Developer wins appeal over ditched school site

The land will be part of the New Eastern Villages (NEV) development
- Published
Land originally set aside for a primary school as part of a huge development on the edge of a town could now be developed into houses.
Danescroft successfully appealed to a planning inspector against having to build the school saying there was sufficient primary education provision elsewhere in the NEV (New Eastern Villages) project near Swindon.
The NEV will consist of 8,000 homes, new schools, employment spaces and community and leisure facilities.
Danescroft already has permission to build 299 houses and so has submitted a proposal for 71 more in the area, including on the land previously marked for the school.

If approved the new area will be lined with trees and a green space to the north
The application includes a 'pocket park' along with trees and green space that would separate it from any developments north of the area.
"The landscape strategy shall seek to retain existing trees and hedgerows to strengthen green infrastructure and deliver a landscape framework that supports amenity, biodiversity, and an attractive setting for future residents," it states.
Nearby Green Street would be the main connecting route between the two housing projects, the Local Democracy Reporting Service was told.
The land set aside for the school was a rectangular site just north of the Foxbridge Village centre bordered to the south by the Southern Connector road running from South Marston just north of the Commonhead Roundabout.
A decision on the application is expected after November.
Get in touch
Tell us which stories we should cover in Wiltshire
Follow BBC Wiltshire on Facebook, external, X, external and Instagram, external. Send your story ideas to us on email or via WhatsApp on 0800 313 4630.
- Published19 June 2023
- Published3 November 2022