Oswestry and District Civic Society aims to encourage a sensitive balance between the demands of new developments and the need to conserve the best show more
Oswestry and District Civic Society aims to encourage a sensitive balance between the demands of new developments and the need to conserve the best features of Oswestry’s urban and rural settlements.
The Society was refounded in the early 1980s and has an active membership, supports a programme of talks and visits throughout the year and conducts an annual Buildings Awards programme.
The Society seeks to promote awareness of, and pride in, the best features of both town and countryside.
Oswestry Cemetery
For the new remembrance garden recently commissioned by the Town Council and for the cataloguing of all the graves in the cemetery.
Knockin and Kinnerley Cricket Club
For the breadth and diversity of the activities of the club, and for the wide range of voluntary effort.
Sundays in the Park – Neil Phillips and Oswestry Town Council
Like the chicken and the egg history does not remember which came first, Neil Phillips and his Sunday Music in the Park events or the Town Council organised Brass and Silver Band concerts. However they, with the relatively new addition of the international community celebrations (Bulgarian, Bangladeshi), add an excellent new dimension to the life of the town’s park.
These events are inclusive, friendly, and fun. They celebrate popular and foreign cultures in the generous and elegant environment of Cae Glas.
Shop in Castle Street
An imaginative but low cost improvement of a shop on the outskirts of the Town Centre. Works like this add to the distinctiveness of the area.
Mrs Barbara Molesworth
Barbara has developed two fantastic gardens, both on Daisy Lane, Whittington. The first house she bought with her husband over forty years ago and then eight years ago she built her own house on some adjacent land. Working closely with her architect Melvin Gough and tradespeople she has created a simple home with a generous multi-faceted garden.
This garden is a small wonder, when the Assessors visited it was full of butterflies, insects and birds. It is also the nursery for many local gardeners who buy her excellent plants for sale most Wednesdays at the Country Market in the Memorial Hall. Last but not least Barbara opens her Gardens for one weekend each year to raise money for Save the Children and a local charity. This she has done for over 20 years and has quietly raised many thousands of pounds.
Perry Cottage, Rednal
An intriguing and innovative modern house that has been built with a simple and ambitious architectural plan. A house that is both very private and also embraces the nature around it. One of the best executed modern houses in the area.
Old Five Bells Pub, Willow Street, Oswestry
The refurbishment and development of this Victorian pub building in the town centre has been done to a high standard where some profit has been forgone for both presentation and build quality.
The Assessors saw this project as a good re-working of a decent building in the town that will improve the town centre’s density.
High Barn, Ty Draw, Nant Mawr
A sensitive and high quality restoration of an old stone and brick farm building. What impressed the Assessors was both the attention to detail that the owners have ensured but also the level of craftsmanship applied throughout the whole building. The creation of a very spacious and well worked home from a redundant agricultural building is an exemplar for others to follow.
Details of particularly high quality are: the random slating of the roof; the retention of the original beams and trusses; internal plastering and use of appropriate materials.
St David’s Church, Welsh Walls, Oswestry
The church of St David’s is a curious and interesting building built as a Welsh speaking Anglican church by the St Oswald’s parish church in the late nineteenth century. It tells us of the resurgence of the Welsh language and a rising Welsh identity; and our town’s place at the cross roads between England and Wales.
By 2000 the building was becoming dilapidated. The owners have both saved it and converted it into a very fine holiday destination.
The society recognises the work done for the restoration of this building and for creating a high quality destination for people to come to Oswestry and support the economy of the town.
The Unicorn Nursery – Maesbury School
The Assessors considered that the building had been sensitively refurbished, retaining original window design. New additions for the purpose of the site were appropriate, restrained, and in tune with the character of the building and its site.
The Assessors were impressed that the large oak tree on the boundary of the site had been carefully treated, retaining its spreading lower branches.
The Unicorn Nursery – Maesbury School
The Assessors considered that the building had been sensitively refurbished, retaining original window design. New additions for the purpose of the site were appropriate, restrained, and in tune with the character of the building and its site.
The Assessors were impressed that the large oak tree on the boundary of the site had been carefully treated, retaining its spreading lower branches.
Summary
The plan cannot be considered to be sound for the following reasons:-
The strategic decision to locate some 27% of all residential development within the rural settlements under the “Hubs and Clusters” policy is
This objection demonstrates that rural development will:
all of which fail to meet requirements of policy SP3.
It has been demonstrated that the Sustainability Appraisal on which the strategy rests lacks credibility due to poor professional quality
The aspirations of the rural development policies are not supported by any clear evidence.
There are preferable means of meeting the needs for development land.
Introduction
Submission as to the Reg. 18 Draft
Further Details – 1 Sustainability Appraisal
Further Details 2 – Zero Carbon
Minimising the need for travel
Maximising the use of sustainable transport
Bus
route providing a single bus in the peak hour in each direction, with services stopping early in the evening. In common with the rest of the country, rural services have been in decline, and there is little being done in Shropshire to stem the decline.
Hub-Town | First bus | Last bus | Duration | Frequency | Time by car | Cost
£ |
Weston Rhyn -Wrexham | 6.23 | 18.52 | 50 | 60 | 20 | 5-6 |
Weston Rhyn-Oswestry | 7.23 | 17.42 | 11 | 30 | 11 | 3-4 |
West Felton – Shrewsbury | 9.04 | 16.12 | 34 | 30 | 20 | 4-6 |
West Felton – Oswestry | 9.10 | 16.42 | 22 | 30 | 10 | 4-5 |
Kinnerley-Oswestry | 08.13 | 17.52 | 17 | 90 | 15 | 4-6 |
Kinnerley – Shrewsbury | 07.26 | 17.28 | 59 | 90 | 20 | 6-7 |
Cycling
Walking
Purported benefits of Hubs and Clusters
An alternative approach
Conclusion
David Ward
September 2020
Annex A
Relative amounts of travel comparing Oswestry Sustainable Urban Extension and sites located in surrounding settlements.
Settlement | Distance to main shops
X S km |
Distance to secondary school E km | Distance to principal service/social centre C km | No of dwellings proposed
D |
Travel T=
D(S+E+O) |
Hh
Travel T/D |
Oswestry SUE (1) | 0.5 S = 94 | 2.E=63 | 1.5.C=257 | 800 | 331,200 | 414 |
Kinnerley | 11.S=2020 | 11.E=346 | 11.C=1886 | 23 | 97,796 | |
Knockin | 12.S=2251 | 12.E=378 | 12.C=2058 | 31 | 145,297 | |
Llanymynech | 10.S=1876 | 9.E=283 | 10.C=1715 | 51 | 212,772 | |
Pant | 9.S=1688 | 8.E=352 | 9.C=1543 | 52 | 186,316 | |
Ruyton XI Towns | 15.S=2814 | 1.E=31 | 15.C=2572 | 103 | 557, 951 | |
Trefonen | 6.S=1126 | 6.E=189 | 6.C=1029 | 50 | 117,200 | |
West Felton | 7.S=1313 | 8.E=352 | 7.C=1200 | 64 | 183,360 | |
Weston Rhyn | 8.S=1500 | 9.E=283 | 8.C=1372 | 101 | 318,655 | |
Whittington | 8.S=1500 | 9.E=283 | 8.C=1372 | 89 | 280,795 | |
Total rural(2) | 564 | 2,100,142 | 3723 | |||
Factor (2)/(1) | 0.7
(70%) |
6.34 (634%) | 8.9
(890%) |
This table makes estimates of travel for all purposes except commuting and business. It therefore refers to 68% of the travel propensity of an average household.
Factors have been applied to give an estimate of trip numbers per household:
S = 536 x 0.35 (from the NTS) x 0.5 ( that is half shopping trips to neighbourhood shop, half to main supermarket and town centre shops) x 2 (approx. average household occupancy) = 187.6
E = 175 (no of school days pa)x 0.18 (% households having 10-19 year old –from ONS)=31.5
0 = 536 x (.17 +.15) (From NTS)x 0.5 (that is half of all service and personal trips made elsewhere than Oswestry)x 2(approx. hh occupancy) = 171.5
A Vision and Plan for a Sustainable Future
A Neighbourhood Plan for Oswestry:
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1H9JqIl7A-mwTspeSwdgj0ATeSU2wqu_H/edit?usp=share_link&ouid=117313634966030126336&rtpof=true&sd=true
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