Developing the area of Nethercote for commercial use would have a hugely negative impact on our countryside; increase traffic and place further pressure on the M40 roundabout which is already insufficient for the volume; increase noise from alarms and machinery; remove the natural habitat for wildlife and birds; increase flooding risks by removing permeable surfaces to mention a few.
Nethercote is a rural hamlet on the edge of Banbury, Oxfordshire. The hamlet lays in an area of approx165acres, today, predominantly agricultural land used for grazing, a single-track road runs through the hamlet, known as Banbury Lane, which has around a dozen residential properties along the lane
Nethercote is separated from the rest of the Banbury parish by the M40, a physical end to the urban spread that makes the rural hamlet a tranquil area of unspoilt countryside and in which lays precious heritage landscape that has survived more than 500 years as well as an abundance of habitat and wildlife
Developing the area of Nethercote for commercial use would have a hugely negative impact on our countryside; increase traffic and place further pressure on the M40 roundabout which is already insufficient for the volume; increase noise from alarms and machinery; remove the natural habitat for wildlife and birds; increase flooding risks by removing permeable surfaces to mention a few.
Nethercote is a rural hamlet on the edge of Banbury, Oxfordshire. The hamlet lays in an area of approx165acres, today, predominantly agricultural land used for grazing, a single-track road runs through the hamlet, known as Banbury Lane, which has around a dozen residential properties along the lane
Nethercote is separated from the rest of the Banbury parish by the M40, a physical end to the urban spread that makes the rural hamlet a tranquil area of unspoilt countryside and in which lays precious heritage landscape that has survived more than 500 years as well as an abundance of habitat and wildlife