Bridgewater and Bible Hill are at various stages of development. The province expects to have 22 units in Glace Bay ready by the fall. The province says the modular units will be finished by this fall and the rest of the larger buildings will be finished by 2028.

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