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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
World
Eddie Bisknell & Laycie Beck

Retired Long Eaton nurse frustrated as Lidl and Wickes stores tower over her garden

A retired nurse is shocked at the size of a new supermarket and DIY store being build behind her home. For the past 11 years Mandy Mulligan has lived on Circuit Drive, Long Eaton, and says she thoroughly enjoyed her garden.

However, the size of a new Lidl supermarket and Wickes DIY store being built on land off Nottingham Road and Springfield Avenue means that her garden will be deprived of sun and warmth for most of the day. The 57-year-old explained that a series of small industrial units had sat on the previous Stadium Retail Park for years until they were cleared, but that they were barely visible from her garden.

Ms Mulligan said she believed the new buildings would be around the same height as the former ones, but is frustrated to learn they are much larger and can clearly be seen from her home. When plans were discussed in 2019, she objected to the "intrusive" plans, reports Derbyshire Live.

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The plans were then re-discussed in 2022 but she said that the scale of the proposed buildings had never truly dawned on her. After 38 years in the NHS, Ms Mulligan had planned to upgrade her garden but says this may now not go ahead due to the buildings and she is now considering moving.

The large Lidl and Wickes stores being built off Nottingham Road in Long Eaton, as viewed from Ms Mulligan's home (Derby Telegraph)

However, she feels this is not a solution available for all residents and is not considered a fair alternative to the disruptive influence of the new builds. She said: “The afternoon and evening sun would normally bathe my patio area and back garden, but, once the build is completed, it will completely obliterate the warmth and sun I did have when sitting outside and relaxing in the evening from this time of year through to early Autumn.

"Building plans are all well and good but the reality can be very different. I don’t think the sheer scale of the height of the building could in all honesty be truly realised from a plan, and how in reality it has actually impacted on the surrounding residents."

She continued: "All I can now see is a massive frame of a building that will now unfortunately be my view from the rear of my house from now on. It has affected me in that all I now see is a massive overbearing structure that obliterates a once reasonable view.

"It is an absolute eyesore and is going to be absolutely hideous, there is nothing they can do to make it look any better, it’ll be like we are living on a retail park when it is finished. None of the pictures showed this impact, they just showed a nice couple of buildings with a little car park, not the impact on our homes.

"In the summer I used to get sun in the garden until about 9pm or 10pm, but that won’t be the case any more.” Clowes Developments, the company behind the plans, chaired by Derby County owner David Clowes, was approached for comment.

A spokesperson said: “Stadium Retail Park obtained planning consent via a unanimous committee vote by Erewash Borough Council in November 2022. As is the case with all planning applications, there is a window to raise objections. On the whole, the support for the scheme from locals and residents has been positive.

"Clowes Developments are building the development in line with the validated decision notice and planning conditions. We are delighted to bring a former derelict industrial site forward to deliver Lidl and Wickes to Long Eaton.”

Erewash Borough Council rejected Clowes’ initial plans in 2019 after making assessments on the impact of the shops on rival trade, with council officials claiming they could prove “category killers”. However, permission was granted for their plans in 2021 after going to appeal.

The firm returned with a different version of the scheme in 2022, seeking to marginally increase the size of the planned Lidl and doubling the size of the Wickes, along with an increase in car parking space, which was approved in November. At the time, the firm had said it hoped to open both new stores by November 2023.

In response to the first application in 2019, 44 residents wrote letters supporting the plans, with 14 against the plans, along with an opposing letter from rival supermarket Asda. Meanwhile, in 2022, in response to the tweaked plans, two opposing letters were written to the council with none in support.

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