Stop The GillyFlower Development - Final Objective
Stop The GillyFlower Development - Final Objective
Latest: Jan. 17, 2024
Funding raised - this appeal will now close
Fellow residents, friends and supporters.
We are delighted to be able to announce that this crowdfunding appeal is now being closed.
Lostwithiel Town Council has agreed to pay our legal team’s fe…
Read moreWe need your continued help to fight the Gillyflower Application as it will soon be proceeding to Strategic Planning Committee.
We need to raise a final £2000 to enable our community’s legal team to scrutinise the Planning Officers Report and give us the best chance of a robust defence.
We’ve come a long way in this battle and despite some minor changes, this application, (which sits outside of the development boundary), remains largely unaltered with plans to turn the protected landscape which forms the rural backdrop to our town into a tourist attraction with 19 individual 'drum' shaped holiday home buildings under the guise of an ‘apart-hotel’, a security office building, and a massive clubhouse/restaurant/bar.
We are proud and humbled by the staunch support that the community has given so far but we need one final collective push to get to the finish line – so please dig deep and help us achieve our target!
For anyone able to attend we will be holding another coffee morning at the Church rooms, Lostwithiel on Saturday 27th January at 10am to Midday where there will be a chance to discuss the progress of the application as well as cakes, refreshments and a raffle so please come along and show your support.
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Our small Cornish town needs your help in a planning battle with a celebrity developer and his family.
Some of you might know Lostwithiel, ‘the fairest of small cities’. Nestled in the Fowey Valley, the town’s historic centre is a conservation area boasting the remnants of a Medieval palace, a Tudor bridge and 92 listed buildings. Crowning the green hills above the town, in a designated Area of Great Landscape Value sits the exquisite 13th century Restormel Castle. ‘There is history in every stone’ is how the poet John Betjeman once described Lostwithiel.
Those of us who are lucky enough to live here love our town. We are a thriving, vibrant, strong and supportive community. We don’t live in the past and we recognise that nothing stays the same for ever. But we do believe that it’s important to preserve what is so special here for future generations. Our town, its rich heritage and the landscapes which surround it, once lost to unnecessary development can never be recovered.
If you haven’t heard of Lostwithiel you’ll almost certainly have heard of Sir Tim Smit, creator of the massive tourist attractions that are the Eden Project and the Lost Gardens of Heligan. He lives on the edge of town. Brand Smit is almost universally revered. Here in Cornwall though, less so. Our relationship with tourism is more complex. Mr Smit though has made a massive amount of money out of ‘green’ tourism and now he wants to do it in Lostwithiel.
A few years back he bought a redundant golf course here. He’s planted thousands of fruit trees and good for him. The world needs more trees. But in 2021 he also put in an application for 19 holiday homes, an agronomy centre, cookery school and restaurant, and parking for well over 100 cars. All looking down upon our historic town, in the setting of our castle and in a green field Area of Great Landscape Value. Following massive campaigning and opposition that application was rejected a year ago.
But he’s back, and now with his son Alex, he is still determined to turn our beloved landscape into a tourist attraction and make a few more million from land he bought for a song.
The application this time is for 19 individual 'drum' shaped holiday home buildings under the guise of an ‘apart-hotel’, a security office building, and a massive clubhouse/restaurant/bar which will service both holiday makers and golfers alike. And that’s despite him being on record saying this is not a viable site for a golf course, which does kind of suggest that his primary interest is the revenue he’ll generate from his high end holiday camp.
We need to be clear that no one objects to the golf course and no one objects to his orchards. Our beef is only to do with him wanting to bring a holiday resort into a very special landscape which we believe must be preserved, and which will also impact upon the conservation status of a unique and historic town.
And let’s not kid ourselves that if this application is approved then that’s where it stops. Once these buildings are in place then it opens the door for more, which will inevitably follow. There is so much more land on this site which could still be developed. It’s no secret that Mr Smit’s original application included a 4 bed triple garage luxury pad for his son until his consultant advised him it might be wise to remove it ‘at this time’. It’s also no secret that Mr Smit has described this project as a legacy for his son. Nice for Alex. Not so much for Lostwithiel.
So that’s the nub of it. There’s so much more we could talk about to do with traffic on country lanes, the impact on existing local businesses and sustainability and the climate emergency.
But this boils down to making a stand, and not allowing those with celebrity, power and influence to ravage our country side to pad their pockets, simply because they have the money to employ a host of consultants to circumnavigate the legislation which would apply to everyone else.
Details of PA23/02502 can be viewed on PA23/02502 | Gillyflower Golf clubhouse and reception, 19 holiday lodges (apart-hotel c1 use class), small classroom and new access and parking arrangements. | Gillyflower Golf Cott Road Lostwithiel PL22 0HQ (cornwall.gov.uk)
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Jan. 17, 2024
Funding raised - this appeal will now close
Fellow residents, friends and supporters.
We are delighted to be able to announce that this crowdfunding appeal is now being closed.
Lostwithiel Town Council has agreed to pay our legal team’s fees to scrutinise the Planning Officer’s report, once it becomes available and assuming it supports the application.
We are enormously grateful to them. Their generosity means that we have enough money for this final target without needing your pledges.
This also sends a clear message to the Planning Committee that the residents of Lostwithiel and our elected council remain resolute in our determination to protect our town and our beloved landscapes.
So no one needs to donate on this page any more. Thank you so much to those that already have. Please be assured that your money hasn’t been taken yet and it isn’t going to be. You won’t be out of pocket.
We still need to raise a small amount. Just £200- £300 to cover existing arrears and fees, but we are confident we can manage this at our next coffee morning which will still take place as arranged at the Church rooms, Lostwithiel on Saturday 27th January at 10am to 12am.
There will be a chance to discuss the progress of the application as well as cakes, refreshments and a raffle so please come along and show your support.
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