![]() ![]() ^ "NOTTINGHAMSHIRE GREEN BELT LOCAL PLAN" (PDF).^ "Nottingham City Council, Green Belt Review, Background Paper" (PDF).^ "Rushcliffe Green Belt Review Part 2 (b) (Detailed Review of the NottinghamDerby Green Belt within Rushcliffe – Rural Towns and Villages) September 2017" (PDF).^ "Newark & Sherwood Green Belt Study September 2011" (PDF).^ "Gedling Borough Council Green Belt Assessment - July 2015" (PDF).^ "Broxtowe Borough Council - Gedling Borough Council - Nottingham City Council: Aligned Core Strategies - Green Belt Review Background Paper, June 2013" (PDF).^ "Ashfield District Council Strategic Green Belt Review, 2016" (PDF).^ a b "Technical Assessment of the Derby Principal Urban Area Green Belt Purposes" (PDF).^ "CD01 Amber Valley Borough Local Plan - Submission Local Plan 2018".^ "Department for Communities and Local Government: Local Planning Authority Green Belt: England 2016/17" (PDF).^ a b c d "Nottingham-Derby Green Belt Review" (PDF). ![]() Ī matching 'Nottinghamshire Sketch Plan Green Belt' was first planned in Nottinghamshire from 1956, again taking several years to be fully realised, before being formally approved by government in July 1980, and locally in June 1989. It wasĪdopted in April 1983 by central government, with a more specific local plan being adopted from September 1994. It took several years to define the boundaries to some accuracy after local and government consultation. The Green Belt was first considered in Derbyshire in 1955 for the immediate region between the cities (South East Derbyshire Green Belt). The Bolsover, Mansfield and North West Leicestershire districts border the belt, but do not contain any part of it. It is contained within these districts, and encloses the following local settlements:īorrowash, Breaston, Ilkeston, Long Eaton, Sandiacre, West Hallamīeeston, Chilwell, Eastwood, Kimberley, StaplefordĪrnold, Calverton, Carlton, Gedling, RavensheadĬotgrave, Keyworth, Radcliffe-on-Trent, Ruddington, West BridgfordĪlong with the above, small portions of green belt exist within both cities on their rural fringes. The belt completely overlaps the Nottingham built-up area as well as beyond. Land area taken up by the belt is 60,700 hectares (607 km 2 234 sq mi) as of 2017. It however 'washes' over smaller settlements and hamlets, these smaller locales thus given very little scope for expansion except in exceptional cases, with any infrastructure plans being put to greater public scrutiny and stricter controls more likely to be levied on any permitted work. The belt avoids major areas of population, thereby granting larger villages and towns more leeway with development within the confines of their boundaries. While this is an overall definition provided by central government, local councils then refine the extents and can review these as required. The fundamental functions for the belt are to prevent urban sprawl and the merging of the outlying areas surrounding the two cities by restricting development, in order to preserve the countryside protect the environment from inappropriate urban growth and maintain the individuality of settlements. Management is mainly performed by the local planning authority (a district council in many cases) on guidance from central government. It includes designated parts of several districts in the surrounding counties of Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire. The Nottingham and Derby Green Belt is a green belt environmental and planning policy for the cities of Derby and Nottingham in the East Midlands region of England. ![]()
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