Hudson Planning has been providing professional planning services for over a decade, with extensive experience of the residential, industrial and commercial sectors.
We work closely with all of our clients to ensure we provide them with bespoke advice specific to their particular project. View our exhaustive list of services in more detail, or contact us at any time for friendly and comprehensive planning advice.
Examples of completed planning projects
Hudson Planning secured planning permission for a new quarry to extract two million tonnes of sand and gravel using a concrete batching plant in the green belt, with restoration using inert material to agriculture.
Hudson Planning secured planning permission for an extension to an existing office and new workshop building.
Hudson Planning advised a small retail business on how to apply for change of retail use from a launderette to a cafe.
Hudson Planning secured permission permission for a residential extension to a first floor side extension over a garage.
Hudson Planning secured planning permission for an energy company to vary their planning consent so that they were able to export oil by tanker from an existing site, which had previously been prohibited for many years.
Hudson Planning secured planning permission to continue working soft sand at an existing quarry, and to enhance the restoration scheme through importation of some 1.8 million tonnes of inert material with restoration to nature conservation and informal recreation. The application included environmental impact assessment.
Hudson Planning secured planning consent to extend an existing hydrocarbon wellsite and drill up to four new wells.
Latest Planning News
In July 2019 the government made a number of changes to current Planning Practice Guidance (PPG), including new sections on Green Belt. These identified several matters that may now need to be taken into account when assessing proposals including visual impact, duration of development and remediability, and the degree of activity that would be generated. It will be interesting to see how this guidance is interpreted by local planning authorities.