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National
James Harrison

Northumberland National Park holiday homes rejected following motocross row

A farmer and businessman has hit back at claims he has been using his land for motorsports events.

Graham Varty had been attempting to secure planning permission to build four holiday chalets on land he owns at Donkleywood, near Kielder Water, in Northumberland.

But opposition from families living nearby, as well as a conclusion by development bosses that the scheme would be an ‘incongruous addition’ to the landscape, saw the application turned down.

Read more: Northumberland National Park busiest it has been 'since the 1970s' as lockdown restrictions lifted

Defending the scheme, Varty told the Northumberland National Park Authority’s Development Management Committee: “I would like to state categorically, that at no time has my company, in any of the time I've been there, had anything to do with any motor sports or motocross.

“It's grossly inaccurate to say that, and unfair to say so.

“What really confuses and disappoints me is I have tried to work hand in hand with the planners [but] every site that I proposed where I wished to put a log cabin or chalet was refused.

“But the site proposed was suggested by a national park planner and I don’t understand where all these issues have come from.”

Planning bosses for the national park insisted any ‘pre-application’ advice would not have been intended as a guarantee of approval for the proposals.

They also said any claims about the land being used for motorsports would not be relevant to a decision on the scheme.

Instead they argued it should be turned down on the grounds it would cause ‘undue harm to the landscape’, as well as criticising a lack of detail on plans for managing the construction process, as well as noise and light pollution.

Members of the panel also sided with the national park’s planning department on plans for a six-bedroom bunkhouse in Alwinton.

Despite some objections to the proposals, including from Alwinton Parish Council, which opposed the location, planners concluded the scheme would help support the ‘rural economy’, as well as provide a boost to the village’s Rose and Thistle pub, which was behind the plans.

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