Great Yarmouth Borough Council Portal
No.Condition Text
1.The development must be begun not later than three years beginning with the date of this permission. The reason for the condition is :- The time limit condition is imposed in order to comply with the requirements of Section 91 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 as amended by Section 51 of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004.
2.The development shall be carried out in accordance with the plans, design and heritage statement and obtrusive lighting survey received by the Local Planning Authority on 27 July 2021. The reason for the condition is :- For the avoidance of doubt.
3.The lighting hereby approved shall only be operated from dusk until midnight of the same night, and shall be turned off outside these hours. The reason for the condition is :- To preserve neighbour amenity and dark skies and to reduce impact on existing and future ecology. Note: There may be occasions when operation of the lights for special events seeks to extend the hours of illumination. The Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development)(England) Order 2015 contains provisions for temporary uses of land to accommodate this on occasion for up to 28 days in a year.
4.No external lighting shall be installed other than in accordance with the lighting plan as illustrated and described on the submitted plans/design and access statement and shall not cause glare beyond the site boundaries and shall not exceed the strength of illumination described therein. The reason for the condition is: - In the interests of highway safety.
5.During periods of illumination the lighting shall be set in a "Static state" only - that is to say that the intensity of luminaires shall not fluctuate to a pattern, and nor should it strobe, flicker or rotate, and the colour which is set at the beginning of the illumination period shall remain constant for that particular period of illumination. The reason for the condition is :- To maintain the character of the conservation area, the amenity of neighbours and to avoid distraction to road users.
6.Notwithstanding the provisions of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) (England) Order 2015 (or any order revoking and re-enacting the order), no additional lighting shall be added without the further submission of written and drawn details to the Local Planning Authority and their subsequent written agreement. The reason for the condition is:- In the interests of the residential amenities of the occupiers of the adjacent property and for highway safety.
7.The existing lighting fixtures indicated in the submitted information as to be removed, shall be removed along with redundant cabling before the installation of the new lighting fixtures. Making good of fixing holes shall be carried out using matching materials or where these were directly into brick or stone, using hydraulic lime mortar, unless the fixing holes are scheduled to be reused by the new fixtures or cabling. The reason for the condition is :- For clarity in conducting the works, both to avoid additional illumination if the old lights were retained and to ensure the minimum harm to the fabric of heritage assets.
8.Occasionally European protected species, such as bats, can be found during the course of development even when the site appears unlikely to support them or after an ecological survey has found no previous evidence of them. In the event that this occurs, the developer must stop work immediately and seek the advice of a suitability qualified ecological consultant and/or the relevant statutory nature conservation organisation. Reason: In accordance with the requirements of the adopted Joint Core Strategy and paragraph 118 of the National Planning Policy Framework, and for the undertaking of the council's statutory function under the Natural Environment and Rural Communities Act (2006).
9.STATEMENT OF POSITIVE ENGAGEMENT: In dealing with this application Great Yarmouth Borough Council has actively sought to work with the applicant in a positive and proactive manner.