arreton construction buildings in the field
© Dave Fairlamb

Proposed tourist attraction near Isle of Wight village faces planning obstacles

A planning appeal has been launched over the construction of a new ‘cider and chocolate’ tourist attraction near an Isle of Wight village.

Carlton Developments Ltd has appealed (24/00044/REF) a rejected bid to keep a barn, four storage containers and three caravans at the site of the former Arreton Garden and Aquatic Centre as part of the construction of a new Arreton Cider and Chocolate centre.

The new attraction would be inspired by Godshill’s Cider Barn and the now closed Chocolate Island shop.

Construction buildings rejected
The Isle of Wight council approved the attraction in March 2017, but refused the developer’s application in March this year to keep the construction buildings at the site looking onto the A3056 for a three year period.

A Planning Statement written by the Andrew White Planning Consultancy on behalf of Carlton Developments said the barn was being used to store construction machinery.

The buildings
The four containers have housed tools and construction materials, as well as staff facilities including a meeting room, toilets and a changing room.

Caravans have provided temporary living accommodation for site workers.

The opposition
County Hall’s report explaining its decision in April said there was ‘no robust justification’ for the scale of storage space proposed.

Neither was on-site living accommodation deemed appropriate, with hotels and guest houses in the nearby Bay Area, including budget options.

Other reasons for the refusal included the proposal’s ‘detrimental visual impact’, adverse effect on trees and hedgerows, ‘insufficient information’ in relation to protected species and biodiversity and nitrate pollution affecting the Solent Special Protection Area.

Arreton Parish Council also opposed the application in a public comment published in April.

“Contradictory information”
The authority said,

“The history of different applications on this site has caused confusion and there is contradictory information.

“Concerns were raised about the lack of information about waste water provision.

“An application for temporary approval for three years, given the original application was 6th March 2017, is too long.”


This article is from the BBC’s LDRS (Local Democracy Reporter Service) scheme, which News OnTheWight is taking part in. Some alterations and additions may have been made by OnTheWight. Ed