GrantedDecided 25 July 2018Kildare County Council

Narraghbeg and Roscolvin, Castledermot, Co. Kildare

Planning application 18518
DecisionConditional grant
Decided25 July 2018
Application typePERMISSION
Source documents1

Site

What is on file

0refusal reasons0conditions8nearby records

Proposed development

Application description published by Kildare County Council.
(A)Retention of existing machinery workshop as constructed on site. (B) Retention of existing agricultural straw bedded shed as constructed on site. (C) Change of use of existing agricultural straw bedded shed to a proposed milking parlour, dairy and ancillary rooms, handling facilities, calving pen and cow waiting yard. (D) Change of use of existing calving shed to an agricultural cubicle shed. (E) Permission for the construction of an extension to existing calving shed which will include cubicles and an underground slatted slurry tank. (F) Permission for the construction of an unroofed cow waiting yard and underground slatted soiled water tank. (G) Permission for the erection of a meal bin (H) Permission for the construction of 2 no. Silage pits and all associated site works

Decision details

Core application dates and identifiers from the public planning record.

Planning analysis

Refusal reasons and planning conditions extracted from the public decision file.

Refusal reasons

No refusal reason on record

Documents are indexed. Reason extraction for Kildare has not started yet.

Conditions

No conditions

No conditions are on record for this application yet.

Planning a project near Narraghbeg and Roscolvin, Castledermot, Co. Kildare?

Get a site risk brief with the local decision pattern and up to 80 detailed nearby comparables (40 refusals and 40 grants), including extracted reasons and source links. €29 incl. VAT, PDF by email.

Source documents

Original council portal records and source PDFs where available.

Nearby precedent

Similar nearby applications linked to this planning decision.
Get up to 80 detailed nearby comparables in a site risk brief →