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Seaside village rejects £500k homes saying: We don t want to be another Abersoch
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We don t want to be another Abersoch - as half-a-million pound homes rejected at seaside village
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Morfa Nefyn Catholic Church. CREDIT - Copyright Alan Fryer geograph.org.uk Planning inspectors have upheld a decision by Gwynedd Council to refuse plans for six open market homes on the site of a former Catholic church after citing the possible impact on the Welsh language. In 2019 Gwynedd Council approved the demolition of the Resurrection of Our Saviour church in Morfa Nefyn after it fell victim to a sweeping closure programme announced by the Bishop of Wrexham three years earlier. Commercial Development Projects Ltd subsequently applied to build six open market homes on the site, but this past February saw Gwynedd’s Planning Committee unanimously refuse the plans after claiming that the Local Development Plan encouraged only affordable housing in such coastal villages.
Morfa Nefyn Catholic Church. CREDIT - Copyright Alan Fryer geograph.org.uk Plans to build six new homes on the site of a Gwynedd catholic church have been unanimously refused by planners. In 2019, Gwynedd Council approved the demolition of the Resurrection of Our Saviour church in Morfa Nefyn after it fell victim to a sweeping closure programme announced by the Bishop of Wrexham in 2016. The church was built in 1967-68 in light of the increasing number of summer visitors to the area, but was one of 22 Catholic churches closed across north Wales. However, meeting on Monday, members of Gwynedd Council’s planning committee unanimously refused an application by Commercial Development Projects Ltd to build six open market homes on the site after being informed that the plans would contravene existing policy.