El Moose Monstero wrote:Yes, because Britain is entirely comprised of castles rather than a wealth of different architure from 1750 to present, some of which is actually worth preserving rather than bulldozing.
Irrelevant, listing of buildings for preservation relies on entirely different laws and governing body.
Planning permissions aren't just there so that the filthy gub'ment can tell you how to live.
No, actually they are. Planning officials in the UK are drunk with power and truly believe that only buildings that fit their whims should be build. The basic rights to use land you own or construct a shelter for your family, present throughout human history, mean nothing to them. It really is just about what the local government wants, which is of course open to change through lobbying and outright bribery. It is probably the most communist part of UK government.
They're there to consider the effects of what someone wants to build on the surrounding area and community. This includes shops and businesses, btw, not just domestic buildings. Fast food restaurants that buy listed buildings, for example, are required to maintain the frontage in keeping with the original style of that building at much as possible. Why should the tourism appeal of shops or restaurants in a historic street be compromised by someone over the road putting up garish neon lights or a giant McDonalds logo?
Of course an individual shopholder won't be allowed to do anything at all. A big chain company will get away with a lot if they can fund professionals to harass the planners full time until they give in.
Similarly, should your house value suffer because your next door neighbour builds an eyesore of an extension?
Planning officers have almost no appreciation for aesthetic value and are very poor at exactly this. Their criteria are 'is it boring and generic, if yes, then maybe if we feel particularly permissive today we might allow it'. Quality of detail is never considered.
What about if someone wants to build a giant block of flats or, in the case of Newcastle, a 50 story casino / penthouse complex that would block out all sunlight to many backyards? Should you have to wait until the building is built or modifiaction made to bring some sort of civil prosecution? Or would it be better if there was a way that this sort of thing could be considered before anyone starts building?
Maybe planning reform is possible, in the hypothetical situation that a central government was elected that actually had this as a priority. In a choice between keeping the existing system and firing the lot of them, I would immediately and repeatedly stab the 'sack all of the worthless petty obstructive parasites' button. The economic benefits of affordable housing, greater commercial development and more construction activity plus the money saved by not paying all of those idiots plus all the professional time associated with getting through the process far, far outweight the negligible benefits of their supposed attempts to protect 'area character'.
I'm sure there are cases when planning regulations are enforced with too much zeal
This single case is enough to condemn the system. Planners are destroying people's homes for no reason (no visible eyesore or detriment to surrounding area), spending tens of millions of pounds of public money to do it (that would be vastly better spent on development, homes and jobs), and worst of all they are not even making the slightest gesture towards suggesting where these people can live in peace. They claim there is nowhere in their entire region that can be a suitable site. Tempting as it is I would not go quite so far as to advocate burning down the homes of the planning officers involved, after all they may be subhuman communoids but they do have families. But they should definitely be fired and barred from ever working in the public sector again.