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Denbighshire North Wales Politics

Plans to develop former lunatic asylum in Denbigh deferred

Denbighshire County Council

PLANS to develop the grade-two listed North Wales Hospital site in Denbigh were deferred today (Tuesday).

Jones Bros Ruthin Development Holding Limited want to develop the former lunatic asylum, which has been owned by the council since 2018, following a compulsory purchase order.

The derelict Victorian hospital closed in 1995, but the development company is seeking permission to convert, restore, part demolish, and adapt the main listed buildings into 34 apartments, with two new access points.

Outline permission is also sought for 300 ‘units’ on nine hectares of land for residential development.

The plans also include provision for 1,114 square metres of business units on the land.

Two proposed scenarios have been put forward as part of the plans, both retaining the ‘main range’ hospital building and chapel whilst ‘scenario two’ also proposes retaining the Aled Ward.

It is envisaged the public funding will come from grants and the North Wales Growth Fund (NWGF).

But planning officers asked the committee to defer the application whilst further details around the application are agreed.

That’s because officers are still finalising a section 106 agreement to agree the ‘phasing’ of works to the main hospital building and chapel as well as the release of capital from the sale of land.

But Cllr Merfyn Parry feared delaying the project.

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“This is a big application in Denbighshire, probably one of the biggest we’ve had for years,” he said.

“It’s so important that this is pushed through quicker. There are funding risks involved from Welsh Government and from UK Government to whether this application happens, so I’m against deferring this one.”

But planning officer Paul Mead said officers were advising the committee to defer the application so further details could be finalised, adding that funding was not at risk.

“What officers are trying to do is protect the council’s interest from a potential judicial review perspective,” he said.

“There are always legal risks of going through a democratic process like planning committee where maybe not a sufficient amount of clarity is being given to members on detail, so that’s fundamentally why we are looking for deferral today.

“To reassure members, we are very close in relation to this detail, so it’s not going to be six months, 12 months further down the line when we do come back. We are hoping it can be next month or the month after, so we are very close in terms of finalising the detail, but it is protecting the council’s interest in terms of the council’s interest today.”

He added, “I understand there are concerns about funding that have been raised there in terms of one of the propositions to not defer today, but again I’d emphasise the information that I’ve had with meetings with Ambition North Wales and other funders in relation to this is that this delay from this planning committee won’t affect the funding. The funding is not at risk in relation to this.”

The application was deferred 14 votes for to four against and will be redebated at a future planning committee meeting.

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