Environmental & Infrastructure Challenges
Environmental & Infrastructure Challenges
Hampshire County Council wants to build up to 900 houses on the Land East of Basingstoke site inside our Parish. We are concerned that the local facilities, already under pressure, will struggle further: local traffic will also become unsustainable on roads already struggling with the volume of traffic through the Parish.
GP Surgeries
There is one GP surgery in Old Basing and Lychpit serving approximately 7,400 residents of the Parish. Adding another 2,160 people to the Parish from up to 900 new houses – which is a conservative estimate of additional population – will require additional GP facilities to serve new residents and there are no plans provided currently to suggest that this will be the case. This will no doubt cause concern for those in the Parish who are already worried about the strain put on the Old Basing surgery by those registered to the practice. The number of patients per GP is already above the average for England and more GPs would be needed to maintain the already stressed situation.
Dentists
There is currently one BUPA private dental practice in Old Basing and Lychpit. There are currently no NHS places at this practice, forcing residents to look outside of the Parish. Adding 2,160 people to the Parish will only increase the pressure on dentists unless further dental practices are proposed.
Schools
There is an Infant and a Junior school in the Parish and no secondary schools. Whilst Great Binfields School has possible expansion opportunities, adding 2,160 residents to the Parish will mean that both the Great Binfields and Old Basing schools will be put under significant pressure for places unless new schools are built. There are plans to build a new primary school on the Land East of Basingstoke site but when will this be built?
When Lychpit was developed in the late 1970s/early 1980s new residents were promised a primary school would be built in Lychpit. Great Binfields School was opened in 2001, in Chineham, not Lychpit.
Traffic
OBLEC has particular concerns about the additional traffic in Old Basing and Lychpit as a result of 2,160 more residents. Old Basing especially already experiences unacceptable levels of traffic on Hatch Lane, Crown Lane, Newnham Lane and also The Street and Church Lane; we can only see this becoming a greater problem with so many more people in the Parish.
The A33 – a road already at capacity – is also a concern, especially during peak commuting hours. The intention is to have one entrance into the development from the A33. This has implications for vehicles entering and exiting the site plus the passage of emergency vehicles. Traffic pressure will increase around Sherfield Park and the Redlands area.
Pollution, noise and congestion are all worries for local residents. There is much talk of promoting walking and cycling but realistically if you are at the far end of the Land East of Basingstoke site, almost into Sherfield, you are going to have to drive to access shops, schools, employment etc. The area is poorly served by public transport at present and it would be foolish to assume that this will change, despite the optimistic plans of the developers to introduce a bus route through the site
Global warming and destruction of the countryside
Digging into the soil to build releases carbon. The building industry is responsible for over 30% of emissions. Green fields and woodland absorb carbon. It could be argued that, before new builds, existing building should be re-purposed and brownfield sites be developed, not green fields. The Loddon Valley supports 43 species of birds, nine of which are red listed. On the Land East of Basingstoke site in the spring and summer skylarks sing. If you walk the footpaths in May you will hear cuckoos – these birds will not be there if there is development. The birds are protected by law but their habitat is not. Any additional house building anywhere in Basingstoke will increase pollution. The sewage treatment facility is at capacity and when it rains ‘storm overflows’ put raw sewage into a tributary of the River Loddon, so into the Loddon and the Thames. This was happening for many days in January 2023.
GP Surgeries
Dentists
Schools
Traffic
Global warming and destruction of the countryside
THANK YOU
