A point which continues to puzzle me, ChrisB.
After all, the whole of the Bicester to Oxford upgrade (with the exception of the new chord) was within railway boundaries, yet the delays caused by continuing opposition in and around the Oxford area have had a big impact on the delivery.
Likewise, we're now being told that an existing level crossing at Ashton is problematic for the Portishead reopening.
Part 18 Class A to Schedule 2 of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order 2015 is applicable to developments which were originally authorised by an Act of Parliament - in this case, the Great Western Railway Act of 1835.
The GPDO states that:
The prior approval... is not to be refused by the appropriate authority nor are any conditions to be imposed unless they are satisfied that -
(a) the development... ought to be and could reasonably be carried out elsewhere on the land; or
(b) the design or external appearance of any building, bridge, aqueduct, pier or dam would injure the amenity of the neighbourhood and is reasonably capable of modification to avoid such injury.
Reason (a) is easily dealt with: the old waiting shelters are in the way, and the new ones need to be on the platforms. Reason (b) is in this case fairly easily dismissed too: The existing shelters date from the 1930s and are described as 'much altered';
NR» consider that there is 'nothing of historical or architectural interest' above platform level at Keynsham. New 'bus shelters' may not exactly lift the spirit, but they couldn't really be said to injure the amenity of the neighbourhood either. This is Keynsham we're talking about, not the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.
So why bother with Prior Approval? Because it gives the appropriate authority the ability to object if NR are about to commit a howler like, for example, emptying a massive box of Dexion all over an
AONB▸ without warning anyone. Not that they'd ever do anything THAT daft!