BTS King: Re: the creative TPO's - an old favorite solution is copper nails in the trunk, usually after allowing a refusal on those grounds, so that their cards are already on the table, and they can't throw some other excuse at you later on.
My favorite gripe about PPS3 is the dual method of measuring density, on the one hand you have the sensible measure of dwellings per hectare; then on the other there is the habitable rooms per hectare measure, which throws the whole thing into complete chaos. I'm yet to determine any pattern on the use of this measure (Trevor if you know of the criteria for choosing between the two please pray do reveal it!) - but it has the result of, in some authorities, developers building 'two bedroom' houses, which happen to have two or three 'studies' upstairs which would make very convenient bedrooms, and in other authorities, it is used by the LA to dictate the mix of dwellings on the development, often flying in the face of market forces.
One day I'll get to grips with PPS7, and get myself planning for a great big modern mansion on the greenbelt somewhere.... if only, eh?
Yes BTS, copper nails work, but Tree Officers know about the strategy and can detect it. Pig urine on the roots is, I am assured by a pig farmer and tree surgeon friend, even more effective. It is evidently like battery acid ! But how one collects it I do not know.***
Yes, you've got the inconsistencies of PPS3 off to a "T". And PPS7 is nearly as bad, but the qualification criteria for temporary and permanent rural dwellings are relatively clear, which is what we mostly use it for.
How you reconcile the crazy density conflicts in PPS3 I'm afraid I can throw no light on. I begin to think we are not supposed to understand it anyway. Hence the abundance of "can" "may" "normally" and other vague words in national guidance which leave all options open. (Hey - 2-bedroomed houses with 3 studies is a great wheeze - thank you !)
As for building "a great big modern mansion on the greenbelt somewhere" .... methinks you know a LOT more about this subject than you have let on !
Only with PPS7 was the "modern" bit added - predictably by a Labour administration that didn't want to see a lot of pseudo-landed-gentry type dwellings being erected in the countryside. (OK if they are nice Socialist blue-stained timber and glass dwellings with a Tesco design ambience !)
*** Talking about collecting pig's urine, reminds me of an appeal hearing I won for an equestrian stud farm, with residential accommodation, in Lancashire. My client, a very prim and proper classy-looking blonde lady called Jill in her late 30's, was explaining that part of her income from the stud came from selling semen from a £60,000 Arab stallion, and that the semen was frozen, sealed in drinking straws, and sent to buyers all over Europe and as far away as Israel. (Believe it or not, Israelis are very keen on Arab horses!)
The 60-odd year old spinster planning officer naively asked "Really? How do you, erm, collect the semen?"
The Hearing went into a stunned silence as Jill explained how they brought a gym horse into the stable and persuaded the stallion to mount it and look out of the window in front of it. A mare would then be paraded back and forth in front of this window to "arouse" the stallion.
"Yes, but how do you collect it ?" asked the planning maid, whose naivity was getting worse by the minute.
"Well, I hold a bucket in my left hand" continued my client, "and, with my right hand I grasp ....." (I will leave the rest to the imagination of readers!) The room fell into a stunned silence when she stopped explaining - a deafening silence that lasted for about 40 seconds.
To break the silence, I said to the lady Inspector, who was gallantly trying not to grin all over her face, "I am sure we have all learned something today" at which point the entire room rang with laughter.
(Planning does occasionally have a comical side.)