At
an appeal hearing in Llangollen Town Hall on September 4, Belgrave Homes
(Llangollen) claimed that because the original development of 20 apartments in
Abbey Road is set to make a financial loss, an agreement – or obligation - it
signed with Denbighshire County Council in 2006 to make cash contributions
towards affordable housing and public open space in the town no longer serves a
useful purpose.
But the
council argued that the sums covered by the Section 106 Agreement - £226,432 for
affordable housing and £47, 526 for open space making a total of £273,958,
indexed to £334,683 up until last April - should still be payable.
The
hearing was presided over on behalf of the Welsh Government by inspector Emyr
Jones and took evidence from both sides.
Mr
Jones has now published his decision, which rules the obligation no longer
serves a useful purpose.
In his
official statement he says the development has incurred “substantial losses” in
excess of £3 million, with apartments being sold at prices which “fall well
short of recovering acquisition and construction costs”.
This, says
the inspector, is predominantly as a result of the site being purchased at the
height of the housing boom and the subsequent dramatic fall in property values.
He adds:
“The appellants are a single purpose company who state that their only asset is
the ground rent from the development which is valued at around £60-70,000.
“The
council does not challenge the appellants’ financial information, but its
hearing statement suggests that there is a reasonable prospect of obtaining the
sums due if the obligation is not discharged.
“Nevertheless,
the appellants are not in a position to pay these sums and the bank, which has
to bear the bulk of the above loss, is not going to make any additional
payments on its own volition.
“Neither
is it likely to enter into possession of the site as a mortgagee given that the
value of the asset would be significantly less than any legal charges running
with the land.”
Allowing
Belgrave Homes’ appeal, he said: “In the above circumstances, I am of the view
that there is no real prospect of the council recovering the commuted sums and
its principal solicitor accepted that the chances of so doing were slim.
“As a
result, adopting a pragmatic approach, it can be concluded that the obligation
no longer serves a useful purpose.”
* The
Planning Inspectorate in encouraging people to complete a survey giving feedback
on its administrative process and the inspector’s decision. It can be
downloaded from https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/PostDecisionQ Quote Appeal Ref: APP/R6830/Q/12/2175832; Site address: Plas Derwen, Abbey Road, Llangollen
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