A new development
plan for the city will create over 32,000 new jobs and 26,400 new homes by
2036.
The process of
adopting a Replacement Development Plan is now nearing its final stages, with
the ‘Deposit Plan’ or full plan set to be discussed and agreed by Cardiff
Council’s Cabinet before being submitted to Full Council for approval.
Cllr Dan De’Ath,
Cabinet Member for Climate Change, Strategic Planning and Transport said: “The
new ‘Deposit Plan’ will act as a blueprint for development in Cardiff up until
2036 setting out a plan-led strategy that will control development in the
city, ensuring that investors and developers know and understand how we want
the city to develop.
“Without an
up-to-date Local Development Plan, development in the city would happen in a
haphazard way, allowing developers to put forward proposals that do not align
with our aspirations on how Cardiff should grow, so this is why this process is
so important.”
Following the
consultation on the Preferred Strategy in summer 2023, a 1% growth rate has
been chosen for the duration of the plan.
The key highlights
of the ‘Deposit Plan’ are:
· Meeting
Future Needs:
Creating 32,300 new jobs and 26,400 new homes to cater for
the growth of the population in the city.
·
New Homes: As well as the sites that
already have planning permission or are earmarked for development on the
strategic sites in the current LDP, new houses will be built on brownfield
sites in the city centre, Cardiff Docks and in the International Sports
Village. This will give an overall 50:50 split between the use of greenfield
and brownfield sites. Twenty five percent of all new homes under the plan will
be affordable, delivering between 5,000 and 6,000 affordable new homes by 2036.
· New Jobs: The
‘Deposit Plan’ supports the Council’s Economic Strategy, proposing a range and
choice of new employment opportunities through protecting existing employment
sites in the current LDP, while bringing forward new sites in the Cardiff
Central Zone, Roath Basin, North of Junction 33, North-West Cardiff, Cardiff
Parkway and other sites.
·
Creating Sustainable Neighbourhoods: Ensuring that all future developments are well-planned,
mixed-use developments to create safe, inclusive, accessible and healthy
environments for people to live. The strategy sets out how we will tackle
deprivation and improve the quality of life by supporting existing centres,
delivering affordable homes, while ensuring community facilities are delivered
alongside new developments.
· Sustainable
Transport and Active Travel: It is essential that any new plan
for growth for the city is strictly aligned to the council’s priority to
encourage people to travel by public transport, walking and cycling, to make
people less reliant on their private car. The aim is to ensure that 75% of all
journeys are made by foot, cycling or public transport by 2030 through
investing in transport infrastructure to make sustainable travel a more
attractive option for the public to use.
·
Responding to Climate Change: The
‘Deposit Plan’ is in line with the One Planet Strategy to deliver low carbon
developments and energy efficient buildings, as well as increasing the supply
of renewable energy to new developments and preventing development in flood
risk areas.
·
Ensuring a net gain in biodiversity and
ensuring the resilience of ecosystems: The ‘Deposit Plan’ aims to ensure
all development maintains and achieves a net gain in biodiversity and promotes
the resilience of ecosystems.
· Protecting
Cardiff’s Environment:Protecting
the greenfield sites north of the M4, along with other areas of countryside
across the city.
· New and
Strengthened Policy in Key Areas: Thesehave been addressed
in the ‘Deposit Plan’, which ensures that all new policy and legislation that
has come into being since the current LDP was adopted are utilised in the
‘Deposit Plan’.
Cllr Dan De'Ath
continued: “The process to deliver a Replacement Local Development Plan is
always challenging, but the detailed work involved in this process should not
be underestimated. I would like to thank all those that took part in the
consultation on the Preferred Strategy last year, the views and ideas put
forward have been considered when preparing the ‘Deposit Plan’. Over 400 people
joined us for our face to face and online engagement sessions and over 1000
people completed the survey. Sixty-two representations were made on the
Preferred Strategy, and all of these have been incorporated into the ‘Deposit
Plan’.
“Creating new jobs
and new homes in a sustainable way is a priority for this administration. The
new ‘Deposit Plan’ is a realistic, yet optimistic vision on how Cardiff will
develop over the next 12 years.
“This
is an LDP for growth, but not un-regulated growth. A plan which will use 50/50
brownfield and greenfield sites, an LDP which will deliver jobs, affordable
homes, and help us on the way to net zero so we can strive towards our One
Planet Cardiff targets.
“If the ‘Deposit
Plan’ is approved by both Cabinet and Full Council, a formal 8-week
consultation will follow between February 18th and April 15th.
All comments received will be submitted with the ‘Deposit Plan’, along with any
proposed changes in Autumn 2025 to Welsh Government for examination by an
Independent Inspector.”
Cardiff
Council’s Cabinet will meet on 23rd January 2025 to consider the
recommendations contained in the report, and a webcast of that meeting will be
available to watch on the day here.
Prior
to the Cabinet meeting, the report with be scrutinised by a Joint Policy Review and Performance & Environmental Scrutiny
Committee when it meets at County Hall at 4.30pm on
January 16th A recording of
that meeting will be available to view here. https://cardiff.public-i.tv/core/portal/webcast_interactive/945339
Following
Cabinet consideration, the report will be debated by Full Council when it meets
on 30th January 2025. The webcast of the meeting will be available
here. https://cardiff.public-i.tv/core/portal/home