Welcome to Save Knowsley Village
Hallam land's proposal is threatening our village. Let your voice be heard and stand up to preserve the beauty and heritage of Knowsley Village.
Even if you sent an objection to Hallam land already, this doesn't count legally. The objection on the council site is what must be submitted.
The planning application is now live on the council website. Your objection doesn't need to be eloquent, clever or well structured. You just need to let them know your object.
You need to let them know why and how the development will impact on you and your family.
Need help with your online objection?
The Save Knowsley Village volunteers will be in the Derby Arms to help you submit your objection online
7-8pm 12th November
7-8pm 13th November
7-8pm 19th November
Fund Raising - to succeed we need professional support
Our crowd funding appeal is now open, please donate to help save our village
News and Information
A reflection on the proposal 17/11/25
The main conflicts between the proposed residential development and the established local planning policy and strategy centre on the premature release of safeguarded land, the absence of a demonstrable housing need, and the failure to adhere to the core principles of the plan-led system.
The most significant conflicts are:
1. Violation of Local Plan Phasing Strategy (Policy SUE1)
- Direct Conflict with Safeguarded Land Designation: The proposal is in direct violation of the adopted local planning strategy, specifically Policy SUE1 of the "Knowsley Local Plan Core Strategy (2016)". This policy explicitly identifies the application site as 'Safeguarded Land'.
- Intended Future Use: This designation means the land is intended to meet "post-2028 development needs". The application is considered a speculative application that attempts to release this land on an ad-hoc basis.
- Circumvention of Statutory Process: The application is premature and attempts to bypass the statutory and democratic process of the forthcoming Local Plan review, which is the proper forum for determining the site’s future. The applicant's own Planning Statement notes the earliest adoption for the new Local Plan is April 2028.
2. Absence of Justifiable Housing Need
- Undermining the Plan-Led System: The National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) prioritizes a plan-led approach. This speculative application attempts to override this system without demonstrable need.
- Exceeding Housing Targets: There is no housing delivery crisis in Knowsley that would justify overriding the adopted Local Plan. In fact, the Council has demonstrably and significantly exceeded its housing delivery targets over the past three years, achieving a Housing Delivery Test score of 372%. This confirms a successful housing strategy and a healthy supply.
- Fundamental Contradiction in Justification: The applicant's case is based on a critical internal contradiction: the Planning Statement simultaneously celebrates the Council's successful housing delivery performance while attempting to justify the site's release by claiming an "emerging shortfall... (4.97 years)". This inconsistency invalidates the primary argument for the development.
3. Failure to Meet NPPF Requirements for Sustainable Development and Infrastructure
The proposal violates the principles of sustainable development by placing unmitigated strain on services and failing to provide a sound evidence base.
- Unsustainable Pressure on Education: The development would place an unsustainable and unmitigated burden on local infrastructure, particularly education, where there is a known capacity crisis. The applicant's generic promise of "off-site financial contributions" is deemed inadequate, especially where schools are physically unable to expand. This failure contradicts the Council's obligations under Paragraph 100 of the NPPF to ensure a sufficient choice of school places is available to meet the needs of new communities.
- Unreliable Transport Assessment (TA): The supporting Transport Assessment is based on outdated and fundamentally flawed socio-economic assumptions that do not reflect contemporary travel patterns (such as post-pandemic working or the likely car dependency of future higher-income residents).
- Because the volume and distribution of traffic are miscalculated, the Council cannot be assured that the "residual cumulative impacts on the road network would [not be] severe" (a key requirement under NPPF, para 116).
- The TA's conclusions regarding highway safety, traffic impact, and resulting air quality are therefore unreliable and invalid.
- Failure to Resolve Statutory Consultee Concerns: The applicant has failed to adequately address significant concerns raised by National Highways, a key statutory consultee. For instance, fundamental assessments—such as a Merge-Diverge Assessment for M57 Junctions 4 and 2, and evidence for routing assignment including M57 Junction 3—were requested but not provided, leaving the Council without necessary information on highway capacity and safety.
The policy conflicts show the proposal is attempting to bypass established rules—much like trying to skip ahead several chapters in a complex blueprint, asserting that the materials reserved for later are needed now, despite ample materials already being available and the structure being ahead of schedule.
Update 04-11-25.
Objection deadline 28-11-25
A few members of the community attended the Councillors Surgery this afternoon.
Turning up on mass to the planning meeting will help us send a message, even if you don't get to be in the room.
The digital support offered by the volunteers at the Derby Inn has been well received. Please see the leaflet for future dates if you need help. We are preparing printed letters for those who are really struggling with the online process.
We will be asking all of you to help spread the word by bombarding the news outlets with the story of this planning application. Our polite individual emails haven't resulted in a response so far.
We are continuing to work through the mass of documentation available on the planning website. If anyone can help please email knowsleyvillage34@gmail.com
We are looking to arrange for a meeting to update those who aren't on Facebook / viewing the website at the Bob Wiley.
Our fund stands at £1597, this is no where near what we need for legal support: We will use this to support the formation of a community interest company so that we have an entity to pursue grant funding and instruct legal help for any appeals we might be able to make. I'm sure those who have and will be burning money in the skies have contributed already... ๐
SKV!
Opposition Guidance
Opposition Guidance: Legal support and advocacy to oppose building plans, ensuring the protection of Knowsley Village.
Resources
See here for pointers on reading the key planning documents.
A selection of example letters are also available here for download.
Hallam Land Plans
In this part of the website, we will look to keep you informed about Hallam land’s proposals and plans.
Hallam Land Response to our concerns
Read Hallam Land's weak response to our communities concerns.
Frequently Asked Questions
Save Knowsley Village, Feel empowered to stand up for our community and protect our way of life in our beautiful village community. Together, we can make a difference
Contact us
Reach out to us with any questions or to get involved in our preservation efforts. Send a form below or email us on knowsleyvillage34@gmail.com
What makes our village special?
About us
Save Knowsley Village is a community-driven initiative dedicated to protecting the heritage and character of Knowsley Village. Our goal is to empower residents to stand up against threats to our community and preserve what makes our village special.
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Comments
Please note Paul's comment on the specific reason for any objection to the proposed development made.
From Hallam's response to the initial public responses (10% of consultees) it appears they are working on a 5 year build start from mid 2028.
For my own part I would consider the most effective ground for objection to be the increased traffic congestion resulting from at least 1000 additional vehicles (1.5 @ vehicles x 700 housing units). Hallam suggest mitigation via "highway improvement" probably traffic lights at the 2 proposed access/ egress points. they also imply traffic calming measures.
As you all would have noticed Knowsley Lane is increasingly being used by commercial traffic / HGV's as a short cut to the Business Park. The single road is already congested at rush hours so you can imagine the flow in future years.
As for the nature of other posted objections GP's, schools, shops, POS etc, these issues can, in the view of a Developer and a Local Planning Authority be "mitigated" by a big wad of dosh in the form of S. 106 Planning Agreement which can be allocated to local schools, the Council's Estates Section for the management and development of Sugar Lane shops and Aston Health Care the local GP in name only (don't get me started on the the extent and quality of their "service" to the community).
Finally, I would recommend mass lobbying of our local democratic representatives. Seek an unequivocal promise of support for our campaign from our duplicitous decision makers.
When objecting on the planning portal, give your reasons rather than just saying 'I object'.
Use the reasons listed in the Save Knowsley leaflet,
eg Traffic impacts / landscape harm / impact on schools and doctors
I have donated but if I can help in any other was just let me know
the closeness of its people, the lovely village schools, churches and shops. everyone looking out for each other. please dont change this lovely happy village
Once again about the doctors...they are not fulfilling their care duties to existing patients, being only one doctor twice a week otherwise having to travel to see one. Schools already full to capacity, long queues of traffic roads on knowsley lane peak time's next to a very busy part of the motorway, 700 houses will course much more congestion. Not good for the environment causing noise and pollution and affecting wildlife.....
If this group goes ahead with their proposal what about doctors you cannot get to see a doctor now never mind the new people also schools no place for our own children who ever thought this one up should think again itโs about money again
I object as this will ruin our green space, natural habitat and cause congestion around the village.
It is a safe place to live. You can walk around all green space.So sad these big corporations can come and destroy people's communities.
Community green space room to breathe
Walking around big spook and little spook Ross close, for over 35years would be devastating if this build goes ahead.