RefusedDecided 03 December 2019Waterford City and County Council

Lacken, Kilbarry, Waterford

Planning application 19757
DecisionRefused
Decided03 December 2019
Application typePERMISSION
Source documents1

Site

What is on file

0refusal reasons0conditions8nearby records

Proposed development

Application description published by Waterford City and County Council.
Alterations to existing site boundaries to provide for the following: new 2.4 metre high blockwork walls and piers and caps (plastered to one side to internal of boundary) to the existing northern, southern & eastern boundary, two number new double gates and piers to part of eastern boundary, and provision of new 2.4 metre high blockwork walls and piers and caps plastered to both sides to part of existing western boundary, together with all associated site works including removal of existing trees due to condition of same

Application and appeal history

Structured appeal stages, outcomes and source documents currently tied to this application.

No indexed appeal history

No structured appeal case is tied to this application. This means no appeal is indexed, not that an appeal is impossible.

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

Refusal reasons not machine-readable

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

Conditions

No conditions

No conditions are on record for this application yet.

Planning a project near Lacken, Kilbarry, Waterford?

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 →