Body Shop Sign Which Will Obstruct Highway and May Endanger Those With Disabilities Approved by Council

Example photo submitted by The Body Shop in application for permission to place sign on Petty Cury

Liberal Democrat run Cambridge City Council has just approved permission for The Body Shop to place a sign on the pavement of Petty Cury, one of the city’s main shopping streets. The approval comes despite recent high profile campaigns from the Liberal Democrats on the subject of making the city’s pavements safer, including by removing such obstacles.

The application from The Body Shop asked for permission for a “street sign on wheels”.

Cambridgeshire County Council opposed the application stating:

The wheeled sign would constitute an obstruction on the public highway and has potential to endanger or inconvenience those with a visual disability and therefore the Highway Authority recommends that unless and until the application is amended to remove the proposal for the wheeled sign the application be REFUSED planning permission.

Reason: Impact upon the safe and efficient operation of the public highway.

Cambridge City Council’s own conservation officers also opposed the sign stating:

The street sign on wheels is also not supported as it is additional street clutter.

The street sign on wheels and the illumination of the projecting sign are not supported as they do not comply with Conservation policies.

Cambridge City Council has a published policy stating:

Shop owners in Cambridge can only have an A-board if it is situated on private land and not on the highway, or pavement. A-boards can cause an obstruction to passers-by, especially those with a visual impairment. They can therefore be dangerous, particularly where a pavement is narrow.

Cambridgeshire County Council’s policy (to which I can only offer a Google Cache link as their site is very broken following a recent redesign) is:

Advertising signs should not be permitted on the highway.

The approval of the sign, apparently by planning officers, comes despite Cambridge’s Liberal Democrat MP recently running a high profile campaign, and speaking in Parliament, on the subject of things which make our pavements more difficult and dangerous, especially for the disabled, elderly and those in wheelchairs, to use.

Julian Huppert, and Cllr Sian Reid, have been speaking on this issue for some time, A post on Huppert’s website from 2010 states:

Julian pushed this issue as a county councillor and chair of the Cambridge Transport Area Joint Committee and Cllr Reid has also been championing the cause for a number of years. Their joint pressure has led to thousands of signs being removed.

“Streets which are full of clutter become obstacle courses for pedestrians and put their safety at risk,”

said Julian.

“They should be pleasant places, full of character not advertising hoardings.”

The application has been allocated the reference: 14/0168/ADV; the application webpage shows its status as “Application Permitted”. The decision was made on Thursday the 3rd of April 2014 and “issued” on Friday the 4th of April 2014.

No report weighing up the pros and cons of the application has yet been published. No decision notice has been published either. There is always a chance that the information on the council’s website is inaccurate or incomplete, but I think it’s reasonable to comment on what’s there. Hopefully commenting will prompt more openness and encourage officers to post all the material online.

Cambridge City Council now run planning on an online only basis; if documents are not available online they are simply unavailable – there is no paper planning file.

It appears councillors have left the decision up to their officers; they have neither taken the opportunity to make the decision themselves in public nor have any of them formally commented on it.

My views

  • I think there is an inconsistency between what elected representatives are saying and doing here. If councillors are serious about reducing street clutter they ought to have called this planning decision in to a committee and voted against it.
  • I think we should encourage shops to hang signs on the walls rather than have them on the pavements and roadways where they would cause an obstruction.
  • Petty Cury is wide, however it’s also busy. There are places a sign could be deployed safely and considerately. Perhaps it would be acceptable to approve the application with appropriate conditions.
  • As with so many things the key here is education; making sure those running shops and businesses are aware of the difficulties some people have moving around the city, and encouraging considerate behaviour. I’d much prefer a society based on well informed people acting responsibly than one in which we rely on regulation and enforcement.
  • This kind of disagreement between two councils would be eliminated if we had one council for Greater Cambridge. Planners would not be isolated from those with other expertise, such as on highways.
  • As I understand it even following planning permission the sign will require the approval of Cambridgeshire County Council if it is to be permitted. Giving such permission would be against the council’s policy so presumably would require a special decision by a councillor, or committee.
  • I’m surprised to see a planning application being made for such a sign. Cambridge City Council accepts applications for, and even gives permission for, things planning permission isn’t required for (eg. pruning fruit trees) which is a very confusing state of affairs which I would like to see addressed.

12 responses to “Body Shop Sign Which Will Obstruct Highway and May Endanger Those With Disabilities Approved by Council”

  1. If the area outside the shop is a forecourt (rather than highway) which it doesn’t appear to be on the side of Petty Curry in question, but may be on the Lion Yard side opposite, then according to government guidance up to 4.6 square meters of advertising signs are permitted without special position.

    One, irrelevant, but interesting element of the guidance I noticed is that advertising within premises needs to be at least 1m away from the window if it is not to require permission. This appears an odd rule and surely one most, if not all, shop window displays quite reasonably breach. If the guidance is accurate (It’s in line with Class I of Schedule 1 of The Town and Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) (England) Regulations 2007)) the law ought be abolished or amended so it has the intended effect. .

  2. Walking around Cambridge yesterday, I thought the two biggest obstructions on pavements were badly parked bikes and people not looking where they were going as they had their eyes glued to mobile phones. The first problem can be overcome by the city providing more and better pavement locing facilities for bkes, and the second, well, I can’t bring myself to say it. The body shop sign is extremely small potatoes when compared with the obstructions caused by the two issues I have mentioned.

    • Fair point – bit too early in the season to have seen them but they must be a real problem in places.

  3. The Body Shop have emailed me a statement:

    We have spoken to the franchisee and they would be willing to review the positioning of the A-board should Cambridge City Council now advise the board is obstructive to shoppers.

    Public safety is paramount to the store and they will wait to be guided by the Council.

    Cambridge City Council have given permission for the board, so it appears corporately that council supports it despite some objections within the council. It is Cambridgeshire County Council which as a whole objects to the sign.

  4. I think the comments by the officer this afternoon were helpful too in answering my question. (In sum footfall and pavement width left were key points as I understood it.) I’m puzzled that ‘A’ boards are not regulated in a similar manner.

  5. Councillors have taken decisions on allowing tables and chairs outside two city centre cafes :

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