Second bid for eco-village
 |
| The community hub building will house a hall, cafe and shop |
Plans for a pioneering eco-village, sited on farmland in Glandwr, will be resubmitted to Pembrokeshire County Council this afternoon.
Lammas was refused planning permission for the village last October. Undaunted they have reworked the plans over the last five months.
"The first application was refused due to insufficient detail," said Paul Wimbush, Lammas co-founder.
"The new application, with over 150 drawings and over 1200 pages of explanation certainly contains plenty of detail.
"This time every blueberry bush has a five year cashflow forecast!" he joked.
The proposed village, on 76 acres of woodland and pasture, would consist of nine largely self sufficient eco-smallholdings built of straw bale, clom, timber, turf and earth.
The project will be completely off-grid, with water supplied from a spring and electricity from a hydro-electric unit and fuel from on-site biomass crops.
Each of the nine smallholdings will be required to run a land-based business in order to meet the stringent planning criterea. Enterprises include making linen shawls from flax, breeding compost worms and building bow-topped caravans, as well as supplying vegetables, fruit and more traditional farm produce.
 |
| The Lammas group have added significant detail to the re-submitted planning application. |
A community hub building, "Yr Hwb" is also planned. This includes a hall, café and part-time shop.
In the long term Lammas say the ecovillage offers one solution to the challenges of affordable housing, rural regeneration, climate change and sustainability. In the short term it will benefit the local community by providing a shop, a minibus service into nearby towns and new footpaths.
The Lammas co-operative have taken the unique approach of making their whole planning application available online for all to see.
"Last time our application was so heavy that we submitted it by wheelbarrow. This time it would have taken two," said Paul.
"That is a lot of paper, even if it is recycled. So we made the whole application electronic, and then we had the idea of putting it on our website so that people can see what we are talking about.
"Last time we said "Trust us, it is good". This time we are saying "Have a look for yourselves, we think it is good, what do you think?"
A model of the Community Hub building will be available for the public to see at County Hall in Haverfordwest for the next three weeks.
9:33am Tuesday 11th March 2008
Print 
Email this
Comment
What are these links for?
If you liked this article and would like to share it with others on the web who might be searching for good content we've made it easy for you to do it.
At the bottom of all articles, you'll see links to six sites. These sites - commonly called 'social bookmark' or 'social news' sites - have large communities of web users who share and rate interesting, useful and fun things on the web.
Clicking the links will automatically add the address of the story you are reading to one of these sites, letting you share it with others. Each site will ask you to register to share stories. Registration is free and once a member, you can store, recommend and search for stories that interest you.
More on Digg
More on del.icio.us
More on Furl
More on reddit
More on NowPublic/
More on Yahoo!