A ban on including a
café in the new Sainsbury’s food store earmarked for Llangollen has been lifted
by Denbighshire’s planning committee.
At their
meeting this morning (Wednesday) members followed the advice of county planning
chief Graham Boase and voted 21-3 to remove the condition - imposed in
September when they approved the scheme - preventing an in-store café when the
store is built on the site of the Dobson & Crowther printworks.
Again on the advice of Mr
Boase, the committee also voted to remove or vary three other conditions
relating to permitted levels of noise from the store site and pedestrian access
to it.
When the store was given the go-ahead by the
planning committee in the autumn, it was subject to a long list of conditions
on what could be included in the building and how it should be allowed to
operate.
But agents for the developers recently submitted a
fresh application to either remove or vary five of these conditions, which
relate to the café, permitted levels of noise and pedestrian access to the
site.
White Young Green
Planning & Design said the changes are needed to allow the store to operate
successfully.
Over 20 objections were received by the council ahead of the new application
being considered by the planning committee this morning.
Among those who have declared their opposition are
the Town Council and the Civic Society.
The bid to remove the café
restriction, which was imposed at the request of local councillors to protect
other cafes in the nearby Riverside Park and the town centre, has been the most
controversial.
Opponents claim an in-store cafe would damage those
already operating in the town.
However, in their submission, Roger Tym &
Partners, who have acted as retail consultants on behalf of the county council,
say there is “probably no strong basis to condition out a café”.
In recommending that the committee allow the
restriction to be removed, Graham Boase said in a report: “Whilst officers
consider there are a number of relevant arguments in objection to the variation
proposed, the absence of support for a refusal from the retail consultant
offers little professional backing for a negative recommendation here, and it
is ultimately considered unreasonable to insist on precluding a café use which
is now a common facility ancillary to the operation of a modern food store.”
Catherine Veasey, of Llangollen Friends of the
Earth, who attended the committee meeting as an observer, told llanblogger
immediately after it ended: “The council voted 21 in favour and three against.
So the café will now go ahead.
“The only variation opposed was regarding the
protocol if noise emissions are breached.”
She added: “Big business wins the day again.
“What frustrates me in relation to the café is that
there is legislation there to protect town centres and it just feels like
everyone is too scared to use it.”