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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Goodman Logistics Developments (UK) Ltd v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government & Anor [2017] EWHC 947 (Admin) (27 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/947.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 947 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GOODMAN LOGISTICS DEVELOPMENTS (UK) LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT (2) SLOUGH BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendants |
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Tim Buley (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the 1st Defendant
The 2nd Defendant did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 28th and 29th March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Holgate:
Introduction
Summary of the Grounds of Challenge
(1) The National Policy Statement for National Networks ("NPS") establishes that there is a "compelling need for an expanded network of SRFIs" "to serve regional, sub-regional and cross-regional markets". The SSCLG found that the Colnbrook proposal would contribute to meeting this need and that there was no alternative site capable of fulfilling the same purpose, namely contributing to a network of SRFI in London and the South East and dealing with the gap in provision on the west side of London. The SSCLG stated that, like the Inspector, he gave "no weight" to Goodman's argument that it was inevitable that a Green Belt location is essential for meeting that need, because this was a matter he had considered in relation to need and alternative sites in DL 24-26 and DL 31 (see DL 32). It is submitted that the SSCLG failed to give adequate reasons for that conclusion and/or misunderstood Goodman's case on this issue so that he failed to take it into account as a material consideration;(2) The SSCLG failed to interpret correctly and apply CP2 of SBC's Core Strategy in relation to development within the Strategic Gap and the Colne Valley Regional Park and/or failed to give adequate reasoning to explain how he had treated the appeal proposals against that policy;
(3) The SSCLG failed to interpret correctly and apply policy in the National Planning Policy Framework ("NPPF") concerning the openness of the Green Belt and/or failed to take into account a material consideration in that he treated visual matters as having no relevance to that issue.
National Policy
The National Policy Statement for National Networks
The National Planning Policy Framework
"79. The Government attaches great importance to Green Belts. The fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open; the essential characteristics of Green Belts are their openness and their permanence.
80. Green Belt serves five purposes:
1) to check the unrestricted sprawl of large built-up areas;
2) to prevent neighbouring towns merging into one another;
3) to assist in safeguarding the countryside from encroachment;
4) to preserve the setting and special character of historic towns; and
5) to assist in urban regeneration, by encouraging the recycling of derelict and other urban land.
87. As with previous Green Belt policy, inappropriate development is, by definition, harmful to the Green Belt and should not be approved except in very special circumstances.
88. When considering any planning application, local planning authorities should ensure that substantial weight is given to any harm to the Green Belt. 'Very special circumstances' will not exist unless the potential harm to the Green Belt by reason of inappropriateness, and any other harm, is clearly outweighed by other considerations.
89. A local planning authority should regard the construction of new buildings as inappropriate in Green Belt".
A summary of the Inspector's report and the decision letter
The Inspector's Report
Green Belt
(i) Openness and permanence are the essential characteristics of Green Belts. Openness is the major asset of the appeal site. There is nothing of any note that detracts from its openness. The proposed development would result in a severe loss of openness, which is very much linked to the purposes of the Green Belt (IR 12.9 to 12.12). The proposal would conflict with the first three purposes of Green Belt policy, namely checking the unrestricted sprawl of large built-up areas, preventing neighbouring towns from merging with one another, and safeguarding the countryside from encroachment. These conflicts have "substantial weight" (IR 12.13 to 12.15 and 12.18).Strategic Gap
(ii) The Strategic Gap is particularly important. It is a fragmented and vulnerable part of the Green Belt. The very high bar set by CP2 is merited because of the need to distinguish this particularly sensitive area of the Green Belt. The policy should be given full weight as a key component of the development plan for Slough. The SRFI would be located within the heart of the Strategic Gap. It would involve a dominant group of large scale buildings and infrastructure, have a very strong influence on the area and cause irreparable harm to the Gap (IR 12.20 to 12.28).
Colne Valley Park
(iii) The Park is of regional importance. The appeal site is located at the narrowest section which links the southern area of the Park to the more extensive central and northern areas. The appeal site is at a fairly pivotal location. Within Slough Borough the area of the Park coincides with the Strategic Gap and CP2 applies to both designations. The open, countryside character of the appeal site is its greatest quality. The proposals for accessibility would do much to avoid severance. Although there would be certain benefits (eg. the high quality landscape scheme and improvements to rights of way), the loss of the countryside feel and amenity could not adequately be replaced. Leaving to one side CP2, which was addressed towards the end of the report, the effects on the Park added moderate weight against the proposal (IR 12.29 to 12.40).
Landscape character and visual effect
(iv) In the broader landscape context the effect on character would be negligible, but at a local level the effect would be more significant. Overall the harm to landscape character had a small amount of weight. Harmful visual impact would be restricted primarily to the immediate surroundings and would affect those living in the area. Visual harm had a greater amount of weight (IR 12.41 to 12.48).
Highways and Traffic
(v) Improvements to the transport network would be undertaken which would effectively limit significant impacts. Safe and suitable access could be achieved (IR 12.49 to 12.57).
Air Quality
(vi) With appropriate mitigation the development complied with policy. The slight adverse effect on air quality had only limited weight (IR 12.58 to 12.64).
Biodiversity, flood risk and water resources
(vii) The effect of the proposed development on these factors would be acceptable (IR 12.65 to 12.82).
Need
(viii) There is a compelling need for an expanded network of SRFIs at a wide range of locations throughout the country, including a network of SRFIs in and around London. The NPS does not give any indication as to the number of SRFIs to be provided in the network as a whole or within a region. There is no quantitative target or limit for meeting the need for SRFIs in London and the South East. Instead the emphasis in the NPS is on proposals meeting locational criteria. However, the number of locations suitable for SRFIs is likely to be limited, particularly for London and the South East. The Colnbrook SRFI would be located in a region deficient in SRFI capacity. The Radlett SRFI would be significantly larger and would improve the position in the South East region, but it would not satisfy the policy need in the NPS for a regional network and should be seen as a complementary facility forming part of that wider network. There are grounds for optimism that the current position will change for London and the South East. In addition to Radlett, the London Gateway port development is capable of fulfilling the function of a SRFI and there is a prospect of Howbury Park being implemented. But because there is a noticeable gap in provision on the west side of London, the Colnbrook proposal would contribute to the development of a regional and wider national network in accordance with the NPS (IR 12.88 to 12.107).
Requirements for transport links and location
(ix) The Colnbrook proposal would fulfil these requirements of the NPS to a very good standard (IR 12.108 to 12.137).
Transfer of freight from road to rail
(x) The proposal would provide a high level of rail service. The risk of not achieving a high level of rail use is low (IR 12.138 to 12.148).
Carbon emissions
(xi) The scheme would achieve a reduction in carbon emissions, a positive factor carrying some weight (IR 12.149 to 12.150).
Economy and jobs
(xii) The scheme would promote national policy objectives to secure economic growth and significant benefits for the local economy (IR 12.151 to 12.152).
Alternative sites
(xiii) The Radlett facility is not an alternative to Colnbrook; it is complementary. There is no identified alternative site to Colnbrook, capable of fulfilling the same purpose, serving the same markets and being geographically similar so as to achieve the desired distribution of SRFIs around London. This is a matter of "considerable weight" in favour of the proposal (IR 12.153 to 12.157).
The balance under Green Belt policy
(xiv) Because the development is "inappropriate," it is by definition harmful to the Green Belt. Furthermore, it would result in a severe loss of openness and conflict with three purposes of Green Belt policy. "The totality of the harm to the Green Belt has very substantial weight". The Strategic Gap designation highlights "the critical importance of the Green Belt in this part of Slough and that some parts of the Green Belt are more valuable than others". The irreparable damage to the Gap adds "significant weight" against the proposal. The harm to the Colne Valley Park has "moderate weight". The harm to landscape character has small weight and the harmful local visual impact has slightly greater weight. The slight adverse effect on air quality and harmful social effects each have a small amount of weight. Other effects are neutral. The overall weight of all factors telling against the development is "very strong and compelling" (IR 12.187 to 12.193). On the other hand, the contribution to satisfying unmet need for SRFIs is "considerable". Compliance with the criteria for site selection attracts significant weight. The lack of an alternative site has considerable weight. The economic benefits, reduction in carbon emissions and improvements each attract a lower degree of weight, "some weight", in favour of the proposal (IR 12.194 to 12.197). Consequently, the harm that would be caused by the scheme is not "clearly outweighed" by its beneficial effects (IR 12.198).
Strategic Gap
(xv) Notwithstanding the contribution that would be made by the proposal to the need for a network of SRFIs and the absence of another site on the west side of London, it had not been shown that the scheme "is essential within the Strategic Gap" when account is taken of the complementary SRFIs that have been identified and will probably be developed to serve the region. Accordingly, the proposal is contrary to CP2 (IR 12.199).
The development plan
(xvi) Because there are not very special circumstances sufficient to overcome Green Belt and other strategic objectives, the balance lies against the proposal (IR 12.200).
The NPPF and sustainable development
(xvii) Balancing its economic, social and environmental consequences, the proposal does not represent a sustainable form of development and is therefore contrary to the NPPF. This conclusion took into account (inter alia) the conflict with the spatial strategy for Slough, the loss of a highly protected area of Green Belt and the irreparable harm to the Green Belt east of Slough, amounting to a "major environmental loss" (IR 12.201 to 12.204).
"I have been persuaded by the irreparable harm that would be caused to this very sensitive part of the Green Belt in the Colnbrook area, leading to the high level of weight I have attached to this consideration. The benefits of the scheme do not clearly overcome the harm. Planning conditions would not be able to overcome the fundamental harms caused to the Green Belt, Strategic Gap and Colne Valley Park and the open environment enjoyed by the local community. However, weight is a matter for the decision maker. In the event the Appellant's case is found to be compelling, there is much to commend in the outline proposals and there is the basis for a very well designed scheme".
I do not accept the suggestion made by Mr. Katkowski QC on behalf of Goodman that this paragraph indicates that the Inspector regarded the decision as "finely balanced". The test laid down by Green Belt policy is that planning permission should not be granted for the SRFI unless the benefits of the scheme clearly outweigh the harm. She plainly concluded that the scheme did not meet that test, taking into account the high level of harm she had identified. The Inspector then went on to acknowledge that the SSCLG might attach different weights to the various factors needing to be balanced. If so, she recognised that the outcome of striking the balance might be different. In that event, the Inspector added that the outline proposals would provide the basis for a well-designed scheme at the detailed stage. Nothing more can be read into her remarks. At all events, it is plain from his decision letter that the SSCLG did not regard the outcome as finely balanced.
The decision letter
"39. Section 38(6) of the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004 requires that proposals be determined in accordance with the development plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise. For the reasons set out in this letter, the Secretary of State concludes that the proposal is inappropriate development and by definition harmful to the Green Belt. He found that the development is contrary to Core Policy 1 of the CS and national policy in the Framework. The Secretary of State finds that the totality of the harm to the Green Belt has very substantial weight. In addition, he finds that the damage to the Strategic Gap would be irreparable, which adds significant weight against the proposal. In addition he has found that there is localised harm to Colne Valley Park to which he adds moderate weight against the proposal. He gives limited weight to the slight adverse impact on air quality, and a small degree of weight to the harmful social effect and erosion of quality of life of local communities. He affords, subject to conditions, no weight to potential harms to biodiversity, water quality or through flood risk. The Secretary of State has then gone on to consider whether there are any material considerations justifying determining the case other than in accordance with the development plan.
40. The Secretary of State accepts that the most important benefit of the proposal is the potential contribution to building up a network of SRFIs in the London and South East region, reducing the unmet need and delivering national policy objectives. In addition, there is the prospect of SIFE being complementary to Radlett and other smaller SRFI developments and improving the geographical spread of these facilities round Greater London. In this context, the Secretary of State accepts that the contribution it would make to meeting unmet need is considerable.
41. He accepts too that SIFE would comply with the transport and location requirements for SRFIs to an overall very good standard. He acknowledges that sites suitable for SRFIs are scarce and the difficulty in finding sites in the London and South East region. On account of this factor, and the standard of compliance achieved, he affords meeting the site selection criteria significant weight. No less harmful alternative site has been identified in the West London market area, a factor which he affords considerable weight. Attracting less but nevertheless moderate weight are the economic benefits, the reduction in carbon emissions and improvements.
42. In common with the Inspector in her conclusion, the Secretary of State has been persuaded by the irreparable harm that would be caused to this very sensitive part of the Green Belt in the Colnbrook area, leading to the high level of weight he attaches to this consideration. Overall, the Secretary of State concludes that the benefits of the scheme do not clearly overcome the harm. Consequently, very special circumstances do not exist to justify the development. Furthermore, he finds that planning conditions would not be able to overcome the fundamental harms caused to the Green Belt, Strategic Gap and Colne Valley Park and the open environment enjoyed by the local community. In addition, he has concluded that the proposal does not have the support of the NPS because very special circumstances have not been demonstrated."
Ground 1
"The inevitability of SRFI development having to be located in the Green Belt is a common thread through the Appellant's case on Green Belt ….. In my view this does not reduce the actual harm that would occur from this particular scheme" (emphasis added).
Goodman makes no criticism of IR 12.19. Indeed, in paragraph 25 of their closing submissions at the inquiry and in their oral submissions in these proceedings, they accepted the very point in IR 12.19 emphasised above.
"As shown by the Alternative Sites Assessments finding a suitable site for a SRFI to serve London and the South East is very difficult. The focus of the area of search on the Metropolitan Green Belt responds to the NPS requirement for new facilities alongside the major rail routes, close to major trunk roads as well as near to the conurbations that consume the goods. However, the Framework makes no exception for SRFIs to be located in the Green Belt. The NPS, whilst acknowledging promoters may find the only viable sites are on Green Belt land, draws attention to the special protection given to Green Belt land. I attach no weight to 'the development being essential on Green Belt land', being a matter that is adequately covered through the other considerations of need and alternative sites".
Ground 1 challenges the legality of the last sentence of the passage quoted.
"Like the Inspector, he attaches no weight to "the development being essential on Green Belt land" (IR 12.157) being a matter that he has considered in relation to need and alternative sites in the above-numbered paragraphs 24-36 and 31".
(i) The policy in the NPS on the need for a network of SRFIs does not modify or water down the application of Green Belt policy for proposals located in the Green Belt;(ii) The harm that may be caused by proposals located in the Green Belt is not a constant. It depends on the circumstances of each case;
(iii) In the present case the inevitability of a Green Belt location and some harm to the Green Belt should not be treated as factors reducing the harm to the Green Belt that would actually be caused by the proposal.
Ground 2
"All development will have to comply with the Spatial Strategy set out in this document.
All development will take place within the built up area, predominantly on previously developed land, unless there are very special circumstances that would justify the use of Green Belt land. A strategic gap will be maintained between Slough and Greater London."
"Development will only be permitted in the Strategic Gap between Slough and Greater London and the open areas of the Colne Valley Park if it is essential to be in that location."
"…. the determination must be made in accordance with the [development] plan unless material considerations indicate otherwise."
But it should be remembered that when applying the presumption in section 38(6), the decision-maker has to decide whether a proposal accords with the development plan taken as a whole, albeit that some policies point in favour of granting permission and others against (City of Edinburgh Council v Secretary of State for Scotland [1997] 1 WLR 1447, 1458-9).
"The remaining open land in Colnbrook & Poyle, east of Langley/Brands Hill, is particularly important because it forms part of the Colne Valley Park and acts as the strategic gap between the eastern edge of Slough and Greater London. Additional restraint will therefore be applied to this fragmented and vulnerable part of the Green Belt…."
But also at paragraphs 79 to 88 of the Helioslough case the High Court decided ([2011] EWHC 2054 (Admin)) that CP2 applies an additional policy restraint to the Strategic Gap (and the Colne Valley Park) over and above Green Belt designation, and which sets "a very high bar" (paragraph 86), because of the special sensitivity of the tightly defined area to which it applies.
(i) the development is essential, but its location within the Strategic Gap is not; or(ii) the development is not essential, albeit that if it is to take place, its location within the Strategic Gap is essential in the sense that no site outside the Gap is available; or
(iii) the development is not essential and in any event it could be located outside the Strategic Gap; or
(iv) the development and its location within the Strategic Gap are both essential.
In my judgment, on a proper interpretation of the policy, scenario (iv) complies with CP2 but scenarios (i) to (iii) do not. It is insufficient that the development itself is essential without any regard to whether it has to be located in the Gap, or that a location in the Gap is essential without any regard to the need for the development. Instead CP2 is only satisfied if the development is essential and it cannot take place outside the Gap. On the claimant's interpretation, any situation falling within scenario (ii) would comply with CP2. For example, if there was no alternative site outside the Strategic Gap upon which a proposed development could be located, the proposal would comply with CP2 even if there was no need for it at all. The claimant's interpretation is simply inconsistent with the language used. It cannot properly be said that it is essential for such a development to be located in the Gap.
"will mean that only essential development that cannot take place elsewhere will be permitted in this location."
Likewise, this passage does not fall to be disregarded because it conflicts with, or sets out an additional criterion not contained in, CP2 (see the principle in paragraph 16 of R (Cherkley Campaign Ltd) v Mole Valley District Council [2014] EWCA Civ 567). I should add that I see no conflict between paragraphs 7.26 and 2.30. The latter requires the demonstration of a "regional" or "national" need for the development, but that is not inconsistent with the requirement in CP2 that the development should also be essential.
Ground 3
Introduction
(i) Development on this scale on 42 hectares of land would have a direct impact upon the openness of this Green Belt location, but this had been minimised by the compact footprint and layout of the built development area. Within the surrounding area of 30.6 hectares most of the existing mature trees would be conserved and future landscaping added;(ii) The scheme would occupy a visually enclosed site with limited visibility between it and surrounding areas, so that the perceived effect of the development upon openness would be fairly limited. This was supported by the assessment of the "zone of visual influence";
(iii) The maximum heights of the proposed buildings were modest for that type of structure and would not project beyond the immediately surrounding framework of trees. They would be screened visually from many surrounding locations;
(iv) The perceived effect upon openness would therefore be notably less than the plan form might suggest. The development would have a limited effect upon people's perception of openness from beyond the boundary of the site and it would not visibly stretch along the M4 or A4, or be seen as filling an area of open space, save from a limited number of surrounding positions.
"In principle it is incorrect to reach a specific conclusion on openness by reference to visual impact. Therefore matters such as visibility, the effect of landscaping and perception have no relevance and do not reduce the significance of the effect of the SRFI on the openness of the site. The effects on visual amenity, character and appearance are separate considerations."
She then immediately went on to conclude in IR 12.12:-
"In conclusion, the proposed development would result in a severe loss of openness. The impact this would have on this area of the Metropolitan Green Belt is very much linked to the purposes of the Green Belt."
It seems likely that the Inspector's approach was influenced by the decision of the High Court in Timmins v Gelding Borough Council [2014] EWHC 654 (Admin) in which it had been held that (paragraph 78):-
(i) There is a clear conceptual distinction between openness and visual impact;(ii) It is therefore wrong in principle to arrive at a specific conclusion as to the effect of a development on openness by reference to visual impact;
(iii) The visual impact from the development may be taken into account as part of the very special circumstances in the overall weighing exercise.
(i) Whether the authorities establish the legal principle that visual impact may or may not be taken into account as a factor reducing the harm to the openness of the Green Belt that would result from a proposed development;(ii) If the answer to (i) is yes, whether that factor was an "obviously material" consideration in this case, and therefore the SSCLG erred in law by failing to take it into account;
(iii) If the answer to (ii) is yes, whether nonetheless the Court should refuse to quash the decision of the SSCLG because it is inevitable that if the factor in (i) above had been taken into account, the decision would still have been to refuse planning permission for the SRFI and dismiss the appeal ("the Simplex" issue).
(i) The relevance or irrelevance of visual impact or perception
(i) The case was essentially dealing with the correct approach to the threshold question whether the proposal represented "appropriate" or "inappropriate" development; and so the question of harm to openness and "very special circumstances" would only have arisen if the decision-maker had reached a different conclusion and treated the development as "inappropriate";(ii) The threshold test for appropriateness simply depended on whether the new building was "materially larger" and not on whether there would be harm to "openness";
(iii) In any event, the Court accepted that visual impact or perception could be relevant as offsetting to some degree an increase in the size of built development (paragraphs 20 and 44).
(ii) Was the visual harm an "obviously material" consideration in the determination of the claimant's appeal
(iii) The "Simplex" test and the exercise of the Court's discretion
"the Court must not stray from its proper province of reviewing the propriety of the decision-making process into the forbidden territory of evaluating the substantial merits of the decision"
(see the North Eastern Derbyshire PCT case at paragraph 10).
"If the court is to exercise its discretion not to grant relief where unlawfulness has been found, it must be satisfied that the decision-maker would necessarily have reached the same decision but for the legal error. That is, of course, a stringent test. It is not enough for the court to be persuaded that the decision probably would have been the same but for the decision-maker's error, or very likely would have been the same, or almost certainly would have been the same. It must be persuaded that the decision necessarily would have been the same. The authorities are clear on that proposition. It is consistent, as I see it, with perhaps the most elementary principle of planning law, that the exercise of planning judgment is a matter for the decision-maker and not for the court (see the classic statement to this effect in the speech of Lord Hoffman in Tesco Stores Ltd v Secretary of State for the Environment [1995] 1 WLR 759, at p.780E-H)."
Nonetheless, the Court of Appeal held that the judge in that case should have exercised his discretion against quashing the decision by reference to findings made by the Inspector which were untainted by the legal error.
(i) The extent to which the findings for and against the development were unaffected by the single error under ground 3;
(ii) The policy hurdles which this proposal had to overcome, notably the "very special circumstances" test and CP2;
(iii) The SSCLG's conclusion that the overall benefits of the proposal were not as great as the overall harm it would cause;
(iv) The error relates solely to one aspect of Green Belt policy, the effect on openness, and not to the harm caused to the purposes of the Green Belt or to the Strategic Gap and CP2;
(v) It was necessary for the decision-maker to bear in mind that the fundamental aim of Green Belt policy is to prevent urban sprawl by keeping land permanently open. The essential characteristics of the Green Belt are its openness and permanence (NPPF paragraph 79, IR 12.9 and DL 13);
(vi) Consequently, when assessing the effects of a development on openness, the primary focus is likely to be on the extent of the "spatial impact" rather than on visual perception as a mitigating factor (Turner at paragraphs 23 to 25; Samuel Smith at paragraph 52). Self-evidently this approach is all the more relevant when it is proposed that a very large scale built development, such as the SRFI, will occupy a large proportion of an undeveloped open site in a strategic part of the Green Belt. The SSCLG considered that the major asset of this site in its existing state is its openness (IR 12.9 and DL 13), despite any limitations on the visibility of the site (this links to Goodman's case in point (vii) below);
(vii) Goodman's case on visual impact and perception essentially depended upon the site being visually enclosed with limited visibility between the site and the surrounding area, and thus limited opportunities to view the development. In fact, both the Inspector and the SSCLG did have regard elsewhere in their conclusions to the contained nature of the site. These conclusions included their consideration of the effect of the development on the purposes of the Green Belt (see eg. IR 12.13, 12.14, 12.44 and 12.47 and DL 14 and 18).
(viii) The earlier adverse findings on the spatial impact of the development on that openness are unimpeachable. The developed areas would occupy the greater proportion of the 58.7 hectare site. The spaces left over would be confined to the edges and would have no effect on the loss of openness resulting from the bulk and mass of the buildings and intensively used vehicle and storage areas. The very large buildings and the height of stacked containers would accentuate the loss of openness (IR 12.10 and DL 13);
(ix) No challenge is made by Goodman to the assessment by the Inspector and the SSCLG of the effects of the SRFI scheme on the Strategic Gap, which did take into account landscaping and the perception of the development (see eg. IR 12.28 and DL 15). It was decided that this part of the Green Belt is "particularly important." It is fragmented and vulnerable (IR 12.20). The development would be a "dominant group of large scale buildings and infrastructure" "located in the heart of the Strategic Gap" and would generate a large volume of traffic and activity. It would be perceived as having a very strong influence on the area. Even with a high quality landscape scheme, its presence would cause "irreparable harm" to the Strategic Gap and threaten the open role of land within that part of the Green Belt (IR 12.28). These findings in relation to the Strategic Gap, where visual harm and perception were taken into account, reinforce the conclusion that if these matters had also been taken into consideration in the assessment of the effect of the development on the openness of the Green Belt, the findings that there would be a "severe loss" of openness and that the totality of harm to the Green Belt attracted "very substantial weight" could not have been materially altered. Bearing in mind also those findings of the Inspector and the SSCLG which were not tainted, it is in any event certain that the assessment of the overall harm from the proposal could not have been reduced by the SSCG to such an extent that his findings on the benefits from the scheme would "clearly" have outweighed that harm;
(x) The position of the SSCLG is also made plain by DL 42 in which he attaches particular importance to the qualities of the Strategic Gap and the harm that the scheme would cause to it :-
"In common with the Inspector in her conclusion, the Secretary of State has been persuaded by the irreparable harm that would be caused to this very sensitive part of the Green Belt in the Colnbrook area, leading to the high level of weight he attaches to this consideration. Overall, the Secretary of State concludes that the benefits of the scheme do not clearly overcome the harm. Consequently, very special circumstances do not exist to justify the development."
Conclusion
Note 1 In this judgment DL and IR followed by numbers are used to identify paragraphs in the decision letter and the Inspector’s report respectively. [Back]