Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Lucion Group
28th March, 2017
This will grant ‘Permission in Principle’ which will provide surety to developers that a site is suitable for development. On 23 March 2017, the Government published two important Statutory Instruments which have direct impact on developers:
Permission in Principle (PiP) establishes that a particular scale of development on a specified site is acceptable, and its aim is to minimise the upfront and at-risk work of those seeking to develop land. The Regulations require each local planning authority to prepare and then maintain a Brownfield Register of previously developed land by 31 December 2017. The regulations will allow Permission in Principle to be granted (under section 59A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990) for development of land allocated in Part 2 of a Brownfield Land register consisting of:
To be added to the register, the sites must be:
Delta-Simons’ article (July 2015) discussed Permission in Principle when it first muted (read article). Our view at that time was, and still is, that there will still need to be a requirement to assess and mitigate environmental impacts relating to the proposed development, ensuring that end users of the site are protected from potential contamination, to assess flood risk and mitigate, and to review transportation issues [etc]. Developers will still need to assess for the presence of protected species, habitats and invasive weeds in order to mitigate appropriately at some point before they complete site redevelopment.
For more information contact Kelvin Hughes, Technical Director, Delta-Simons.
Don’t miss a beat - get the latest insights and updates from Lucion straight to your inbox.