Plans for ÂŁ2.3m disability-friendly holiday lodges at a Pembrokeshire deer park attraction have been backed for a second time, but a final decision will have to be made by full council.
In an application recommended for refusal at the February 18 meeting of Pembrokeshire County councilâs planning committee, Mr and Mrs Evans are seeking permission for 15 lodges at Great Wedlock, Gumfreston, near Tenby, the site of a 176-acre deer farm attraction, which includes animals from the late Queenâs estate, and a more recently-granted market tradersâ barn.
The application had previously been recommended for refusal at the January meeting, but members went against officer recommendations with a âminded toâ approval, meaning the scheme returned to the February meeting after a âcooling off periodâ.
Reasons for refusal given to members included it was outside of an identified settlement boundary in a countryside location, and was considered to have an adverse impact on visual amenity.
The applicants have previously said build costs to complete the development would be circa ÂŁ2.3m.
St Florence Community Council did not support a previous application, but has supported the latest amended scheme.
At the February meeting, officers repeated their concerns, also raising a recent court judgement against the council for a previously-granted holiday park scheme in Stepaside, which had been backed despite repeated calls by officers for its refusal, saying there was a possibility of a similar situation arising.
Applicant Andrew Evans thanked members for their previous support for the scheme, saying it would be âcompletely unique to Pembrokeshire,â providing a facility âfor those less fortunate than ourselves,â adding: âPersons with disabilities can come and stay and be one of the majority, and not the minority.â
He said issues on visual intrusion had been addressed by screening which had already cost some ÂŁ2,000, saying: âThe only way youâd see this development is from a helicopter.â
Mr Evans told members some ÂŁ2.3m was being sunk into the scheme, estimating an annual ÂŁ1.5m spend in the county when wages, visitor expenditure and other factors were taken into account.
He said, if full approval was given, the first builds could be up-and-running this year, with all finished by February 2026.
Tenby-born Mr Evans quoted a recently-submitted Network Rail scheme to the national park to improve disability access at the townâs railway station, adding: âWeâre going for something that no-one else caters for; 24 percent of people suffer a disability.â
Local member, Cllr Rhys Jordan called once again for the scheme to be supported, saying the recent judgement of the Heritage Park scheme was âa different set of circumstances,â with the likelihood of a judicial review on an application that had ânot received one objectionâ and was supported by the local community council âslim to noneâ.
Councillor Alan Dennison, who moved the approval, seconded by Cllr Jordan, said: âWith respect to the recent court case, everyone supports this.â
Concerns were raised by councillors Brian Hall and Alistair Cameron, the former warning it could âopen the doorâ for applications previously refused.
Members voted nine in favour to five against supporting the scheme.
This second approval against officer recommendations based on policy means the final decision on the scheme will have to be made by full council, the matter expected to be heard at the March meeting.
The applicantsâ previous scheme for a trading barn took an identical route, being decided by full council after repeatedly being recommended for refusal.
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