Are You A Dog Walker, Hiker, Runner, Horse Rider, Cyclist Or Just Someone Who Enjoys Warminster’s Stunning Natural Landscape And Associated Wildlife?

Thursday 19th February 2026

From the Facebook page of EBBRAG:

Are you a dog walker, hiker, runner, horse rider, cyclist or just someone who enjoys Warminster’s stunning natural landscape and associated wildlife?

This photo was taken by the late Steve Climpson, who was passionate about protecting this landscape. It is the view from the public footpath adjacent the potential Home Farm development site. The view looks to Battlesbury Hill. The draft Neighbourhood Plan does not preserve the view from Battlesbury to Boreham and Bishopstrow, nor does it protect the Home Farm fields from development.

Developers are supposed to improve biodiversity and commit to providing community open spaces as part of their obligation to sustainable development, set out by Government legislation. In reality, they rarely do this. In effect, in their greed for money, natural landscapes are destroyed forever and many developers don’t even deliver the mitigations they agree to when planning permission is granted.

You can read more in our article on protecting the landscape: Red Kites And Rubble Stone – EBBRAG: https://www.ebbrag.com/boreham-history-the-unique-landscape-setting/

And for background on what Bellway, the potential developer of the Home Farm site, might be like: Bellway Homes for Warminster or would that be Hellway if it goes ahead? – EBBRAG: https://www.ebbrag.com/bellway-homes-for-warminster-or-would-that-be-hellway-if-it-goes-ahead/

The other large scale developers sniffing around sites in Warminster are likely to be similar. We need to take out site selection from the draft Warminster Neighbourhood plan.

Warminster needs YOU to find a voice.

As a resident of Warminster, you will already be aware of the huge West Urban Extension/Jubilee Gardens where 1000 new homes are currently being built, with another 500 due by 2042. Did you also know that a further approximately 700+ houses are at the planning stage?

  • Cley Hill View – 227 homes already approved and being advertised.
  • Ashley Coombe – 77 homes; planning permission applied for.
  • Westbury Road – 205 homes; rejected once in 2025, outline planning applied for again.
  • Home Farm – 135 homes; planning application expected imminently (the Neighbourhood Plan suggests 90 but the developer – Bellway Homes – would like 135).
  • Grovelands – 68 homes; building already started.


Are these homes ALL really needed?

Are they being planned in a responsible and sustainable way? They are all eating up ‘green’ areas, rather than using brown field sites.

What impact will these developments have on the lives of people already living in our town?

Despite what the Town Council would have us believe, a Neighbourhood Plan does not offer Warminster protection against these speculative development bids.

The whole premise of naming a potential site in the Neighbourhood Plan is to offer legal protection for the rest of Warminster for up to five years. Consider this example – Melksham Parish Council had an adopted Neighbourhood Plan, fully supported by local residents which excluded a site – Snarlton Farm – from designated building. On appeal, the developer has now gone to The Secretary of State for Housing, taking the decision right out of local hands.

And consider this – by the time the current draft Neighbourhood Plan is finalised, it is likely that all of the developments listed above will already have gone through the planning process and have been approved, not just the one they have named.

What can you do?

  • Register on the EBBRAG website. Our contact form is here: https://www.ebbrag.com/contact/
  • Make it known to our Town Council that you do not support any more large scale developments, in the absence of improved infrastructure and local services. You can email the council here: admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk

How?

Warminster Town Council Gives 10 Objections To 77 Homes On Land Next To Ashley Coombe

Wednesday 18th February 2026

Press release from Warminster Town Council:

Town councillors have unanimously objected to a planning application for homes on land off Ashley Coombe in line with strong arguments from local residents at the Planning Advisory Committee on Monday 16th February.

The planning team heard from passionate residents who opposed outline planning application for the erection of up to 77 homes, public open space, landscaping and sustainable urban drainage system, with vehicular access off Ashley Coombe.

Cllr Phil Keeble explained: “The committee unanimously objected to the Ashley Combe application on numerous points planning reasons. The site was rejected by the Neighbourhood Plan process. It is exactly the sort of development we are seeking to avoid.

“We can’t stop developers putting forward sites hoping they will get planning permission, but if we allocate a site for 90 houses in the Neighbourhood Plan, we can get 5 years protection from such applications where the balance is tilted back in favour of the community. The Planning Advisory Committee takes its role seriously.

“I hope the developer listens to the committee and the public and withdraws its planning application.”

𝐌𝐞𝐦𝐛𝐞𝐫𝐬 𝐫𝐞𝐬𝐨𝐥𝐯𝐞𝐝 𝐭𝐨 𝐨𝐛𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭 𝐭𝐨 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐚𝐩𝐩𝐥𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐨𝐧 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐟𝐨𝐥𝐥𝐨𝐰𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐠𝐫𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐝𝐬:

1. 𝐀𝐜𝐜𝐞𝐬𝐬, 𝐫𝐨𝐚𝐝 𝐬𝐚𝐟𝐞𝐭𝐲 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐢𝐧𝐜𝐫𝐞𝐚𝐬𝐞𝐝 𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐟𝐟𝐢𝐜 – The proposal concentrates all housing within a single zone served by a single access point. This design will funnel traffic into one location, significantly increasing vehicle movements and congestion in an already constrained area.

The access roads are narrow, winding, and include blind bends. The proposed junction with Deverill Road is located on the crest of a hill, creating poor visibility and a heightened risk of collisions.

The development will inevitably increase traffic onto the A36, a road that has experienced multiple serious collisions near Warminster in recent years.

The site is located at a significant distance from town amenities. There is no clear provision for safe cycle routes, and public transport availability is questionable, resulting in extra reliance on private vehicles.

2. 𝐏𝐫𝐨𝐱𝐢𝐦𝐢𝐭𝐲 𝐭𝐨 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐬𝐞𝐰𝐚𝐠𝐞 𝐰𝐨𝐫𝐤𝐬 – the proposal puts housing within the buffer zone around the sewage work. The odour is likely to be a nuisance and the presence of swarms of flies will have a public health impact.

The log of sniff tests are woefully inadequate and contain no tests during the 5 hottest months of the year. The environment agency has received 182 complaints in the past 3 years.

Odour and safety impacts linked to the Malaby Gas Biodigester have not been assessed.

3. 𝐍𝐮𝐭𝐫𝐢𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐍𝐞𝐮𝐭𝐫𝐚𝐥𝐢𝐭𝐲 – The site is close to the River Wylye, an SSSI and SAC. Run-off and pollution risks threaten this European-protected chalk stream. Run-off from roads and roofs of any new development on this site will enter the stream currently in Flood Zone 2.

Wessex Water is aware that Warminster already has ongoing issues. The site also overlies an important aquifer, posing contamination risks from clearance work, building and drainage from future dwellings. Buying offsite credits does not address the harm that would be done locally.

4. 𝐋𝐨𝐬𝐬 𝐨𝐟 𝐛𝐢𝐨𝐝𝐢𝐯𝐞𝐫𝐬𝐢𝐭𝐲 – The site supports protected species such as newts, kites, hedgehogs, deer, swifts, toads, woodpeckers and pollinators. A badger sett also exists on the proposed site. At least four species of bat have been recorded in the designated area. There are no reliable plans for biodiversity net gains. The development would negatively impact on the dark skies area

5. 𝐀𝐫𝐜𝐡𝐚𝐞𝐨𝐥𝐨𝐠𝐲 – Wiltshire Council Archaeology Service have acknowledged that archaeological findings have been identified on the site. Impacts have not been adequately assessed. Test trenches should be dug before any layout is considered and any planning application is put forward and make any outline planning application fraught with risk of harm.

6. 𝐃𝐞𝐬𝐢𝐠𝐧 – Two and three-storey dwellings will overlook existing bungalows. The design is essentially suburban

7. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐬𝐢𝐭𝐞 𝐢𝐬 𝐨𝐮𝐭𝐬𝐢𝐝𝐞 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐬𝐞𝐭𝐭𝐥𝐞𝐦𝐞𝐧𝐭 𝐩𝐨𝐥𝐢𝐜𝐲 𝐛𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐝𝐚𝐫𝐲; it has been excluded from the Draft Warminster Neighbourhood Plan that is currently undergoing Regulation 14 consultation.

8. 𝐋𝐚𝐜𝐤 𝐨𝐟 𝐩𝐮𝐛𝐥𝐢𝐜 𝐚𝐫𝐭 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐩𝐮𝐛𝐥𝐢𝐜 𝐨𝐩𝐞𝐧 𝐬𝐩𝐚𝐜𝐞 – There is no provision for public art and the proposed public open space is of low quality and poor layout.

9. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐭𝐨𝐩𝐨𝐠𝐫𝐚𝐩𝐡𝐲 𝐨𝐟 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐬𝐢𝐭𝐞 is such that there is a risk of flooding, particularly from surface water.

10. 𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐚𝐩𝐩𝐥𝐢𝐜𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐨𝐧 𝐢𝐬 𝐢𝐧 𝐨𝐮𝐭𝐥𝐢𝐧𝐞 𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐦, with all matters except access reserved, we are concerned that the Planning Authority is being asked to accept the principle of development without sufficient certainty over how these impacts would be addressed in practice. While outline permission may be suitable for simple and uncontroversial sites, the opposite should apply in what is a complex site which has already been rejected for inclusion in the merging Neighbourhood Plan.

The objection will now be submitted to the planning authority at Wiltshire Council.

The comments from Warminster Town Council are only advisory, any decision on whether to grant planning permission and any associated conditions will be made by Wiltshire Council.

For more information contact Warminster Town Council, Tel: 01985 214847 or email: admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk

Sugar Hut Is Sweet And Special

Friday 13th February 2026

A message from The Sugar Hut, 11a Silver Street, Warminster, BA12 8PS:

Just over a year ago, Sugar Hut opened its doors in the heart of Warminster. My mum had a vision to bring something sweet and special to our little town — because there was nothing quite like it here. She wanted to create a place full of colour, happiness and treats that would make people smile.

Sadly, my mum passed away not long after opening, and at just 16 years old I made the decision to take over and continue what she started. It hasn’t always been easy, but the support from our amazing community has meant everything to me.

Since taking over, the shop has grown into such a success, and I’m so proud of how far we’ve come. Every jar we fill and every customer who walks through the door reminds me why she started this journey in the first place.

I’m working every day to fulfil my mum’s dream — to make it bigger, better, and even sweeter than she imagined. Thank you to everyone who has supported us this past year. You’re not just supporting a small business, you’re helping keep my mum’s dream alive.

Here’s to many more sweet years ahead.

www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61565483296831

sugarhut1986@gmail.com

An Ongoing Review Of Flood Behaviour Within The River Wylye Catchment Area Around Boreham And Bishopstrow

Friday 6th February 2026

A letter from the Boreham & Bishopstrow Flood Group to Wessex Water Planning/Developer Services Team:

Dear Wessex Water Planning / Developer Services Team,

I am writing on behalf of the Boreham & Bishopstrow Flood Group in relation to ongoing review of flood behaviour within the River Wylye catchment around Boreham and Bishopstrow.

We are currently engaging with the Environment Agency regarding cumulative flood behaviour.

Following a number of recent flood events, the group is seeking to better understand potential cumulative drivers affecting river loading and downstream flood risk. As part of this work, we are reviewing whether wastewater infrastructure and discharge patterns may contribute to baseline flows within the catchment.

We would therefore be grateful if you could provide general clarification on the following points:

  • Whether wastewater networks or treatment works serving the Boreham / River Wylye catchment operate under known hydraulic constraints;
  • Whether surcharge conditions or storm overflow activation occur during peak rainfall or flow events;
  • Whether additional development within this catchment would typically require reinforcement or capacity assessment of existing wastewater infrastructure.

This enquiry is intended to support a catchment-level understanding of system-wide pressures rather than assessment of any individual site.

We appreciate that detailed responses may depend on specific proposals, but any general guidance or direction to relevant published information would be extremely helpful.

Many thanks for your time and assistance.

Kind regards,

Jeremy Kelton
On behalf of the Boreham & Bishopstrow Flood Group.

“Political Charade” – Warminster Town Council Extraordinary Meeting

Friday 23rd January 2026

From the EBBRAG website – www.ebbrag.com – EBBRAG’s report of the Full Council Meeting of Warminster Town Council, last Monday evening, which saw the launch of the Warminster Neighbourhood Plan 2 for public consultation:

Warminster Town Council Extraordinary Meeting, Monday 19th January 2026

“Unfortunately last night’s Town Council meeting was no more than the political charade we could have expected it to be. Blind and ill-informed compliance by most of the councillors to an agenda set by an influential few, is how it came across to me.” – an angry comment from a member of the public after the meeting.

Warminster Town Council held an Extraordinary meeting on 19th January 2026, to vote on progressing the Neighbourhood Plan to Regulation 14. In plain English this means a discussion of whether the current process moves to its next phase of a formal public consultation on the draft plan document.

You may have missed the widespread publicity of this meeting, as there was none! They put the agenda on their Council agendas/minutes page one week ahead but that was all, they didn’t publicise that the meeting was taking place. So that’s why only 17 adult members of the public attended. Could it be the Town Council didn’t really want any public there?

Nick Parker, spoke as someone who has lived in Warminster for 28 years. He highlighted the exceptional level of housing development Warminster is undergoing and how the further 90 houses at Home Farm are not justified and indeed against Wiltshire Council Planning documents for Warminster. Warminster is already meeting its housing requirement and needs a coherent strategy for infrastructure to catch up. Will the inclusion of unsustainable housing development on the fields of Home Farm and elsewhere be the single issue which causes residents to reject the Plan altogether?

Tania Peacock also spoke about factual errors the Council had made regarding land in the Cannimore/Folly Lane area owned by her family, which has been classified as Local Green Space within the plan. She highlighted how the plan does not even get the name of this area correct, due democratic process has not been followed, there are spurious claims that there is public support for this land to be open space from a survey which was for a totally different purpose, the space is in fact a private fenced field and not as claimed an open space and the Council claims to have agreement from the landowner which is disputed and which the Council cannot evidence ever happened.

Alastair Wright flagged how there is a legal requirement for Wiltshire Council to produce more detailed flood risk assessments before they allocate any houses in Warminster outside of the West Urban Extension but this has not been done. There are sewage overflows currently on Woodcock Road and Boreham Road which suggest the sewage system in that area is at capacity, but this is not recognised within Warminster’s flood risk assessments. Mr Wright also highlighted problems with the classification of the open spaces and rural buffer corridors within the plan. Finally, he highlighted that the Home Farm site is outside the settlement boundary and as the maps cut off at this point, the important historic setting in that area is also excluded.

Jeremy Kelton, who has lived beside the river Wylye for 14 years, also highlighted issues around flooding and how building on Home Farm would remove its ability to act like a flood plain in winter and force the groundwater elsewhere. He reminded the council that we have had two ‘once in a generation’ floods in a decade in 2014 and 2024.

Nick Tilt who lives near to the proposed entrance to the Home Farm site and whose family have lived in Warminster for over 60 years, outlined how the inclusion of Home Farm would be contrary to a number of national planning policies. In particular 109 which relates to road safety given the development’s need for a westbound right turn ghost lane on a road which is already too narrow at that point. The resultant damage to several mature trees, a length of unique historic wall and removing the rural character with suburban lighting. The harm to Bishopstrow Conservation Area also being contrary to 135c in the NPPF.

But the Councillors seemed not to be listening. They didn’t appear to want to listen. They were determined to proceed with Regulation 14 and put the draft out for consultation, yet they know it has flaws and contains things unnecessary and not wanted. They must know the flaws put acceptance of the Plan in jeopardy and if the Plan is rejected it will cost £1,000s in taxpayers’ money.

One EBBRAG supporter commented afterwards, â€œI was of a view our Councillors didn’t take on board the speeches from the public, particularly the selection of Home Farm for housing allocation, and it seemed not one of the Councillors had anything to say about the matter.”

They could have called for a postponement, held a discussion, and then said they would pull things out or make amendments before putting the Plan out for consultation. They didn’t.

Even though the speakers raised many issues and in some cases calling out major flaws in the process, the Council made no comment or held no proper debate among themselves about what was said. Councillor Andrew Davis (who is not only a Warminster East Ward Councillor but also a Wiltshire Councillor) put several questions to the Mayor, Cllr Andrew Cooper who was chairing the meeting but I don’t think anyone present fully understood what Councillor Davis was trying to say. It was notable that when speeches from the public were being made, at least one Councillor seemed more occupied messing about with his phone than listening to voters.

When the Chair asked Councillors to speak, there was a deadly silence to begin with. Only a couple of Councillors commented and their comments were really questions. The speeches from the public made important points about the river Wylye and raised serious concerns with how flood risk is being dealt with in Warminster. Flooding is not being recorded at a Wiltshire level. Even though some Councillors have professed an interest in this area, they had absolutely nothing to say at this meeting.

The Council also failed to mention that one of the Neighbourhood Plan Steering Group has resigned, Could it be that this person cannot support a draft plan that allocates unsustainable housing development? Why hasn’t the public been told?

Our Councillors always say they are available to chat, but what do they actually do… the meeting was just an exercise for the Council to tick boxes and go sailing ahead despite the consequences.

We urge Warminster residents to vote against this flawed Neighbourhood Plan to show “the influential few” that Warminster has had enough of large scale over-development of our town.

Draft minutes of the meeting including text of the speeches submitted is on the Warminster Town Council Website. We include text of the speeches below. Al Wright spoke from his extensive knowledge of the issues without verbatim notes.

Nick Parker spoke as a resident of Warminster for 28 years.

While there is much that is positive in the draft Neighbourhood Plan, the site selection is a serious mistake. If left unchanged, it risks the Plan being rejected by residents, wasting public money and damaging the Council’s reputation.

Warminster is already experiencing an exceptional level of housing development—including Grovelands, Cley Hill View, Ashley Coombe, Westbury Road and Jubilee Gardens. In that context, the proposed 90 houses at Home Farm and two at the Yew Tree are neither required nor justified. Their inclusion risks becoming the single issue that causes residents to reject the Plan altogether.

There are clear signs that supply has outpaced demand. Homes at Jubilee Gardens are not selling, with councils elsewhere now purchasing them for their own needs. This shows that Warminster is already meeting its housing requirement.

The scale of development is staggering, yet it is proceeding without a coherent strategy for infrastructure—roads, healthcare, schools and drainage. The Neighbourhood Plan is intended to prevent speculative development, yet it will not be adopted until the end of this year, leaving Warminster exposed in the meantime.

Wiltshire Council’s Planning for Warminster document of September 2023, on which this Plan should be based, clearly explains why housing numbers in Warminster were restricted. That reasoning remains valid.

The draft inclusion of Home Farm and the Yew Tree fails to address the reasons these sites were rejected by a Planning Inspector in 2020. Nothing material has changed since then, and housing need is being met elsewhere.

This decision rests with you. Local feeling about Home Farm has been seriously underestimated, and approving this Plan unchanged risks losing both a valued part of Warminster and public confidence in the Neighbourhood Plan itself.

We have already seen irreversible damage to the west of Warminster at Jubilee Gardens and Cley Hill View. Please do not repeat that mistake in the east, for development that is simply not needed.

Speech by Tania Peacock

Good evening. I am Tania Peacock. I am here because Warminster Town Council is at a crossroads between the law and a documented falsehood. You are now formally ‘on notice’ that the evidence for LGS 1.1 Folly Lane is built on factual errors that cannot be carried into the 2026 Plan.

The Clerk previously stated that if errors were shown, the designation could be removed. I am presenting five fatal evidence failures:

  1. The Petition: The Council relies on 729 names as ‘support.’ However, this petition was originally gathered to object to a separate housing development. To repurpose those signatures to tell a Government Inspector they represent real support for a Local Green Space designation is legally misleading.
  2. The Law: This site was never in the original draft plan. The Council bypassed the mandatory 6 week public consultation required to add it, meaning the public never had a legal window to object.
  3. The Consent: The previous Examiner was told the landowners agreed. Your own FOI response now admits the Council holds no records of contact with my father. You cannot claim ‘agreement’ with a resident you never spoke to.
  4. The Description: The Council described a private, fenced field as ‘Rehobath open space for all by the water.’ This was a factual inaccuracy regarding the land’s physical state, designed to meet criteria that the land does not fulfill.
  5. The Deeds: The Council calls this land ‘Rehobath.’ I am handing over the Legal Title Deeds today which show the historical and legal identity of this site as Cannimore. Land Registry as ‘Land lying North of Cannimore’. The name ‘Rehobath’ is a nickname for a neighboring private house—it is not the name of this land. By simply ‘copying and pasting’ a neighbor’s house name rom the 2016 plan, the Council has failed in its duty of due diligence.

Furthermore, your 2023 survey is ‘Unsound.’ Using data from people walking on a Public Footpath to justify a Green Space on a private field is a mapping error that no Inspector will accept.

It appears the Council has relied on the narrative of a third party that contradicts the Legal Deeds and the Official FOI record. A planning policy built on a neighbor’s house name instead of a Legal Deed is a Material Error of Fact.

Closing: No Independent Examiner will ignore these documented factual errors. If you vote to retain LGS 1.1 ‘Rehobath’ Folly Lane tonight, you are knowingly adopting a flawed evidence base. To protect the integrity of the 2026 Plan and your own reputations, I ask that you remove LGS 1.1 tonight. I request that the minutes specifically record that the Legal Title Deeds have been handed to the Council tonight.

Speech by Jeremy Kelton

Although Home Farm is labelled Flood Zone 1, in reality it behaves like floodplain. In winter it holds water, it connects directly to the River Wylye, and it feeds groundwater into the river— which is how chalk streams flood.

Building here would force water elsewhere. Hard surfaces increase runoff and groundwater pressure, risks not shown on national flood maps but well known in Warminster.

All water from the town flows into the River Wylye. In 2024, residents saw the river completely change colour as phosphate-rich silt from the WUE entered this protected chalk stream.

We have now had two â€˜once-in-a-generation’ floods in a decade, in 2014 and 2024, and they are getting much worse due to climate change. In 2024 GEA’s factory in Watery Lane flooded, homes in Bishopstrow were inches from flooding, Park Cottages flooded, and Boreham roundabout became impassable to emergency vehicles and full of sewage coming down Woodcock Road.

Approving this without a full catchment-wide assessment would pass flood and pollution risk onto existing homes and a protected river.

Speech by Nick Tilt

This statement refers to the inclusion of Home Farm as a potential site for housing development within the Warminster neighbourhood plan.

There are significant highway safety concerns relating to the proposed location of the access road, required visibility splays and weight of traffic arising from the development of Home Farm.

This development would result in an unacceptable impact on highway safety, contrary to NPPF paragraph 109. Boreham Road is constrained rural road with blind bends and high vehicle speeds, carrying cars, buses, HGV and military traffic. There have been at least five recorded accidents in recent years within close proximity to the existing Home Farm lane.

The access depends on the creation of a westbound right-turn ghost lane on a carriageway that is already too narrow. This will necessitate carriageway widening into the conservation area, endangering the root systems of seven mature trees and a narrowing of the westbound lane at a bend further increasing risk at the most hazardous point of the road.

Achieving visibility standards would require a 30-metre splayed access cut through an existing 100-metre high stone wall, causing further harm to heritage assets which along with the road safety concerns have been key reasons for 3 previous government inspector refusals of earlier planning applications of this site.

The associated road markings and additional street lighting (the area is very dark at night reinforcing its very rural character) would result in a more suburban level of lighting which would fail to sustain or enhance the significance of the Bishopstrow Conservation Area causing clear harm to its setting and character, contrary to NPPF paragraph 135 section (c).

The above concerns relating to the development of Home Farm are not new and have been publicly available information for several years and should have been key considerations against site selection and allocation. On this basis, Home Farm should not have been included in the Warminster neighbourhood plan and any future development applications should, as they have in the past, be refused.

The scale of highway intervention required to make this access function would itself cause unacceptable highway risk and heritage harm, which is not outweighed by any public benefit.

Notes:

NPPF Paragraph 109 is the criterion used at decision-making to assess whether a proposal can be refused on transport grounds.

NPPF paragraph 135 section (c): provides the decision criteria against which proposals should be judged – including character, landscape setting, heritage, safety, and overall quality. c) be sympathetic to local character and history, including built and landscape settings.

www.ebbrag.com

Carrion Close, Warminster

Danny Howell writes:

Carrion Close was the name of a paddock in Warminster. It lay north of Portway House and was used in the 18th Century for the Warminster October Sheep Fairs. The Woodmead Old People’s Home was built on the site in 1961. It is now occupied by the Crescent Place apartments.

Barley Close, Warminster

Danny Howell writes:

Barley Close is the name of a private housing estate between Boreham Road and St. John’s Road, Warminster. It is a cul-de-sac. It is so named because it was built on the site of the Guinness Barley Research Station (formerly Dr. E.S. Beaven’s barley nursery (1895-1941). Dr. Beaven produced his very own Plumage Archer barley on this site which yielded up to 20% more grain to the acre than any other barley at the time. Guinness took over the site when Dr. Beaven died in 1971 and carried on with research growing test plots of barley until the 1970s when they moved to Codford. Houses were built on the site as an extension of the Prestbury Drive and St. John’s Road housing developments. Vehicular access to Barley Close is from St. John’s Road. There is a footpath from Barley Close to Boreham Road.

Press Release From EBBRAG

Wednesday 7th January 2026

Press Release from EBBRAG (the East Boreham Businesses And Residents Action Group):

Previous press coverage from EBBRAG (the East Boreham Businesses And Residents Action Group) about the consequences of residential development on Home Farm, has awakened the community.

As yet, however, most people are unaware that with the proposed Ashley Coombe (77 houses), Cley Hill View (227 houses) and Home Farm (135 houses) developments this makes a total of a further 439 houses on top of the WWUE (1200 houses?) without any change or increase to the supporting infrastructure. This make 1639 houses in Warminster when all are completed.

We understand houses are not selling as expected on Jubilee Gardens and the developer has slowed the build.

The Town Council were delighted when the application on Westbury Road was turned down in March 2025. They, and Wiltshire Council, have singularly failed, however, to plan, compensate or provide increased infrastructure support for this new increase in housing.

As an example of the storm that is coming when all 1639 houses are completed, based on Government National Averages in 2022:

Education: a further 409 Primary School Children and 213 Secondary Children. Schools are near capacity now.

Traffic: 1639 houses brings an increase of 738 cars (one car/van per household) and 171 cars (for 2 cars/van per household) in Warminster, making a total of 909 cars/vans when the houses are complete. The  town is grid locked at peak times in the morning and afternoon already.

Finally, developers are failing to meet the conditions imposed on applications when granted i.e. where is the new school and surgery for Jubilee Gardens? Where is the environmental planting for Boreham Mead and Mill Island? 

Development Of Farm Land In Warminster Sparks Concern

Friday 2nd January 2026

From the Facebook page of EBBRAG (the East Boreham Business And Residents Action Group) ~

From The Wiltshire Times (Senior Correspondent John Baker) Friday 2nd January 2026:

Development Of Farm Land In Warminster Sparks Concern

Residents in Warminster have voiced growing concerns as developers press ahead with proposals for two farmland sites just as the town’s Neighbourhood Plan Review reaches its final consultation stage.

The Warminster Neighbourhood Plan (WNP) Review, a community-led framework designed to protect local heritage, safeguard green spaces and guide future development, is now nearing completion following three years of preparation.

An eight-week public consultation on the full draft plan is due to begin at the end of January 2026. Following this, the plan will be submitted to Wiltshire Council for independent examination in the summer, before being put to a local referendum. A majority vote in favour would be required for the plan to be formally adopted.

However, many residents have voiced concerns that the process may not progress quickly enough to prevent farmland being used for housing development sites.

Developers including Bellway Homes and Rubix Land are already advancing proposals on sites previously considered by the town council during earlier stages of the plan’s development.

At Home Farm on Boreham Road, Bellway Homes is proposing up to 135 new houses. Meanwhile, at Ashley Coombe, Rubix Land is continuing to pursue a development scheme despite the town council withdrawing its support after updated surveys raised concerns about land levels, underground services and potential odour issues.

More than 320 residents have voiced their opposition to the developments ahead of the Neighbourhood Plan Review public consultation being launched.

Around 100 residents attended a public meeting over the summer to discuss the Ashley Coombe proposals, while the East Boreham Business and Residents Action Group (EBBRAG) has launched a campaign to strongly oppose development at Home Farm, holding meetings and mobilising support online.

EBBRAG members Gwyn and Anne Evans said: “Development of this land was unequivocally turned down by a Government inspector in 2020. Despite this, our local town council has included this complex site as a singular option for development, for residents of Warminster to vote on at referendum, even though 61 per cent voted against this in its informal survey.

“To add more fuel to the fire of opposition, Bellway Homes, with the full knowledge of the town council, are poised to submit a ‘speculative’ planning application. Local residents are outraged at how a supposedly democratic and ‘community led’ process can be willingly compromised in this manner.

“We feel decisions, well intentioned though they may have been, have largely been made behind closed doors and without meaningful reference to the community of Warminster.”

Bellway Homes says its Home Farm scheme is needed to help meet local housing demand. The developer has stated that 40 per cent of the homes would be affordable, with provision for multi-generational living, and that more than half of the 5.9-hectare site would be retained as public green space.

Residents raised questions about the plans at a public consultation on November 19, with formal feedback accepted until December 5. The group is urging locals to formally object to the housing proposal.

At Ashley Coombe, Rubix Land is promoting a revised proposal for 77 homes, now accessed solely via Ashley Coombe after removing a previously included parcel of land near Fanshaw Way. The developer says it remains committed to the site, despite the withdrawal of the WNP Review Steering Group support.

In a statement, Rubix said: “Whilst the WNPR Steering Group has withdrawn support for this revised scheme, Rubix considers it offers a suitable and acceptable alternative.” The company is seeking further feedback from the community on design, green space and connectivity.

Meanwhile, Warminster town councillor Phil Keeble has urged residents to take part in the upcoming consultation on the Neighbourhood Plan, saying: “The draft plan has been prepared by local representatives with the input of hundreds of residents. Your feedback is vital to inform the final plan we submit for formal examination and adoption.”

Further information about the Neighbourhood Plan consultation is available from Warminster Town Council on 01985 214847, by emailing [admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk](mailto:admin@warminster-tc.gov.uk), or via [www.warminsterplan.com](http://www.warminsterplan.com/).

Picture shows an artist’s impression of how the new houses on the farmland will look. Image from Wiltshire Council.

http://www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/…/25731692…/

For further information about the Home Farm development please contact EBBRAG (the East Boreham Business And Residents Action Group:

email: info@ebbrag.com

website: www.ebbrag.com