News

City sewage plant approved for green belt. Story by Hannah Brown - Local Democracy Reporting Service • 2w. Plans to relocate a sewage treatment works to make way for new homes have been approved.
Dore residents are fighting plans by the Duke of Devonshire to develop green belt land for housing. The 12th duke, Peregrine ...
Green belts are more than just spaces; for many people, they're places providing a brief escape from the city. Land designated as green belt—and protected from building—can also store carbon and hold ...
How much cabbage could you eat in four minutes? The Cabbage Shed in Elberta is welcoming a roster of competitors who are all ...
Sheffield needs more than 38,000 additional homes to meet the needs of a growing city – meaning that land for an additional 3,529 homes needs to be identified – according to Government inspectors.
Sheffield City Council has proposed building 3,529 homes, three schools, two graveyards, and 130 acres of business space across 14 green belt sites - marking the largest loss of protected green ...
Plans to build homes, offices and industrial buildings on areas of green belt land in Sheffield have been criticised by residents. About 3.6% of the city's green belt land, across 14 different ...
Labour’s plans to relax protection for the green belt will incentivise developers to build expensive houses for commuters while leaving city centre brownfield sites to rot, says Sam Fowles ...
Green belts around cities help keep them cool. ... But as warm air rises in a city, it creates a layer of low pressure near the ground, which draws in cooler air from the surrounding countryside.
More than 100 concerned residents attended a meeting over fears green belt land will be “swallowed up by 10,000 new ...
Plans to build homes, offices and industrial buildings on areas of green belt land in Sheffield have been criticised by residents. About 3.6% of the city's green belt land, across 14 different ...
City sewage plant approved for green belt. Image source, Anglian Water. Image caption, The relocation of the treatment plant will allow for a new district to be built in the north-east of Cambridge.