Home » Plans to convert derelict farmhouse into home put on hold for site visit

Plans to convert derelict farmhouse into home put on hold for site visit

Mr and Mrs I and A Evans, of Fronlwyd, Llangrannog are seeking permission for a new build at a nearby abandoned dwelling (Pic: Ceredigion County Council webcast)

A CEREDIGION farmer’s call to convert a derelict building last occupied in the 1930s as a downsizing home on land he has farmed all his life has been put on hold while planners visit the site.

At the February meeting of Ceredigion County Council’s development management committee, members were recommended to refuse an application by Mr and Mrs I and A Evans, of Fronlwyd, Llangrannog to erect a dwelling, agricultural shed and associated works on the site of the nearby abandoned dwelling at Fronlwyd/Pen-yr-Allt, just over a mile from Llangrannog, which was last occupied in 1936.

It was recommended for refusal on grounds including it was “unjustified new housing in open countryside”.

Mr and Mrs I and A Evans, of Fronlwyd, Llangrannog are seeking permission for a new build at a nearby abandoned dwelling (Pic: Ceredigion County Council webcast)

Giving an impassioned plea to be allowed to build the bungalow, Mr Evans, who warned he was “not a big fan of public speaking,” said: “I have farmed the land all my life, I live in a five-bed house, just me and the wife, we’re getting older.

“We want to build a bungalow just so we can future-proof as we get older; I don’t want to leave the land I’ve farmed all my life, I like being out in the fresh air and listening to the birds and the animals.”

He said there was more of the ruined building present when he was a child, the building declining after “years of not being looked after”.

He told members he wanted the site to go back to “what I remember as a kid”, adding: “In the olden days they knew how to build houses, it’s in a little dip and only visible from one direction, it’s ideally situated.

“I would look after the land and me and my wife in our old age; I just want to stay there, that’s where I’ve lived all my life, and I want to stay there.”

A site inspection panel visit before any decision was made was proposed by Cllr Gareth Lloyd, with Cllr Maldwyn Lewis saying: “In my mind heritage is important for Ceredigion, the backbone of the fabric of the community.”

Members unanimously backed a site inspection panel viewing of the application, the application returning to a future meeting.

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