Tuesday 30 June 2009

Tribute to Test Valley planning teams


Sorry this one is out of sequence, but I do want to pay credit to my colleagues in Test Valley Borough Council, who invited me back to see how my team's 1976 Romsey Town Centre Plan had panned out.
The invitation came from Policy Design and Conservation Manager, Steve Lees, one of two heads of service responsible for planning at TVBC - the other, who had just been appointed, being Paul Jackson, Head of Planning and Building, who joined us for the tour.
Steve was a little perplexed at some recent advice on the submitted Core Strategy, but his team was clearly enthusiastic and we briefly discussed the challenges of capturing all stakeholder commitment in a two-tier local authority structure, a common issue for LDF processes.


I met many young planners and those, who weren’t MRTPI, were licentiates or well on the way through their part-time planning courses. I remember well the excitement of securing MRTPI, just before I took up the post of TVBC team leader, Policy and Conservation, in 1973!!
We reviewed the old plan and I was particularly interested in the Bell Street, Romsey, area, where I cut my teeth on understanding the economics of conservation - when faced with a council-owned tranch of land, just behind a line of listed buildings within the conservation area, but in poor condition.


I was advised by a councillor to “go and speak with the enemy”, the local estate agent who gave me advice I have never forgotten.
One scheme would create values where an “accidental fire” might take place to allow comprehensive redevelopment; the next would have no impact at all and buildings would continue to fall into disrepair; the promoted scheme - in what we believed was the first planning “development brief” in the country - was to put parking in and secure ginnals through to the rest of the town centre.
We were also concerned at the general quality of new design, so Colin Stansfield Smith - now Sir Colin, the county architect - was persuaded to provide expert young architects (Huw Thomas, Neil Bradbury, Robert Adam and especially Steve Harte, who designed the car park and landscaping) to illustrate well designed extensions, to again provide the basis for investment in the listed buildings.
Colin also agreed to use Huw to design a housing scheme on the Abbey Garth which the County Council constructed as speculative housing which as you can see is still an outstanding design.
These proposals were put in place and the buildings were refurbished, now 30 years later, as the centre of specialist ladies' shops for Romsey, the ultimate test of “viability”.
We walked round Romsey and, with improvements from Steve over the years, were able to see that all of the Plan proposals had been put in place!
Romsey is a little gem and I must also credit the local conservation society, created to “save” Romsey, when it became part of Test Valley, in 1974 with Andover, whose council had previously demolished about 50 listed buildings in their town centre!
Back for lunch with the Cabinet member, CEO and other staff and old friends.
It was a particular pleasure to meet Bob Gregory, the Development Manager North, who I had appointed in the mid 70s as a trainee and sent off to college to get qualified. He hasn’t aged a bit and still looks youthful - but now has a family!
A real pleasure for me to see what real planning is about.




The following week, with Rynd, Tino and others, I met Phil Kirby, (then) President, David Hackforth, about to be (now) President, and Steven Tapper, Junior now Senior Vice President of the Planning Officers Society.
The RTPI is refreshing a number of relationships and this, with the POS, is an important one. The conversation established potential links between RTPI Networks and POS committees and looked at other issues, where a common agenda might emerge. Those responsible for planning in local authorities are the “face” of planning and the review allowed us to demonstrate how important the RTPI believes they are to the profession as a whole.

Martin Willey
2009 RTPI President

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