Times of Tonbridge 13th July 2016

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Wednesday, July 13, 2016

All the news that matters

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THERESA MAY HOLDS HER HAND UP – NO ELECTION Page 17

CASTLE SUNSET And the band played on

PHOTO: Owen Baldock

CLASSIC FILMS ON SHOW AT OUTSIDE CINEMA IN CASTLE GROUNDS

FA CUP WINNER HELPS TONBRIDGE ENTREPRENEUR WITH A SNACK ATTACK

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RAPID RISE FOR AWARD-WINNING YOYO BOSS

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Orchestra lights up festival MUSICIANS from the Tonbridge Philharmonic Orchestra were given an ovation after they kept playing through a mystery power cut that hit their grand finale performance at Tonbridge castle. The orchestra, which was appearing as part of the ten-day Tonbridge Festival, played on to the delight of the large audience who had earlier witnessed a spectacular sunset behind the stage as they enjoyed the music. Former mayor Owen Baldock, who was

at the performance, said: “I have to give credit to the musicians and singers who were very professional in keeping going after the stage lighting went down right at the end of its Handel’s Messiah finale, just as the fireworks started.” Liz Penn, marketing manager for the festival said she was unaware of the power failure’s cause. She said: “The festival has gone really well, with good attendance at all of the events throughout the week.”

Key site for new homes is rejected by planners

Average price of property continues to soar out of reach for young families By Neill Barston

newsdesk@timesoftonbridge.co.uk THERE have been major revisions to the plans for delivering up to 2,000 new homes in Tonbridge over the next 15 years. An image drawn up by Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council showing potential sites for development appeared on the front of the Times of Tonbridge on 1st June 2016. It formed part of a new Local Plan being drawn up to meet the surge in demand for family homes in the area. However, the council has now rejected several key locations in Tonbridge on environmental and planning grounds including Grange Farm, off Higham Lane, which could have seen up to 1,200 properties being built. This removes a sizeable portion from the total expected number of homes from the borough’s next Local Plan, which covers a period until 2031, despite a projected need for 6,000 new properties across the

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borough during that period. According to the council’s ‘Way Forward’ document, which forms the basis of the public consultation due to start in September, there are more than 15 sites actively being considered for development in Tonbridge. These include potential for up to 332 homes at Manor Farm, 300 properties at Coblands Nurseries, as well as hundreds more homes in Lower Haysden Lane. However, as council studies revealed, the area now faces

‘We need to find around 6,000 homes for the borough’ major housing challenges with average property values in Tonbridge having soared to £277,000 for a three-bedroom home, according to property website Zoopla. The borough’s figures show this is at least eight times a mid-earning Tonbridge salary of around £29,000 placing the property market out of reach for many families who then have to rely on the rented sector – which

is also under strain because of the recently introduced hike in stamp duty. As previously reported in the Times, concerns were raised by Mark Hood, of West Kent Green Party, who said the ongoing issue of serious flooding in Tonbridge posed a considerable challenge to future development. However, according to Ian Bailey, planning policy manager for Tonbridge & Malling Borough Council, its teams would work with the Environment Agency to strike a balance between developing a sufficient number of properties against ensuring environmental considerations. He said: “The next stage for us now is to put together the proposed strategy which takes the best part of the principles of the initial call for sites that include existing locations that we can use as building blocks to help deliver the needs of the plan. “We need to find around 6,000 homes for the borough. We’ve looked at some of the sites such as Grange Farm and found that perhaps parts of the location are not viable, which means in Tonbridge there might be around 1,200 homes as part of the Local Plan.”

INSIDE ROCK OF AGES

German gift to town gets a makeover. Page 5

ON STAGE

Tonbridge theatre school stars in show. Page 5

GET LOST

The maize maze returns to Penshurst Place. Page 84

PROPERTY GUIDE

40 pages of the finest homes on the market. See property section


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