Hi all,
I'm seeking examples of planning conditions that have been used successfully to secure the preservation of remains encountered during development. I have a proper chicken and egg situation, where there is very likely to be schedulable archaeology at a site, but since the site is currently occupied by derelict buildings, we can't evaluate to find it pre-determination and thereby allow it to be designed around at this stage (we have tried but a keyhole trench in the only available area was inconclusive). The buildings can't be demolished, because the applicant (local authority) does not own the land and the ownership is in fact unknown. The local authority is seeking compulsory purchase, but apparently require a planning permission to achieve this. Everyone is prepared for the eventuality that amended plans may have to be submitted upon archaeological discovery, but I am anxious that there should be a secure means of enforcing this. I'm hoping that colleagues in urban areas might have come across this situation before and have some words of wisdom to offer. Apologies if this has been asked before - am new to list and a search of the message archives was fruitless.
Al the best
Jenny
Jenny Emmett
Uwch Archaeolegydd Cynllunio - Senior Planning Archaeologist
Gwasanaeth Cynllunio Archaeolegol Gwynedd – Gwynedd Archaeological Planning Service
Craig Beuno, Ffordd Garth, Bangor, Gwynedd, LL57 2RT
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