Decision on Next Home store plan postponed (From Bucks Free Press)
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Decision on Next Home store plan postponed
2:20pm Thursday 14th March 2013 in News By Simon Farr
Decision on Next Home store plan postponed
PLANS for a contentious Next Home store on the current Cressex park-and-ride scheme will be debated by council chiefs next month.
Wycombe District Council’s Planning Committee was expected to mull over the proposals at Wednesday’s meeting but it has been postponed until April’s meeting.
Next has submitted an application for a two-storey home and garden centre on the existing park-and-ride in Crest Road, High Wycombe.
The development would have 4,636 square meters of retail space and a cafe area. Next would also lay on a bus service into the town centre.
But any build could not go ahead until the park-and-ride has been relocated – which is expected to join the new Wycombe Sports Centre, a hotel and offices at Handy Cross.
Objections have been raised by the Eden shopping centre and House of Fraser, who fear the mooted store would keep shoppers away from the town centre.
The High Wycombe Society and Chiltern Society have raised concerns about transport and the store’s design in keeping with the rest of the area.
And National Grid is also against the proposals, as it believes Cressex is not suitable for retail development and the former gasworks site in Lily’s Walk – which it owns and plans to develop – would be a better location.
Next says the available land at the old gasworks is not large enough for its dedicated home branch and the retailer would not be able to retain its existing clothing outlet in Eden if it built a new store in Lily’s Walk.
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Comments (5)
2:40pm Thu 14 Mar 13
BOOKERite says...
3:34pm Thu 14 Mar 13
Robert.M says...
Apart from that we who live around here are sick to the back teeth of traffic jams and bad parking caused by the stores we already have here.
Come on councillers just for once think about the long term and try to get Next into our already dead town centre and try an liven that up, and think of the residents who live here, if next are serious about opening a store here then let them do it in an alredy built premises, there is enough empty ones in the town centre, and then use the park and ride land for much needed housing.
4:29pm Thu 14 Mar 13
Darren Hayday says...
With BCC looking to roll in many trucks to the Waste Transfer Station @ Booker Dump, the heavy build up of John Lewis sale traffic plus of course the normal hell like traffic in the area (especially rush hour traffic) - not so sure that they would be able to overcome this...without someone (BCC?) spending out a lot of money to improve the current traffic problem.
11:51am Fri 15 Mar 13
KTinBucks says...
WDC continue to slope shoulders over this, arguing that BCC is the authority – true.
WDC rely on the adopted Southern Quadrant Transport Strategy (SQTS), but SQTS is merely a concept. There is no rigorous evidence of the viability of the strategy; modelling seems to be minimal, data cannot be provided. We just have to “trust” the experts!
WDC know that SQTS is inadequate & flawed, yet still make planning decisions which rely on it. Why pretend? If you know the emperor is naked, say so; if you know the strategy is flawed, stop deciding on developments until we can all be confident that they can be supported by the infrastructure. Anything else is irresponsible.
This is not anti-development; it is pro- sustainable development. And that means nil detriment, slight betterment, ie don’t make the current situation worse; give us some improvements!
The emperor has no clothes.
1:46pm Fri 15 Mar 13
Agniesca says...