Wednesday 26 October 2011

B&NES grants approval for Newbridge Meadows Village Green status


In April 2010, an application was submitted to B&NES Council by a representative of ‘Newbridge Matters’, an organisation set up to enhance and protect the area of Newbridge, in full co-operation with the Ward Councillors, for the Newbridge Meadow Fields to be registered as a Town or Village Green.
The application was considered to be valid and a Non-Statutory Public Inquiry was held in The Guildhall in April 2011, after which the Inspector holding the Inquiry issued a report recommending that the two large Meadow Fields and the Corridor between them, be Registered as a Village Green.

A meeting of B&NES’s Regulatory (Access) Committee was held in The Guildhall on Tuesday 25th October 2011 to consider the Inspector’s report and, after hearing from their Senior Rights of Way Officer who recommended that as all requirements under Section 15 of the Open Spaces Act 2006 were satisfied, as detailed by the Inspector, he recommended that the two large Meadow Fields and the Corridor between them, be Registered as a Village Green.

The Committee resolved to accept the report and Register the area accordingly. (Please see plan below, click on image to enlarge.)

The meeting was attended by the applicant, another member of ‘Newbridge Matters’, a member of The Bath Society and Councillor Loraine Morgan-Brinkhurst, one of the Ward Councillors, all of whom spoke in favour of Registration.
Also in attendance were members of the public including children and Ward Councillor Caroline Roberts, who had supported the application.

Now that the Meadows have been registered, they will be protected from future development so that present and future generations may continue to enjoy their use, for leisure and environmental purposes.

The Committee was advised that next year, 2012, marks the Queen’s Diamond Jubilee, sixty years on the throne and, that in order to celebrate the occasion her grandson Prince William, now the Duke of Cambridge, has as Patron set up a scheme to protect Playing Fields and Outdoor Spaces. If areas of land conformed to criteria set down under this scheme, these areas could be named ‘Queen Elizabeth II Fields’.

The owners of the land, in the case of Newbridge Meadows being B&NES, would if they so desired, be able to request that the name ‘Queen Elizabeth II Fields’ be applied to the Meadows, in a similar way to that for Bath’s ‘Royal Victoria Park’.

A formal request will be made to B&NES in due course for this action to be taken.