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Latest news with #BordPleanála

€120m Westmeath housing development seeking five year planning extension
€120m Westmeath housing development seeking five year planning extension

Irish Independent

time12 hours ago

  • Business
  • Irish Independent

€120m Westmeath housing development seeking five year planning extension

Ukrainian war causing major supply chain uncertainty Today at 04:32 Developers behind a €120m housing development in Athlone have applied for further time to complete one of the largest residential housing developments the midlands town has ever seen. An Bord Pleanála rubberstamped plans for 426 new homes on a near 40 acre site at lands and bordering Buccaneers rugby club, in the townlands of Coosan, Cornamagh, and Clonbrusk in October 2020.

Appeal over refusal of 58 Wicklow homes is rejected
Appeal over refusal of 58 Wicklow homes is rejected

Irish Independent

time2 days ago

  • Automotive
  • Irish Independent

Appeal over refusal of 58 Wicklow homes is rejected

The appeal was submitted by Ronan O'Caoimh and applied to lands at Ashtown Lane, Hawkestown Lower, including existing dwellings, Elbren Cottage, Ashtown Lane, and Redkite Rest. The 58 single and two storey homes were due be a mix of two, three and four bedroom houses, including bungalows, terraced and semi-detached dwellings. The planning application also involved the proposed removal of the existing dwelling, Elbren Cottage, and the semi-detached single storey garage structure located on the site. The appeal was submitted after Wicklow County Council refused the application in February, having considered the site's peripheral location, which would result in the proposed development being primarily car dependent, the existing undeveloped lands closer to the centre of Wicklow town, and the scale of the proposed development. The approved plans of the local authority to upgrade Rocky Road, the L1099, as an improved access to/from the M11 to Wicklow town was also noted by the planning section, and the lack of any plans to deal with potential traffic increases on Ashtown Lane, the L5100. An Bord Pleanála paid regard to the objectives of the Wicklow County Development Plan 2022-2028 before making their decision to reject the appeal. It is considered that the design and layout of the proposed development does not respond favourably to the topography of the proposed development site in this location and would cause a poor contextual elevation of the proposed development from Ashtown Lane, which would result in the rear of dwellings being visible from the public road. It was also ruled that the proposed development would adversely impact on the visual amenities of the area and would not, therefore, strengthen the character of the area or provide a coherent and legible urban structure. It was also felt that, notwithstanding the relatively short vehicle access route to Junction 18 of the M11 motorway, the proposed development would be premature pending the provision of road improvements to the local road network that would provide ease of movement and avoid conflict between pedestrians/cyclists and traffic, and would therefore constitute a traffic hazard.

Operator of Dublin Fields movie studios wins €276,000 planning levy battle
Operator of Dublin Fields movie studios wins €276,000 planning levy battle

Irish Independent

time05-06-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Independent

Operator of Dublin Fields movie studios wins €276,000 planning levy battle

An Bord Pleanála has ruled that combined public infrastructure and special planning contributions to be paid by Lens Media Ltd to the council be reduced by a cumulative €276,018. Lens Media has stated that the proposed film studios 'will more than double the current soundstage offering in Ireland' and once fully operational, it will directly support in the region of 2,800 jobs and a further 2,100 indirectly. The board has reduced the planning contributions bill following an appeal by Lens Media. In the ruling, the appeals board has upheld the argument put forward by the applicants that a special planning contribution of €143,112 be removed as the junction upgrades at the R120 Newcastle Village-Peamount Road referenced in the condition is not exceptional or specific to the proposed development. The appeals board also ordered that a demand by the council that Lens Media Ltd pay a public infrastructure planning contribution be reduced by €132,906 from €8.859m to €8.72m. The council found that contribution exemptions in relation to the South Dublin County Council Development Contribution Scheme 2021-2025 were not properly applied. The appeals board stated that the council applied a commercial levy to 1,112sqm of the scheme which comprise switch-rooms, plant rooms, ancillary plant rooms and a standalone substation, all of which are listed as exempt from development contributions. The board made its ruling following a 27-page inspector's report recommending the reduction in planning levies. Last December, the council granted a 10-year planning permission to Lens Media Ltd for the 56-acre site which includes 20 individual structures amounting to over 74,000sqm of gross floor space. A planning report by planning consultants Tom Phillips+ Associates lodged with the application stated that Dublin Fields 'will have all the elements that will lure top productions from around the world'. The planning report stated that the project 'will be a world-class studio' and occupy the top tier of movie studios globally. In their report, the consultants stated: 'We believe this will be the largest stage in the European Union, and a unifying step in making Ireland a new hub for the movie and TV industry.'

Fresh blow for Dublin tourism as third hotel is refused
Fresh blow for Dublin tourism as third hotel is refused

Irish Independent

time23-05-2025

  • Business
  • Irish Independent

Fresh blow for Dublin tourism as third hotel is refused

An Bord Pleanála has refused permission to Derek Murtagh's planned eight-storey, 81-bedroom hotel for Kevin Street Lower and Liberty Lane in ­Portobello, Dublin 8. A report prepared for Mr Murtagh by the Head of Hotels & Leisure at Savills, Tom Barrett, stated the planned hotel 'would be a good addition to this city centre area'. The refusal follows two hotel proposals by Eamon Waters's Sretaw Hotel Group failing to get permission to proceed this month. In one decision, the appeals board refused planning permission for a new 61-bedroom hotel close to St Stephen's Green in a new eight-storey hotel for a site known as Textile House on Johnson's Place and Clarendon Market opposite the Grafton Hotel in Dublin. In a second blow to the Sretaw Hotel Group, Dublin City Council planners refused planning permission to Mr ­Waters's Peachbeach UC for a 113-bedroom hotel for Baggot Street Lower as the scheme would cause serious injury to the special architectural character of the Georgian area. In relation to the Murtagh scheme, the board refused planning permission as it concluded the hotel's ­excessive scale, massing and architectural design would be visually overbearing with an abrupt transition within the historic terrace which would detract from the prevailing scale and architectural character of the traditional streetscape. The appeals board ruled the proposal would result in overdevelopment of the site and would negatively impact the setting of the Protected Structure. The appeals board also concluded that notwithstanding the revised scheme of reduced scale, it was not satisfied the proposed development would not seriously injure the residential amenities of the opposing properties on Liberty Lane by reason of overbearance, ­overlooking, potential noise and disturbance and access to daylight and sunlight. In the third ground for refusal, the board stated the board was not ­satisfied that the proposed development would provide an adequate level of public facilities such as a cafe, restaurant and bar uses to generate activity at street level throughout the day and night. The board also stated that it was not satisfied the operational management was adequately demonstrated as feasible in the absence of the provision of a designated loading bay off road.

Planning grant for 246 homes at Cork site where executed RIC constable believed to be secretly buried
Planning grant for 246 homes at Cork site where executed RIC constable believed to be secretly buried

Irish Independent

time16-05-2025

  • Irish Independent

Planning grant for 246 homes at Cork site where executed RIC constable believed to be secretly buried

Constable Thomas Joseph Walsh was court martialled and executed by the IRA in Blarney during the War of Independence Planning has been granted for 246 homes to be built at a Cork site where the secret burial place of an executed RIC constable is believed to be located. An Bord Pleanála upheld planning permission on May 6 for Clockstrike Ltd to build the houses and a creche at Ringwood, Shean Upper in Blarney.

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