Monday, September 08, 2008

Where Will You Go When The Concrete Comes?

Where Will You Go When The Concrete Comes?

A canal-cut reservoir at Coate Water,

A manuscript of field, sky and lake-land

For Richard Jefferies and his muse,

Wandering east from England’s Chicago.

Recreation for Railway families,

Who couldn’t afford the annual Trip,

Just trying to forget the Great War

And short-time working.

It’s where my mother dived deep into the waves

Wind-whipped and keen before the polio scare,

And where mum and dad courted before the War.

It’s where I paddled in the 1950’s,

Thrilled by miniature railway rides,

Egg sandwiches and ice cream cornets,

In long summer holiday equal measure,

Until the smell of creosote and Woodbines

Wafted through the wooden changing rooms,

With the 11 Plus, The Beatles,

And Don Rogers on a thousand transistor radios.

It’s where young men impressed their girl friends

With a clean sweep of the oars from out the boathouse,

Cries of joy echoing in the willowed, muddied banks,

While the great crested grebe stared up to the Downs

And the thatched cottages up in Hodson,

“The Gamekeeper At Home”, still.

You can see all these memories reflected in the waters,

You can see all of yours too,

Take a walk and peer into the shifting surface,

There they are just waiting to be netted,

With the rod and line of recollection,

But where will they all go when the concrete comes?


by Stuart Butler

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

House-builders launch a planning appeal

Redrow Homes and Persimmon Homes have lodged an appeal with the Secretary of State against Swindon Borough Council over their failure to make a decision about one of their planning applications to develop land east and south of Coate Water Country Park.

There are two planning applications related to the area - the main planning application relates to the bulk of the houses (1550 houses), the employment land and university campus. The second relates to a field owned by Mr & Mrs Austin (who live in Bourton, Oxfordshire)that is designated for 250 houses. It is the first of these planning applications that is up for appeal.

The decision whether to allow the development will now be in the hands of the Planning Inspectorate in Bristol. All being well, a Local Public Inquiry will be held where the public will have an opportunity to make their comments about the proposals.

Watch this space to find out what to do to save Coate.

Monday, June 23, 2008

House builders submit revised plans

Persimmon Homes and Redrow Homes have submitted a revised planning application to Swindon Borough Council for 1,800 houses, 14 hectares of employment land, a university campus etc etc.

It is virtually the same as the one submitted in August 2007. The house-builders still haven't found a university partner.

Keep up the fight!

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Swindon Core Strategy consultation - please respond!

Once again Swindon Borough Council is proposing policies in their Swindon Core Strategy that would blight the landscape east of Coate Water.

Here are some notes to help you respond to the Council’s preferred option of Coate/Badbury Wick (“Commonhead”) for development of 750 houses and 15 hectares of industrial landuse, followed by a sample letter that you might send to the council instead of using their glossy response sheet. (The forms are available at the council offices and libraries or at Swindon Core Strategy along with all the documentation [and online response pages]. Completed forms to: Forward Planning Group, Freepost SCE5251, Swindon Borough Council, Premier House, Station Road, Swindon, SN1 1TZ and must arrive no later than 4.30pm on Monday 12th May 2008.)



Support Key Objective 5 to allocate land for a university campus at North Star. This objective is in line with government planning policy (PPS13) that encourages the siting of facilities of this nature at places that can be readily accessed on foot, by bicycle and by public transport. The objective is also in line with SBC policy to situate tertiary education in the town centre to aid its urban regeneration programme.

Object to Spatial Framework Preferred Option in para 19.11.
Delete “Commonhead” as a preferred location for 750 houses and 15 hectares of employment land.
Reason: Whilst appreciating that SBC must meet housing and employment land requirements set down in the emerging Regional Spatial Strategy for the south-west, there is no duty upon SBC to put forward sites that are not sustainable. Indeed, if SBC must accept the requirement to accommodate a further 37,000 houses in Swindon between 2006-2026, never was there a greater time in Swindon’s history to protect this most treasured landscape in the foothills of the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty that stretches to Coate Water (the area missed national designation as an AONB in the 1970s because the building of the M4 motorway and A419 Trunk road at that time formed a “convenient line on the map” to limit the designation). On environmental, historic and literary grounds, the land between Coate Water and the Richard Jefferies Museum, stretching east-south-east to Liddington Hill, is of major archaeological importance – it is a Bronze Age gateway site to the Downs; it is of major literary significance – inspirational in the works of Richard Jefferies (who is still rated as one of Britain’s best nature writers) and Alfred Williams who shared a common passion for Liddington Hill and the views from it; and it is next to Coate Water Site of Special Scientific Interest and the Country Park; a major public amenity as well as a wild-life sanctuary.

Object to Para 20.24 – “Commonhead Preferred Option”.Reason: This option is in conflict with advice in para 23.23 that supports protecting and enhancing historic landscapes. Can there be any other landscape of greater historic importance in Swindon given its roots in pre-history and its cultural and literary importance associated with Richard Jefferies? The proposed development area includes key fields of significant archaeological importance to the north of Day House Lane opposite the Richard Jefferies Museum and Day House Farm that date back to the Neolithic period. The proposed development area also takes in fields of major Medieval archaeological significance at Badbury Wick. These fields were also extremely important to Richard Jefferies – he recorded the archaeology and many were noted as favourite “thinking” places.

The proposed development area includes Day House Copse, a local nature reserve that would be isolated from Coate Water restricting movement of terrestrial wild life species dependent on the link. The copse is an ancient oak woodland that features in Richard Jefferies writing (e.g. Greene Ferne Farm, Wood Magic).

SBC committed itself to the principle that if no university is based at Coate, there would be no houses. Following shortly after their promise that the only development in the area would be the hospital, SBC must uphold the “no university, no houses” rule.

Whilst supporting the protection of a buffer around Coate Water and incorporating what is now private farmland into the Country Park, the views from the park would still become urban in nature as a result of the morphology of the landscape. The hospital is clearly visible from Coate Water. There is no indication in the preferred option to indicate how proposed buffer land would be incorporated into the Country Park or how it would be obtained, protected and managed in perpetuity.

It is difficult to see how the views from the Downs can be “respected” if the fields are urbanised. The fields leading to Coate Water dominate the landscape particularly as viewed from Liddington Hill. The hospital is a major intrusion on the landscape from Liddington Hill.

Day House Lane has a unique rural quality and is used by walkers, joggers, ramblers, cyclists and horse-riders for recreation on a regular basis. The site is a gateway to the Downs. The route to Liddington Hill was inspirational to Richard Jefferies who walked it regularly from Coate Farm and it led to the production of his autobiographical work The Story of my Heart that has strong spiritual overtones.

The area identified includes land that has been used to bury waste that was never subject to regulation. It is contaminated and leaching pollutants to air, ground and water. The only appropriate after use of the site is for public open space or tree planting – not development.

We accept that land will be required at Commonhead for hospital expansion. Have all plans for a Park and Ride site at Commonhead now fallen? The Swindon and Marlborough NHS Trust have bought the field earmarked for Park and Ride and they have no intention to sell it. Where does this leave SBC’s transport plan?

Development near Junction 15 of the M4 is inaccessible and remote from Swindon town centre. It cannot be accessed from the A419T or the M4. As such it is an unsustainable site that is unlikely to attract a bus service and will encourage car-based commuting.

Development of fields opposite the hamlet of Coate will exacerbate flooding of the existing buildings (some are below ground level) and there is a scheduled building next to the proposed development field that is also of major literary importance to Richard Jefferies.

Support 23-23 Historic Landscapes and Buildings options. Landscapes and buildings of importance to Richard Jefferies should be carefully preserved and enhanced for their cultural and historic quality.

SAMPLE LETTER

To:
Forward Planning Group
Freepost SCE5251
Swindon Borough Council
Premier House
Swindon, SN1 1SX.

From:
Name:
Address:
Postcode:
Tel No (home):
Tel No (work):
Email:
Date

Swindon Core Strategy Preferred Options Draft, March 2008

I disagree with Swindon Borough Council’s draft spatial framework for the borough and its preferred option to allocate land at Coate/Badbury Wick (“Commonhead”) for the building of 750 houses and for 15 hectares of business use. This option should be deleted from the Swindon Core Strategy and a policy put in place that protects the high landscape value of the area.

I am one of 35,000 people who signed the Save Coate petition in order to protect open countryside between Coate Water and the Downs from development. Swindon Borough Council pledged that if no university wished to develop at Coate, there would be no houses built. Once again, assurances to protect this unique countryside are being broken and I have no faith that any buffer land left around Coate Water won’t become a building site when circumstances change.

The proposal conflicts with advice elsewhere in the Swindon Core Strategy that supports protecting and enhancing historic landscapes. Coate and Badbury Wick are steeped in history given their roots in pre-history. The significant cultural and literary importance of the landscape that influenced Richard Jefferies’ writing, is unique. Key fields of significant archaeological importance to the north of Day House Lane (opposite the Richard Jefferies Museum and Day House Farm) that date back to the Neolithic period are included in the proposed development area. The area also includes fields of major Medieval significance at Badbury Wick. Day House Copse, a local nature reserve and ancient oak woodland, would be surrounded by a housing estate isolating wildlife from Coate Water and the surrounding countryside. The views from the Downs and Coate Water cannot be “respected” if the fields are urbanised. The hospital is already a major blot on the landscape and we were assured that the hospital was a one-off building in this area. Day House Lane has a unique rural quality and it is used by walkers, joggers, ramblers, cyclists and horse-riders for recreation on a regular basis. Development near Junction 15 of the M4 is inaccessible and remote from Swindon town centre. It is unlikely to attract a regular bus service and will encourage car-based commuting.

I am appalled that Swindon Borough Council is proposing that land in this area should be developed further – this is nothing less than vandalism.


Signed


Friday, February 15, 2008

PLEASE DONATE TO LAND FUND

LAND FUND

The Trust has set up a Land Fund with the aim to buy as much farmland as possible between Coate Water and the North Wessex Downs in order to create new wild-life friendly habitats.

Donations can be made through the Charities Aid Foundation by following the link. Type in Jefferies Land Conservation Trust once connected to the site.

Donate through CAFOnline

Thank you.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Charity will uphold Swindon Council’s pledge of ‘No university, no houses’ at Coate

The Jefferies Land Conservation Trust [1] has pledged to fight on to ensure that Swindon Borough Council keeps to its promise that if no university comes forward to set up a campus in the Coate/Badbury Wick area, no houses will be built there.


The conservation trust, a registered charity set up in 2005 with the aim to protect and enhance the environmental, historic and cultural quality of the landscape beloved by Victorian nature writer Richard Jefferies, held its Annual General Meeting on 2nd February. Members received news of a new draft Swindon Borough Council blue-print. Entitled ‘Swindon Core Strategy,’ [2] the Council sets out its preferred options for the development of Swindon to 2026 that went to their Cabinet for approval on 23rd January. The Trust was disappointed to learn that Swindon Council wishes to make provision for 750 new houses and 15 hectares of employment land at ‘Commonhead.’ The Trust had asked that the land, under threat from development next to Coate Water Country Park and in the foothills of the Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, should be re-designated as an Area of Local Landscape Importance. Up until five years ago, the area was protected as a result of its high visual value.


The proposal to develop two square kilometres of land between Coate Water and the Downs by the Swindon Gateway Partnership (essentially Redrow Homes and Persimmon Homes) has been the most controversial building plan to face Swindon and it generated objections from 35,000 people who signed a petition against it.


Jean Saunders, Secretary of the Jefferies Land Conservation Trust said:


“ ‘No houses’ means ‘no houses.’ The Council might propose a larger buffer around Coate Water Country Park that they claim will be safe from development, but we might have this same battle again in a few years time. Only seven years ago we were promised that the only new building in this corner of the town would be the new hospital and we won’t be fooled again”.


Mrs Saunders added:

“Our Members have agreed to set up a Land Fund with the intention of fund-raising to buy as much of the threatened farmland as possible and turn it into a wild-life haven, given a positive response from the land owners. We hope that Swindon people will back this idea and dip into their pockets to help”.

The draft Council Strategy document should be issued for consultation in March and the public will have only eight weeks to make their views known.

ENDS


Editor’s notes

[1] More information about the Trust at http://jefferiesland.org.uk

[2] The draft consultation document can be downloaded here:



  • Sunday, August 12, 2007

    Letter of objection to new planning applications

    Mr Ian Halsall
    Planning Department
    Swindon Borough Council
    Premier House
    Station Road
    Swindon SN1 1TZ


    Objection to outline planning applications SO7\1688 & SO7\1689 – Swindon Gateway proposal for land at Coate.

    Dear Mr Halsall

    I wish to lodge a formal objection to the outline planning applications submitted by Persimmon Homes and Redrow Homes to build 1,800 houses, a university campus including accommodation for students, offices and community facilities on countryside at Coate and Badbury Wick.

    Whilst I appreciate that land at Coate has been allocated in the Swindon Local Plan for mixed use development incorporating a university campus, the policy was drawn up to meet the needs of the University of Bath who are no longer interested in developing the site. As no new university partner has come forward, it is premature to consider the planning application given that the elements of the proposals must relate to each other and cannot proceed until the requirements of any future university partner, if any, are met. Currently, the planning applications conflict with Swindon Local Plan policy DS3 and should be refused planning permission.

    The planning applications also conflict with many other requirements of policy DS3.

    The rural views out of Coate Water Country Park have not been respected – offering glimpses of countryside between the buildings is not in the spirit of the policy.

    The height and layout of buildings do not respect the views from the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, particularly those in the business park, and do not provide a soft urban edge to Swindon.

    The provision of at least 60 hectares of land for a university campus has not been met (DS3a) – there is barely 44 hectares of land set aside for a campus. The land allocated for the university campus falls within the area that Natural England believe should be protected and enhanced to secure the conservation value of Coate Water Site of Special Scientific Interest. The proposed buildings next to Coate Water nature reserve are too close, too concentrated and too high.

    Whilst the policy calls for the provision of up to 1800 houses, this was conditional on there being sufficient land suitable and available for development. This is clearly not the case given that a buffer of at least 300m is required at the north- east boundary of Coate Water to protect the rural setting of the Country Park and archaeological features whilst the old landfill site is also proposed for house-building contrary to government planning guidance.

    The setting of the listed buildings in the area has not been considered. These include the Richard Jefferies Museum, Day House Farm and the milestone along the old Coate lane – all have Grade II listing and their rural setting is also important given the context of their importance to Richard Jefferies’ writing. Indeed, there has been no environmental impact assessment of the proposals on the literary landscape value of Jefferies Land – a unique feature in Swindon that has been grossly under-rated by both the borough council and the developers.

    The transport infrastructure is inadequate to cope with the increased traffic that would pour out onto Marlborough Road. The residents of Coate should not be forced to live on a plot of land that acts as a roundabout.

    The underpass at Coate roundabout regularly floods – the sewage infrastructure is already inadequate whilst any increase in flow in the Dorcan Brook and the River Cole will increase flooding incidents elsewhere. Day House Lane is regularly flooded as are the fields to the south-east of Coate Water.

    This area of Swindon is very special to me and should be protected at all costs. With the pressures on Swindon to get bigger, this last remnant of local countryside next to Coate Water, along with its historic and literary connections with Coate-born writer Richard Jefferies and the varied extensive archaeology dating back to the early Bronze Age, is even more valuable as an educational and recreational facility than ever before.

    The buffer proposed around the Country Park, is insufficient to protect and enhance the wildlife interest of the Coate Water Site of Special Scientific Interest and the rural landscape setting of the park. It is too narrow to be of any value and there is no indication that building work will be delayed for several years until after newly created habitats have had an opportunity to mature. In some places there is no buffer proposed – merely a row of trees that will ultimately block out the treasured views from Coate Water across to Liddington Hill and the Downs.

    The scale, nature and location of the different elements of the proposed development will reduce wildlife movement, drastically reduce feeding areas and habitats for protected species such as hares, badgers, bats, otters and endangered birds both within and outside the nature reserves. Human intrusion and predation from household pets could further destroy the wildlife value of the area forever.

    The impact of the buildings on the landscape will be indescribably awful and totally unacceptable. The new hospital – one kilometre from Coate Water - has been a good marker to show just how badly a modern building can ruin the views from the Downs and Coate Water.

    The university campus should be located in the town centre near the railway station as originally proposed. There is already provision to build thousands more houses whilst empty industrial units and offices litter the Borough. We don't need more.

    Coate Water is my favourite place in Swindon. Its value to the town is beyond price. Please refuse planning permission and protect this area for future generations to enjoy as much as I have.

    Please keep me informed about any decision that is taken.

    Yours sincerely

    Monday, July 16, 2007

    New policies suggested to protect Jefferies Land.

    Swindon Friends of the Earth, the Richard Jefferies Society, the Jefferies Land Conservation Trust and the Swindon Civic Trust have written to Swindon Borough Council's Forward Planning team asking them to consider the following changes to the next Swindon Local Development Framework Plan :

    - a focus on North Star as the favoured site for tertiary education as proposed in the deposit draft Swindon Local Plan 2011 along with other town centre sites.

    - the reinstatement of the former Thamesdown/Swindon Borough Council Local Plan policies and Wiltshire Structure Plan policy that afforded protection and enhancement of the high and unique landscape value of the countryside in the foothills of the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty that stretches to Coate Water Country Park, a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) and Burderop Wood Local Nature Reserve and which includes Day House Copse Local Nature Reserve. As such it would be necessary to re-evaluate the area that might be developed without harm to the environment and to allow for some hospital expansion.

    - a new policy that seeks to protect and enhance the landscape setting of Coate Farm that houses the Jefferies Museum and other features associated with the world class nature and countryside writer, Richard Jefferies.



    The letter continues:

    The emerging Regional Spatial Strategy for the South-West offers this observation for the forward planning of Swindon to 2026: "the town has aspirations to establish a university". (paragraph 4.2.26) There is no further reference to making provision for a university in the Swindon strategy. Given that the University of Bath has dropped all proposals to provide a major campus at Coate or a medical research facility at Commonhead and whilst the Higher Education Funding Council of England is no longer supporting grants to establish new out-of-town campus-style educational facilities, the time is ripe to re-visit the planning policies for the Coate area that were only introduced to satisfy the needs of the University of Bath. As such, the emerging Framework Plan for Swindon should focus the town’s tertiary education needs at North Star and the town centre as part of the regeneration programme.

    There is a considerable amount of new evidence related to the Coate area since both the Examination in Public of the Wiltshire and Swindon Structure Plan 2016 and the Public Inquiry of the Swindon Borough Local Plan 2011 took place. The area, that was thought to be suitable for development at the time by some, is far more heavily constrained by environmental and historic assets than previously recognised whilst environmental considerations such as the presence of unstable contaminated land and potential flood areas have been brushed aside. The archaeological study alone has revealed major constraints to development, unknown previously, that must now be protected. Further evidence has emerged to show that the ecological studies carried out on behalf of the developers were flawed and unreliable suggesting that the precautionary buffer of 0.5km to protect Coate Water SSSI, as proposed by Natural England (formerly English Nature), is more realistic. Furthermore, planners have demonstrated no appreciation of the importance of the unique literary landscape quality of the area and have failed to undertake any study that might shed light on the matter. If they had done so, they might understand why Richard Jefferies, particularly in his position as a pioneer environmentalist, is one of Swindon’s greatest assets and why the landscape that inspired Jefferies’ writing is of significant literary importance.

    As such we believe that the Coate/Badbury Wick/Burderop area, that just escaped official national designation as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (as part of the North Wessex Downs) in the 1970s, should be re-designated as a Landscape Character Area subject to a policy of protection and enhancement that would require any permitted development to be in keeping with the historic setting of the landscape. Land that might be excluded from the policy might be evaluated in order to allow for some expansion of the hospital.

    Richard Jefferies (1848-1887) was born at Coate Farm and lived at Coate for the best part of his first 28 years. In his short writing career, he wrote over 20 books and hundreds of essays and articles, many of them heavily influenced by his years of living in a farming community at Coate. Coate Farm was purchased by Swindon Corporation in 1926. Since that positive act of preservation 81 years ago, it is unfortunate that the Corporation's successors have made many unsympathetic changes to the property that include selling off meadow to the Sun Inn to extend their car-park, building a large “shed” in the same meadow (Brook Field) that was intended for use as an agricultural museum, reducing the size of the orchards and front garden for road widening, pulling down the thatched cow-sheds and thatched rick-shed, and replacing the thatch on the cart-house with an asbestos roof. A public outcry in the 1970s stopped the council from pulling down the pig-sties and barn. It was as a result of a national appeal by Sir John Betjeman, Spike Milligan, Johnny Morris and other national figures who helped the Richard Jefferies Society raise money for repairs, that the buildings were saved from demolition.

    The Jefferies Museum attracts visitors from all around the world. This year alone there have been visitors from Canada, Australia, New Zealand and France drawn there because of their admiration for Jefferies’ writing. Visitors are thrilled that they can still see so many natural and man-made features in the area that Jefferies clearly identified and described in his books, albeit that he used fictitious place names. The development pressures on Swindon make Jefferies’ home vulnerable. Any further degradation of the property or of the setting of the Grade II listed building must not be permitted in order to allow future generations the opportunity to appreciate this literary heritage site. As such, we request that a policy is introduced in the Framework Plan that recognises the importance of the Jefferies house at Coate and ensures that it is preserved and enhanced.

    Sunday, May 27, 2007

    Treading in the footsteps of Richard Jefferies’ Coate

    The Richard Jefferies Society and the Jefferies Land Conservation Trust are joining forces with the public on Sunday 3rd June to celebrate places around Coate that the Victorian naturalist and countryside writer highlighted in his books written about 130 years ago.

    Guided by Mark Daniel, now in his 80’s and living in Brighton, there will be a walk around Coate Water illustrated by readings from Bevis – a boy’s adventure story based around Jefferies’ old Coate farmhouse and Coate Water. The event starts at 11am, meeting next to the Coate Water Rangers’ centre in the car park at Coate Water.

    The tour will end in the gardens of Jefferies’ House and Museum where a picnic is planned at lunchtime. Refreshments will be provided and participants are invited to bring their own snacks.

    Marissa & Steve Rouse’s 'Romanska School of World Dance' will put on a creative show for visitors in the garden during the lunch break. 'The Battle of Coate’ is a dance piece dealing with the current development plans at Coate. Characters include the Giant Albion, Richard Jefferies, the Lady of the Lake in her Coate of Water, Councillor Money Bags, Urban Sprawl and Concrete Box.

    A new leaflet of the Coate walk has been produced for the occasion funded by the National Lottery’s Awards for All grant. The leaflet (see enclosure) is available at the Coate Water Rangers Centre and at the Jefferies’ Museum.

    Mark Daniel, member of the Richard Jefferies Society and author of the leaflet, said:

    “I first discovered Bevis when I was about twelve. The story tells of the adventures of two boys for whom the exciting possibilities of their world are just dawning. It is no namby-pamby life either. Adventures include living on an island on Coate Water, mock battles with Coate village lads and swimming, fishing and sailing on the lake. It was a great joy to visit Coate as an adult and find that many of the places mentioned in Jefferies’ books are still there bringing the writing alive to generations of readers. But how much longer will this be the case if Coate is swamped with more development?”


    Steve Rouse, member of the Jefferies Land Conservation Trust said:

    “I was incensed when I learnt the scale of the building plans next to Coate Water that would destroy a beauty spot that I hold dear. I wanted to use my performing skills to highlight the battle to save Coate. With the help of young dancers, we plan to recount the tale”.

    The museum is open to visitors on Sunday from 2-5pm. The event is free and suitable for all ages. Contact Jean Saunders on 01793 783040 for more information.

    Friday, March 02, 2007

    NO UNIVERSITY = NO HOUSES AT COATE

    On 1st March 2007 the University of Bath announced that they were pulling out for good from the Coate development proposals. The so-called Swindon Gateway plan earmarked two square kilometres of countryside to the east and south of Coate Water Country Park for a campus, 1800 houses and offices. The university cite two main reasons for the decision: an inability to arrive at an agreement with Persimmon Homes and Redrow Homes who were offering them free land for a campus and a change in government funding preferences for higher education.


    The truth of the matter is that building works are highly constrained by the existence of multiple environmental assets at Coate and Badbury Wick whilst a recent archaeological study has revealed that there are even more “no go” areas than previously detected. As a result, the house-builders were putting a squeeze on the land they first allocated to the university and even this was on the most ecologically sensitive area surrounding Coate Water nature reserve.

    Despite the university’s announcement, the house builders state that they intend to submit a new planning application around May and hope to start building their housing and office estate in 2008. They say that they would leave an area for a campus even though they know that no other university wants the land.

    The Save Coate! battle is not yet won. Swindon Borough Council has stated most emphatically – NO UNIVERSITY – NO HOUSES. But Redrow and Persimmon Homes will try every trick in the book to push through their proposal.

    30,000 people have signed a petition asking for a substantial buffer of countryside to be left around Coate Water to protect its national designation as a Site of Special Scientific Interest, to protect its wildlife and to safeguard the views to and from Liddington Hill and the North Wessex Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Moreover it is a landscape treasured by Victorian nature writer, Richard Jefferies (1848-87) born at Coate, who drew inspiration from it.

    The Jefferies Land Conservation Trust seeks to acquire the proposed development area, particularly around Coate Water, in order to enhance the nature reserve and to keep Coate Water as a COUNTRY park.

    ACTION

    - Sign the Save Coate! petition at the link.

    - Write to Mrs Vivien O’Connell, Planning Department, Swindon Borough Council, Premier House, Station Road SN1 1TZ stating why you object to development next to Coate Water Country Park.

    - Write to the Leader of SBC, Councillor Roderick Bluh at the Civic Offices, Euclid Street SN1 2JH supporting his stance of NO UNIVERSITY- NO HOUSES.

    - Join the Jefferies Land Conservation Trust