Latest news with #Thurmaston


BBC News
4 days ago
- General
- BBC News
420-place school plans detailed for new Leicestershire town
A new primary school is among facilities being planned for a town being built in Leicestershire. Thorpebury was given initial planning approval in 2016, with 4,500 houses set to be built across 900 acres of land north of Hamilton and east of new proposals submitted to Charnwood Borough Council (CBC) include the 420-space school, along with shops, healthcare facilities, parks, sports pitches, play areas, and walking and cycle is estimated the £450m project will take more than a decade to complete, but work on the first 584 homes began in 2022. The plans, submitted by Leicestershire County Council, show the two-storey school building on a 4.5 acre site will have a 42-space car park, playing fields and sports to the Local Democracy Reporting Service, planning documents state: "The demand for additional school places arises because of the development of 4,500 new build homes in the area. "It is expected that the new primary school will have a discrete catchment area to serve the new development."


BBC News
16-05-2025
- BBC News
Construction worker's fatal fall in Thurmaston was 'wholly avoidable'
A construction boss has admitted failings over the "wholly avoidable" death of a worker on a house Lifestyle Design Ltd worker Stephen Pywell was walking on roof beams on a site in Thurmaston, Leicestershire, in March 2019 when he 59-year-old was taken to hospital and underwent surgery but died in May 2019 as a result of his director James Pitsillides, of Leicester, pleaded guilty to breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was handed a suspended prison sentence, a community order and £10,000 costs at Leicester Magistrates' Court on Wednesday 7 May. A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) investigation found that Mr Pywell had used a ladder to access the beams, where there was no edge protection in place, leaving him to fall almost eight feet (2.4m). 'Tragic death' HSE said Pitsillides, of Orchard Lane, Great Glen, had failed to manage the roof work leaving subcontractors including Mr Pywell exposed to 45, pleaded guilty and was given a 20-week prison sentence, suspended for two district judge also ordered him to complete 200 hours of unpaid work and pay £10,000 in inspector Phil Gratton said: "This was a wholly avoidable incident, caused by the failure to implement simple fall protection measures."Had the company used suitable work equipment or devised a safe system of work, Mr Pywell's tragic death could have been avoided."Our thoughts remain with his family and friends."