Get permission or its the end of line for Portishead railway muralCampaigners who put up a mural in Portishead highlighting the need to reopen the railway line to the town have been forced to apply for planning permission for it to remain in place.
The 40ft mural was placed on land in Harbour Road earmarked for a new station in April in a bid to raise awareness of the need for a rail link in the growing town.
The mural on Harbour Road which depicts the ^railway story^ of Portishead. But railway campaigners have been told it needs planning permissionThe mural, costing in the region of ^6,000, was jointly funded by the Portishead Railway Group (PRG), Pure Offices and dock developer Crest Nicholson ^ which owns the site ^ and house builder Persimmon.
But the issue of whether the mural could remain came into question earlier this year when concerns were raised it had been put up without planning permission.
The Portishead Railway Group said it had checked with North Somerset Council planning officers on a number of occasions before the mural went up and were told, because it was a piece of art, planning permission was not needed.
Other artwork installed across the new developments in the town over the last seven years has been installed without planning permission.
However, authority planning chiefs have now ruled permission is required and a retrospective planning permission for the wooden structure on which the mural sits has now been submitted by the railway group.
Portishead Railway Group chairman Alan Matthews, said: ^We hope that retrospective planning permission will be agreed so the mural can remain in place. I think this is just a case of ticking all the relevant boxes. The mural is getting national and international recognition and has already appeared in the local newspaper in Portishead^s twin town of Den Dungen in Holland. It would be a dreadful shame if it had to come down.^
The design tells the ^railway story^ of the North Somerset town, from 1867 and into the future with trains using the line again. It shows the history of the line and plans for its future and also features artwork depicting the arrival of the broad gauge line in the town.
The mural ^ designed by local artist Aili Purdy ^ also embodies images from the past, present and future of Portishead and the surrounding area. Included are the first train to Portishead in 1867, the High Street in 1890, a 1909 horse carriage, a diesel railcar from 1954, the modern marina, and a future train and station.
Once the new station is built, when the railway is open, the mural will be taken down and put in the station.
North Somerset Council spokesman Nick Yates, said: ^The mural needs planning permission. The group has now submitted an application which will be considered in the normal way.^