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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 >> Davies, R (On the Application Of) v Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea [2024] EWHC 2711 (Admin) (31 October 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/2711.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2711 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a judge of the High Court
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THE KING (on the application of DAVIES) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ROYAL BOROUGH OF KENSINGTON AND CHELSEA |
Defendant |
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-and- |
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IMPERIUM CORPORATE DIRECTORS GROUP |
Interested Party |
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Mr Charles Streeten (instructed by Bi-Borough Legal Services) for the defendant
Mr Robert Walton KC (instructed by Mischon de Reya) for the interested party
Hearing dates: 15 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ JARMAN KC:
Introduction
"Failure to take into account material considerations, namely, failure have regard to the PPG as to the need to consider whether the noise exposure of neighbouring residents would be 'above or below the significant observed adverse effect level'; failure to have regard to the Noise SPD and to objectors' points as to the significant increase in noise above background levels, matters which should have informed whether the noise would amount to a significant observed adverse effect and whether there was conflict with development plan policies; failure to take expert internal advice in relation to these matters; failure to have regard to the Claimant's rights under Article 8 of the European Convention of Human Rights."
"Error of law as to the effect of (perceived) compliance with Policy CL7. Contrary to what was said by the officer at the meeting, CL7 is not a 'permissive policy'. It is not supportive of basement development in principle; it simply sets out a list of requirements that must be complied with. Those requirements are in addition to other relevant policy requirements in the development plan. There is no presumption that compliance with CL7 (even if properly applied) trumps any conflict with other policies in the development plan."
Policy
"The Council will require all development ensures good living conditions for occupants of new, existing and neighbouring buildings. To deliver this the Council will:
e. require that the reasonable enjoyment of the use of buildings, gardens and other spaces is not harmed due to increases in traffic, servicing, parking, noise, disturbance, odours or vibration or local microclimatic effects."
"The Council will require all basement development to:
a. not exceed a maximum of 50 per cent of each garden or open part of the site. The unaffected garden must be in a single area and where relevant should form a continuous area with other neighbouring gardens. Exceptions may be made on large sites.
l. ensure that construction impacts such as noise, vibration and dust are kept to acceptable levels for the duration of the works."
"A basement development next door has an immediacy which can have a serious impact on the quality of life, while the effect of multiple excavations in many streets can be the equivalent of having a permanent inappropriate use in a residential area. There are also concerns over the structural stability of adjacent property, character of rear gardens, sustainable drainage and the impact on carbon emissions. Planning deals with the use of land and it is expedient to deal with these issues proactively and address the long term harm to residents' living conditions rather than rely only on mitigation. For all these reasons the Council considers that careful control is required over the scale, form and extent of basements. The policy therefore restricts the extent of basement excavation to no more than under half the garden or open part of the site and limits the depth of excavation to a single storey in most cases.
Restricting the size of basements will help protect residential living conditions in the borough by limiting the extent and duration of construction and by reducing the volume of soil to be excavated. Large basement construction in residential neighbourhoods can affect the health and well-being of residents with issues such as noise, vibration and heavy vehicles experienced for a prolonged period. A limit on the size of basements will reduce this impact."
"The Council will carefully control the impact of noise and vibration generating sources which affect amenity both during the construction and operational phases of development.
To deliver this the Council will:
b. resist developments which fail to meet adopted local noise and vibration standards;
c. resist all applications for noise and vibration generating development and plant that would have an unacceptable noise and vibration impact on surrounding amenity."
"Plan-making and decision making need to take account of the acoustic environment and in doing so consider:
... whether or not a significant adverse effect is occurring or likely to occur;
... whether or not an adverse effect is occurring or likely to occur; and
... whether or not a good standard of amenity can be achieved.
In line with the Explanatory note of the noise policy statement for England, this would include identifying whether the overall effect of the noise exposure (including the impact during the construction phase wherever applicable) is, or would be, above or below the significant observed adverse effect level and the lowest observed adverse effect level for the given situation. As noise is a complex technical issue, it may be appropriate to seek experienced specialist assistance when applying this policy."
The decision making process
"Site Set Up and Enabling Works 10 Weeks (wk01-10) Piling + Temporary Works 18 Weeks (wk01-18) Substructure Works 32 Weeks (wk03-35) Basement Box 29 weeks (wk34-63)."
"All high impact works will be carried out during the restricted working hours of Monday to Friday 9am to noon and 2pm to 5.30pm unless otherwise stated in the Section 61 prior consent. Such works may include but will not be inclusive to the following: - Demolition works - Ground breaking using percussive equipment - Percussive pile reduction works - Sheet Piling for temporary shoring - All works where percussive hand held tools will be required."
"General Noise and Vibration Control Measures Site Personnel. All operatives on site will be trained to ensure that noise minimisation is implemented at all times. Operatives will also be trained in line with the Best Practicable Means (BPM), as defined in Section 72 of the Control of Pollution Act 1974. Works will be checked regularly by site management to ensure that BPM are being undertaken and where necessary corrective actions implemented. Employees must show consideration to the sensitive receptors, including residential neighbours, and must not generate unnecessary noise when walking to and from the site, or when leaving from, and arriving, at work.
Community Engagement details of the site personnel responsible for noise and vibration, the head office, the duration of the project and site working hours, will be displayed on the site boundary; letter drops to neighbouring residents before work begins giving the information identified in Table 1 of the CoCP. website with site information and contact email address will be provided. liaison with neighbouring construction sites to co-ordinate works as far as practicable, particularly off-site vehicle movements, to avoid waiting vehicles. establish contact with the relevant residents' association, meetings with residents at appropriate intervals, minutes of meeting and agreed actions circulated to residents. site will keep an observations, investigations, and complaints log, to be made available to RBKC on request; and all complaints will be responded to."
"Construction noise levels are calculated using the methodology presented in BS 5228- 1:2009+A1:2014 - Code of practice for noise and vibration control on construction and open sites, implemented within the software modelling package NoiseMap Five. Faηade noise levels are predicted at sensitive receptor locations at each floor specific to the identified receptor location, with the height of intervening floor repetitions being 2.5 m. The results for the 1st floor (assumed to be at 4.0 m are displayed below)."
"However, the Construction Noise, Vibration and Dust Assessment does set out the proposed weekly average noise levels. Appendix B of this document sets out that the expected construction noise levels for 11 and 13 Holland Park the two addresses most likely to be affected will vary from 67dB to 74.7dB over the 63 weeks this construction is predicted to last. Sound is measured on a logarithmic scale, so every 10dB increase is a doubling of the noise that can be measured. Effectively this proposes a noise level that is more than four times the current background noise all day, every weekday, for the next 63 weeks that's a year and two months. This should be unacceptable to the Council and will certainly be unacceptable to local residents. We note that the impact on the Grade II listed Park and Garden, Holland Park, has not been measured, but such an increase in noise is likely to be even more extreme in the peace and quiet of this oasis of calm."
"The proposed size of the basement would be considered acceptable, given its location, depth, height, retention of the garden level and large rear garden and therefore would comply with policies CL7(a, b, c) of the Local Plan. Although there would be some disturbance during construction, conditions are recommended to help minimise the impact of the construction process on nearby properties and therefore subject to the recommended conditions the proposals would comply with Basements policy CL7 and the recommendations of the Basements SPD."
"Living conditions of neighbouring occupiers both during and after construction
6.27 The submitted Noise, Vibration and Dust Assessment demonstrates that the proposal would be acceptable. Condition 12 is recommended to ensure that the construction would be overseen by a professional engineer. Condition 13 is recommended to ensure that the contractor would be signed up to the considerate constructors scheme. Condition 14 is recommended to ensure that the works would be overseen by the Council's construction management team."
"The proposed development would preserve the special architectural and historic interest and heritage significance of this Grade II listed building and would preserve the character and appearance of the conservation area. The proposals would have an acceptable impact on neighbouring living conditions. Although there would be some disturbance during construction, conditions are recommended to help minimise the impact of the construction process on nearby properties. Subject to the recommended conditions the proposals would preserve the living conditions of neighbouring occupiers and would safeguard the trees of amenity value and would comply with Basements policy CL7 and the recommendations of the Basement SPD."
Legal principles
". The question for the court will always be whether, on a fair reading of the report as a whole, the officer has materially misled the members on a matter bearing upon their decision, and the error has gone uncorrected before the decision was made. Minor or inconsequential errors may be excused. It is only if the advice in the officer's report is such as to misdirect the members in a material way so that, but for the flawed advice it was given, the committee's decision would or might have been different that the court will be able to conclude that the decision itself was rendered unlawful by that advice."
Ground 1
"1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home and his correspondence.
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others."
Ground 2
Conclusion