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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Alice Peacock

Millionaire wins fight to stop construction of neighbours' house which 'looks too suburban'

An interior designer has won a fight in the Court of Appeal to stop his neighbours' new house from being built after complaining it looks "too suburban" to be sitting next to his £1.6million country mansion.

Millionaire Glenn Kinnersley, 60, and his wife Donna fell out with photographer neighbour Paul Dixon and his wife Angela over their plans to build their planned "suburban" style barn conversion.

Design guru Mr Kinnersley claimed the conversion would spoil the image of their Georgian country pile, in the Kent Downs.

Mr and Mrs Kinnersley expressed their "disappointment with the suburban design, the extensive glazing and the non-traditional flat roof" of their neighbours' proposed to build in a letter of protest penned through their lawyers to their local council.

Maidstone Borough Council went ahead and granted permission for the build, but Mr Kinnersley fought on, taking the case first to the High Court and then Court of Appeal.

This week, he won a Court of Appeal ruling, overturning the council's January 2021 decision, after claiming the local authority ignored the impact their neighbours' new house would have on the prized "heritage asset" of their posh home.

This is Mulberry Cottage which is owned by Paul and Angela Dixon (Champion News)

An internationally renowned interiors guru, Mr Kinnersley has done design work for Fortnum and Mason and set up the global creative design brand Kinnersley Kent, a business based in London and Dubai.

He and his wife bought 18th-century Hollingbourne House for £1.6 million in 2005 and transformed it into a sprawling family home, dominating a crest of the Kentish North Downs.

The Georgian mansion, which came with eight acres of grounds and "vast cellars," was originally the seat of a family of prominent Kent landowners - the Duppa.

Kent-based photographer Paul Dixon has planned a 'suburban' style barn conversion. (Champion News)

It was designed by the architect Charles Beazley as a "grand neo-classical residence".

But the couple's contentment in their stately dream home faded when they learned their neighbours, Mr and Mrs Dixon, were trying to convert a barn on their land into two new houses.

Complaining to the council during the planning process, Mr and Mrs Kinnersley said they had a "fundamental concern about the design of the scheme" - which involves demolishing part of the barn to erect a "replacement structure" and converting the barn's front section to create two homes, plus parking and garden space.

This is Hollingbourne House (Champion News)

The Dixons also want to demolish a garden wall which their neighbours say is historic, while rebuilding an alternative wall and restoring an old glasshouse.

At present, Mr Dixon uses the barn building - known as the Courtyard Studios - to house his commercial photography business.

"These features are out of keeping with the prevailing character of the site and will detract from the agricultural character of the building and from the overall aesthetic of the estate," the letter of objection added.

The couple also questioned the proposed "dominating windows" which they said would be "highly visible from the listed walled garden owned and used by Mr and Mrs Kinnersley".

Such jarring features would "draw the eye and significantly alter the experience of the historical surroundings of Hollingbourne House" and would be "domineering and overbearing," they said.

The Dixons insisted they did their utmost to design a project in tune with both the environment and the historical profile of Hollingbourne House.

Mr Kinnersley went to court in July 2021 after Maidstone Council granted planning permission and Judge Walden-Smith threw out his case, rejecting his lawyers' arguments that the council's planning officer wrongly assessed the impact of the development on historic Hollingbourne House.

But he continued the fight and this week won after challenging Judge Walden-Smith's decision at the Court of Appeal in London.

This image shows the plans for a barn conversion (Champion News)

Lord Justice Lewis came down in favour Mr Kinnersley, quashing the grant of planning permission and directing that the council reconsider their decision to allow the build.

He said the core issue came down to whether the build could be allowed to go ahead if the whole of the site genuinely has a high "environmental value".

He ruled that the council failed to properly consider this question, concluding: "Maidstone Borough Council failed properly to interpret the planning policy in that it failed to consider whether the application site as a whole had environmental value.

"Rather, it only considered whether part of the application site, that is, the existing studio building, had a high environmental value.

"For that reason, I would quash the planning permission and the listed building consent and remit the matter to the respondent.

"It will have to decide whether or not the application site, comprising the studio building, the walled garden and the land connecting with the road, has high environmental value and whether the other criteria...are satisfied."

Mr Dixon said he and his wife had intended to convert the Courtyard Studios into residences and sell them on to provide for their pension pot, having lavished time and cash restoring the buildings they own next to Hollingbourne House over the past 20 years.

The case will now go back before the council to be looked at again in light of the Court of Appeal's ruling.

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