A former farm in South Ribble has gone on the market after permission was granted to turn it into an estate of industrial units designed to house start-up businesses.
Councillors last month gave the go-ahead to the redevelopment of the Model Farm site, on Croston Road in Farington, after a long-running wrangle over whether the plans were suitable for the greenbelt plot.
It means 13 âshellâ buildings can be constructed and rented out to fledgling businesses which would then be free to tailor the spaces for their own needs.
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The land is now listed on property website Rightmove for âoffers over ÂŁ975,000â â with the description trumpeting the planning permission that now comes with the site for industrial, storage or office use.
South Ribble Borough Councilâs planning committee approved the proposal at a recent meeting, having deferred its decision last December after questioning whether the farm should be classed as âpreviously developedâ.
When conferred on greenbelt land, that status means new buildings are permitted in the location â provided they do not have any greater impact on the âopennessâ of the area than whatever they replace.
The committee was once again presented with a report by the authorityâs planning officers which concluded that the former dairy farm did fall into the previously developed category â because of the past use of facilities on the site to manufacture and sell furniture.
However, Lancashire county councillor Michael Green â who represents the Moss Side and Farington division â said that while the agricultural business had âdiversified to some extentâ, it was only for the sale of âa few wooden planters and likewiseâ.
âIt was not an industrial site in any way shape or form,â he insisted.
Acknowledging the economic benefits of the proposal, County Cllr Green said that it was nevertheless important to âstand up to protect the greenbeltâ.
However, Sophie Marshall, the agent for the application, told the committee there was now âno question that the whole site is brownfieldâ, following the implementation of a separate permission allowing some of the farm buildings to be used for storage and distribution purposes.
She added that the applicant, Whitwell Properties Limited, had taken on board a range of other concerns expressed about their plans at Decemberâs meeting â and âwent to the expense and time to amend the scheme againâ.
Some committee members remained unconvinced, with Cllr Mary Green saying she was saddened that so many applications were being âchewed onâ and contrived âjust so that we can allow yet another industrial unit on aâŠpiece of greenbeltâ.
However, the authorityâs planning manager, Catherine Thomas, said it was not a matter of âwriggling around greenbelt policyâ, but rather âlooking [at] what the policy actually saysâ.
She told members that planning officers considered the demolition of what she described as the âsubstantialâ number of buildings currently on the farm and their replacement with the 13 proposed units â which will have a maximum height of 6.7 metres â would âactually increase the openness of the siteâ.
Ms. Thomas stressed that national planning guidance encouraged âalternative usesâ of redundant agricultural buildings â where the farms in question are âno longer viableâ â in order to prevent their deterioration.
Committee member Cllr Will Adams said he felt the proposal was âa positive oneâ, which would have âa better visual impactâ on the surrounding community.
The meeting was also told that the risk of the development getting in the way of longstanding proposals to widen the A582, which borders the site, had been resolved by changes to the layout of the units.
The application was approved by eight votes to two.
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