Glossary of
Planning Terms
A
Adoption - the final confirmation of a
plan as a statutory document by the local planning
authority.
Advertisement Control - the process
whereby a local planning authority decides whether an
advertisement which is being displayed, or about to be
displayed, is acceptable in terms of amenity and public safety
and is being displayed in accordance with the Town and Country
Planning (Control of Advertisements) Regulations.
Affordable Housing - low cost housing
for sale or rent, often from a housing association, to meet the
needs of local people who cannot afford accommodation through
the open or low cost market, or subsidised housing.
Agricultural Dwelling - a dwelling
which is subject to a condition or legal agreement that it
shall only be occupied by someone who is employed or was last
employed solely or mainly in agriculture, forestry or other
appropriate rural employment.
Amenity - the pleasant or normally
satisfactory aspects of a location which contribute to its
overall character and the enjoyment of residents or
visitors.
Ancillary Use - a subsidiary use
connected to the main use of a building or piece of land.
Appeal - the process whereby an
applicant can challenge an adverse decision on an application
by means of written representations, an informal hearing or
formal inquiry proceedings. Appeals can also be made against
the failure of the planning authority to issue a decision,
against conditions attached to a permission and against the
issue of an enforcement notice.
Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty -
area designated by the Countryside Agency or the Countryside
Council for Wales where the primary purpose is the conservation
and enhancement of natural beauty including flora, fauna,
geology and landscape.
Area of Special Control of
Advertisements - an area which is specifically
defined by the local planning authority because they consider
its scenic, historical, architectural or cultural features are
so significant that a stricter degree of advertisement control
is justified in order to conserve visual amenity within that
area. Such areas can only be designated with the approval of
the Secretary of State.
Article 4 Direction - an order made by
the Secretary of State, the National Assembly for Wales or the
local planning authority, requiring a planning application to
be made where normally permitted development rights would
apply.
Article 14 Direction - issued by the
Secretary of State or the National Assembly for Wales to
restrict the grant of planning permission by a local planning
authority, either indefinitely or for a specified period,
normally to give the Department time to decide whether to call
in the application.
Download
documents and diagrams of useful
Permitted
Development information

B
Back-land - land which is behind
existing development with no, or very limited, road
frontage.
BPEO (Best Possible Environmental
Option) - The option that provides the most
benefits or the least damage for the environment, as a whole,
at acceptable cost, in the long term as well as the short term.
(defined in the 12th report of the Royal Commission on
Environmental Pollution)
Betterment - the amount by which the
value of land is increased by development or by the grant of
planning permission, or because of the development of
neighbouring land.
Bio-diversity - a measure of the
number and range of species and their relative abundance in a
community.
Bio-diversity Action Plan - the means
by which the UK government commitment to the Convention on
Biological Diversity at Rio de Janeiro (1992) is to be met.
Brown-field Site - land which has been
previously developed, excluding mineral workings or other
temporary uses.
Building Preservation Order - a notice
under Section 3 of the Planning (Listed Buildings and
Conservation Areas) Act 1990 to protect buildings of special
architectural or historic interest from demolition or
alterations that would affect their interest.
C
Cadw - government agency supporting
the preservation, conservation, enhancement, interpretation and
appreciation of historic buildings and monuments in Wales.
Called-in Application - a planning
application referred to the Secretary of State or the National
Assembly for Wales for determination by virtue of the powers
contained in section 77 of the Town and Country Planning Act
1990.
Change of Use - more correctly
referred to as a 'material change of use'. A change in the use
of land or buildings that is of significance for planning
purposes, often requiring planning permission.
Circular - guidance, including policy,
issued by a government department usually, but not always, in
support of legislation.
Commitments - All land with current
planning permission or allocated in local plans.
Community Forests - A joint initiative
between the Countryside Agency and the Forestry Commission to
promote the creation, regeneration of well-wooded landscapes
around major towns and cities.
Comparison Goods - 'non perishable'
goods for retail sale which are often stocked in a wide range
of sizes, styles, colours and qualities, including furniture,
carpets, televisions etc.
Compulsory Purchase Orders (CPOs) -
notice issued by the government or a local authority to acquire
land or buildings for public interest purposes.
Conditions - stipulations attached to
a planning permission to limit or direct the manner in which a
development is carried out.
Contaminated Land - land which has
been polluted or harmed in some way rendering it unfit for safe
development and most practical uses.
Controlled Parking Zone (CPZ) - an
area in which all kerbside space is controlled by either
waiting or loading restrictions or by designated parking
spaces.
Conservation Area - an area given
statutory protection under the Planning Acts, in order to
preserve and enhance its character and townscape.
Conservation Area Consent - consent
required from the local planning authority before demolishing
an unlisted building in a conservation area.
Consultation - procedures for
assessing public opinion about a plan or major development
proposal, or in the case of a planning application, the means
of obtaining the views of affected neighbours or others with an
interest in the proposal.
Convenience Shop - supermarket,
grocers, newsagents, confectioners, tobacconists, off-licences
or other shops selling goods which tend to be purchased
regularly.
Conversions - the sub-division of
residential properties into bedsits, self-contained flats or
maisonettes.
Countryside Agency - organisation
responsible for advising government and taking action on issues
affecting the social, economic and environmental well-being of
the English countryside.
Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) -
government agency promoting the interests and well-being of
rural Wales.
D
Deemed Consent - this allows the
display of certain "specified classes" of advertisement without
first having to make an application to the local planning
authority. Under the Control of Advertisements Regulations
there are 14 Classes, all of which are subject to strict
conditions and limitations.
Density - in the case of residential
development, a measurement of either the number of habitable
rooms per hectare or the number of dwellings per hectare.
Departure - a proposed development
which is not in accordance with a local plan but which due to
exceptional circumstances the local planning authority proposes
to accept - after due publicity and possible referral to the
Secretary of State or the National Assembly for Wales.
Derelict Land - Land so damaged by
industrial or other development that it is incapable of
beneficial use without treatment.
Detailed/Full Application - The most
common type of planning application is one that seeks full or
detailed planning permission. It should contain all the
information needed for the LPA to reach its decision, but the
LPA may seek further information.
Determination - local planning
authority process to decide whether a proposed development
requires planning permission.
Development - the carrying out of
building, engineering, mining or other operations in, on, over
or under land, or the making of any material change in the use
of any buildings or land.
Development Area - a priority area for
environmental, social or economic regeneration or a combination
of these.
Development Brief - document providing
detailed information to guide developers on the type of
development, design and layout constraints and other
requirements for a particular, usually substantial, site.
Development Control - the process
whereby a local planning authority decides whether a planning
application meets the requirements of planning policy,
particularly as set out in development plans.
Development Plan - document (a
structure or local plan) that sets out in writing and/or in
maps and diagrams a local planning authority's policies and
proposals for the development and use of land and buildings in
the authority's area.
Discontinuance Notice - notice served
by a local planning authority requiring the discontinuance of
the display of any advertisement, or the use of a site for the
display of an advertisement, which has the benefit of deemed
consent under the Control of Advertisements Regulations. Action
to serve a discontinuance notice may only be taken if the
planning authority is satisfied it is necessary to do so to
remedy a substantial injury to the amenity of the locality or a
danger to members of the public.
E
Examination in Public (EIP) -
consideration of public views on a draft structure plan or
proposed changes to it, held before an independent
inspector.
Express Consent - this is needed to
display an advertisement, which does not benefit from deemed
consent under the Town and Country Planning (Control of
Advertisements Regulations).
Edge-of-centre - for shopping, a
location within easy walking distance of the primary shopping
area, often with parking and a main store; for offices or
leisure purposes, the term may refer to something more
extensive a little further out but at a still walkable distance
from a public transport hub.
Enforcement - procedures by a local
planning authority to ensure that the terms and conditions of a
planning decision are carried out, or that development carried
out without planning permission is brought under control.
Enforcement Notice - notice requiring
the discontinuance of an unauthorised use and/or the removal of
buildings, including restoration of land, where development has
been begun without permission or in breach of a condition.
English Heritage (Historic Buildings and Monuments
Commission for England) - a national body funded
by the government to promote and give advice on building
conservation matters.
English Nature - a national body
funded by the government to promote and give advice on the
conservation of England's wildlife and natural features.
Environmental Appraisal - the process
of weighing all the policies in a development plan for their
global, national and local implications.
Environmental Impact Assessment
(EIA) - under the Town and Country Planning
(Assessment of Environmental Effects) Regulations 1988,
proposers of certain scheduled developments are required to
submit a planning application with an accompanying
environmental statement, evaluating the likely environmental
impacts of the development, together with an assessment of how
the severity of the impacts could be reduced.
Established use - a use which does not
conform to a plan but against which enforcement proceedings
cannot be taken, often because of the length of time a use has
been in operation.
Established Use Certificate - these
were issued by a planning authority before July 1992 where it
could be shown that a use of land or buildings had existed
since before 1964. It gave immunity from enforcement action.
Since July 1992 these have been replaced by Lawful Development
Certificates.
European Spatial Development Perspective
(ESDP) - non-binding regional structure plan for
the European Union.
G
General Permitted Development Order
(GPDO) - the Town and Country Planning (General
Permitted Development) Order 1995 grants rights (known as
permitted development rights) to carry out certain limited
forms of development without the need to make an application
for planning permission.
Green Belt - specially designated area
of countryside protected from most forms of development in
order to stop urban sprawl and the coalescence of settlements,
preserve the character of existing settlements and encourage
development to locate within existing built-up areas.
Green-field Site - an area not
previously used for built development.
H
Habitable Room - all living rooms and
bedrooms, but not kitchens, bathrooms, WCs or circulation
space, are normally regarded as habitable for the purposes of
density calculations.
I
Infrastructure - permanent resources
serving society's needs, including roads, sewers, schools,
hospitals, railways, communication networks etc.
Integrated Transport Strategy - the
integration of land-use and transportation planning to allow
transport provision and the demand for travel to be planned and
managed together, balancing the use of different modes of
transport to encourage easy transfer between them and reduced
reliance on the private car.
L
Land Compensation - concerns the
assessment of compensation where land, or some other interest
in land, is being acquired, either compulsorily, or by
agreement, by an authority possessing compulsory purchase
powers.
Lawful Development Certificate - a
procedure by which existing or proposed uses and other forms of
development can be certified as lawful for planning purposes.
An application has to be made to the local planning authority
and there is a right of appeal against their decision.
Listed Building - building or other
structure of special architectural or historic interest
included on a statutory list and assigned a grade (I, II* or
II).
Listed Building Consent - a permission
required for the alteration or demolition of a listed
building.
Local Nature Reserve (LNR) - area
designated under the National Parks and Access to the
Countryside Act 1949 as being of particular importance to
nature conservation and where public understanding of nature
conservation issues is encouraged.
Local Plan - statutory development
plan prepared by a local planning authority setting out
detailed policies for environmental protection and
development.
Local Planning Authority - the local
authority or council that is empowered by law to exercise
planning functions. This is normally the local borough or
district council, but in National Parks and some other areas
there is a different arrangement.
M
Material Consideration - a matter
which should be taken into account in deciding on a planning
application or on an appeal against a planning decision.
Metropolitan - constituting a large
urban area, usually including a city, its suburbs and outlying
areas.
Mineral Planning Guidance Notes
(MPGs) - a series of documents issued by the
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM) (previously
Department of Transport, Local Government and the Regions
(DTLR)) setting out government policy and advice on planning
issues relating to mineral resources.
Minerals Planning Policy Wales -
Document setting out the policy of the Welsh Assembly
Government in relation to short and long term future use and
safeguarding of mineral deposits.
N
National Assembly for Wales -
Government body in Wales that debates and approves legislation
and holds the Welsh Assembly Government to account.
National Nature Reserve - area
designated by English Nature to protect and conserve nationally
important areas of wildlife habitat and geological formations
and to promote scientific research; in Wales it is an SSSI that
the Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) has designated of
national or international importance for nature conservation.
(Note: on the CCW website I noticed that they also refer to
National Nature Reserves, as well as SSSIs)
National Park - tract of predominantly
open and attractive countryside designated under the National
Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 with its own
administration and management role and function as a local
planning authority.
Nature Conservation - the
preservation, management and enhancement of natural plant and
animal communities, and occasionally modified vegetation, as
representative samples of their kind.
New Town - free-standing new
settlement designated and planned under the New Towns Act 1946
and subsequent legislation.
Non-conforming Use - a use which does
not conform to the general provisions of the development plan
for the area in which it is located.
Non-Fossil Fuel Obligation (NFFO) - a
provision of the Electricity Act 1989 requiring regional
electricity companies to take a proportion of their electricity
from energy sources other than fossil fuels.
O
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister
(ODPM) - (previously Department of Transport,
Local Government and the Regions (DTLR)) government department
responsible for town and country planning policy and
administration.
Outline application - a general
application for planning permission to establish that a
development is acceptable in principle, subject to subsequent
approval of detailed matters.
Out-of-Centre - a location that is
separated from a town centre but is not necessarily outside the
built-up area.
Out-of-town - an out-of-centre
development on a green-field site or on land not clearly within
the current urban boundary.
P
Park and Ride - scheme enabling
motorists to leave their vehicles at edge-of-town car parks and
travel into town centres by public transport.
Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest
(GSHI) - parks and gardens containing historic
features dating from 1939 or earlier and registered by English
Heritage in three grades as with historic buildings.
Permitted Development Rights - rights
to carry out certain limited forms of development without the
need to make an application for planning permission, as granted
under the terms of the Town and Country Planning (General
Permitted Development) Order 1995.
Planning Obligations and Agreements -
legal agreements between a planning authority and a developer,
or offered unilaterally by a developer, ensuring that certain
extra works related to a development are undertaken, usually
under Section 106 of the Town and Country Planning Act
1990.
Planning Gain - the principle of a
developer agreeing to provide additional benefits or
safeguards, often for the benefit of the community, usually in
the form of related development supplied at the developer's
expense.
Planning Policy Guidance Notes
(PPGs) - a series of documents issued by the
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (ODPM) (previously
Department of Transport, Local Government and the Regions
(DTLR)) setting out government policy and advice on planning
issues such as housing, transport, conservation etc
Planning Policy Wales - document
setting out the land use planning policies of the Welsh
Assembly Government.
Proposals Map - an obligatory
component of a local plan showing the location of proposals in
the plan on an Ordnance Survey base map.
Protected Species - plant and animal
species, including all wild birds, protected under the
Conservation (Natural Habitats and Conservation) Regulations
1994, the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and subsequent
amendments, or other species protected under legislation
specific to them.
Public Open Space (POS) - land
provided in urban or rural areas for public recreation, though
not necessarily publicly owned.
Public Realm - outdoor areas
accessible to the public.
Public Right of Way - a way where the
public has a right to walk, and in some cases ride horses,
bicycles, motorcycles or drive motor vehicles, which will be
designated either as a footpath, a bridleway, a road used as a
public path (RUPP) or a byway.
Purchase Notice - this requires a
local planning authority to purchase an interest in land where
a planning decision conflicts with the private interests of
landowners.
R
Ramsar Site - area identified under
the internationally agreed Convention on Wetlands of
International Importance, especially as waterfowl sites and as
Sites of Special Scientific Interest focusing on the ecological
importance of wetlands generally.
Recycling - the recovery of reusable
materials from waste.
Regional Planning Guidance Notes
(RPGs) -policy guidance and advice issued for
each region in England by the Secretary of State.
Regional Shopping Centre - out-of-town
concentration of shops, usually containing over 50,000 square
metres gross retail area, typically offering a wide range of
comparison goods.
Regionally Important Geological/Geomorphological
Sites (RIGS) - non-statutory sites of regional
importance recognised by English Nature and local
authorities.
Regulation 7 Direction - a Direction
made by the Secretary of State to remove from a particular site
or defined area the benefit of deemed consent normally provided
by the Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements)
Regulations.
Renewable Energy - energy generated
from resources that are unlimited, rapidly replenished or
naturally renewable such as wind, water, sun, wave and refuse,
and not from the combustion of fossil fuels.
Ribbon development - a narrow band of
development extending along one or both sides of a road.
Rural Development Area - priority area
for economic and social development.
Rural Diversification - activities
undertaken on surplus land to support farming incomes,
including, for example, forestry, leisure and tourism.
S
Scheduled Ancient Monument - a
structure placed on a schedule compiled by the Department of
National Heritage in England and Cadw in Wales for protection
under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act.
Section 106 Agreement (see Planning
Gain) - a binding agreement between a council and
a developer associated with a grant of planning permission and
regarding matters linked to the proposed development.
Site of Special Scientific Interest
(SSSI) - area identified by English Nature or
Countryside Council for Wales for protection by reason of the
rarity of its nature conservation or wildlife features.
Special Needs Housing - housing to
meet need arising from homelessness or overcrowding, and
purpose-built or supported housing for the elderly or disabled
people or those requiring care.
Statutory - required by law (statute),
usually through an Act of Parliament.
Statutory Undertakers/Statutory
Utilities - providers of essential services such
as gas, electricity, water or telecommunications.
Stop Notice - a notice served in
respect of land subject to enforcement proceedings prohibiting
the carrying out or continuing of specified operations which
are alleged to constitute a breach of planning control and
designed to stop work going on pending the outcome of an
appeal.
Structure Plan - statutory plan
setting out key strategic policies which provide the framework
for more detailed policies in local plans.
Sui Generis - uses of land or
buildings which do not fall into any of the use classes
identified by the Use Classes Order, for example theatres,
launderettes, car showrooms and filling stations.
Supplementary Planning Guidance -
additional advice issued by a local planning authority
expanding upon its statutory policies.
Sustainable Development -
environmentally responsible development, commonly defined as
"development which meets the needs of the present generation
without compromising the ability of future generations to meet
their own needs".
T
TANs - technical advice notes for
Wales which provide topic-based supplements to the policy
document Planning Policy Wales.
Town Centre - describes city, town and
traditional suburban centres which provide a broad range of
facilities and services and which fulfil a function as a focus
for a community and for public transport.
Town Centre Management - partnership
of local organisations, businesses and individuals to promote
the common good of a town by developing, managing, promoting
and improving facilities, the useful resources, the economy and
the environment of a town centre.
Townscape - the appearance and
character of buildings and all other features of an urban area
taken together as a whole.
Traffic Calming - management measures
designed to lower traffic speeds or redirect traffic to
alternative routes to avoid congestion, reduce accidents and
injuries and prevent excess levels of pollution.
Transport Policy and Programme (TPP) -
statutory document setting out a transport authority's bid for
the programming and funding of transport measures, produced
annually for submission to central government.
Travel to Work Area (TTWA) - a broadly
self-contained labour market area usually focused on an urban
employment centre.
Tree Preservation Order (TPO) -
direction made by a local planning authority that makes it an
offence to cut, top, lop, uproot or wilfully damage or destroy
a tree without that authority's permission.
U
Unitary Development Plan - local plan
produced by certain unitary district authorities and London
boroughs which have responsibility for the full range of local
authority services.
Urban Fringe - predominantly open land
on the edge of an existing urban area.
Urban Regeneration - the re-use or
redevelopment of decaying or run-down parts of older urban
areas to bring them new life and economic vitality.
Use Classes Order - the Town and
Country Planning (Use Classes) Order 1987 puts uses of land and
buildings into various categories, planning permission not
being required for changes of use within the same use class. In
practice changes between use classes are likely to require
planning permission.
V
Village envelope - boundaries defined
on a map beyond which the local planning authority proposes
that a village should not be allowed to extend.
W
Welsh Assembly Government - a body
that develops and implements policy in Wales via the civil
service and a range of sponsored bodies.
Wildlife Corridor - a continuous area
facilitating the movement of wildlife through rural or urban
environments.
Wind Farm - large open site where wind
speeds are consistently high on which a number of wind turbines
generate electricity for private or commercial use.
Written Statement - documentary
statement of policy, forming part of a development plan
submitted by a local planning authority and requiring formal
approval.
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