A landowner extended a long-standing gravelled corner of their agricultural field to allow vehicles in and out without churning the soil. The council noticed and asked for retrospective consent.
Our client owns a six-acre agricultural field used for low-intensity farming and forestry. There was already a small patch of hardstanding in the corner of the field when the land was purchased — the kind of basic, gravelled area you find on countless rural holdings, used for keeping vehicles out of the mud and turning farm machinery without damaging the soil. The client extended the patch by a modest amount, using more of the same loose gravel surface, to make access into and out of the field workable across the seasons without compacting the underlying ground.
The council was made aware of the works and informed the client that, in their view, the change required planning permission. The land sits within Grade 3 Agricultural Land Classification — productive farmland — and is close to areas the council's policy map identifies as a Site of Nature Conservation Interest and a Wetland Strategic Network. Both of those designations come with specific local plan policies that protect the underlying environment.
Hardstanding on agricultural land is one of those topics where the underlying planning position is genuinely tricky. Some agricultural surfacing falls within the permitted development rights for established agricultural holdings; other surfacing requires express consent. The question turns on the scale of the agricultural use, the size of the holding, the nature of the works, and how the land is being managed in practice.
The risk in this case is not the design of the hardstanding — which is small, soft-edged and unobtrusive — but the policy backdrop. Anything close to a designated nature conservation site needs to clear the bar of "no significant harm." If the application is framed properly, the loose gravel surface should comfortably meet that test: it remains permeable, it doesn't introduce structures, it doesn't change the underlying ecology, and it actively supports the land staying in productive agricultural use rather than being abandoned or churned to mud.
The other thing the council had flagged was a caravan being kept on the site. We advised the client up front that this was a separate issue and would not be supportable in a planning application; the practical answer was to confirm to the council in writing that the caravan was being used for storage rather than residential purposes, and to keep that conversation entirely separate from the hardstanding case.
We prepared and submitted a focused retrospective full planning application for the gravel works, supported by:
Alongside the planning statement, we prepared and submitted a full set of scaled architectural drawings — site location plan, block plan, and existing and proposed elevations and floor plans where relevant — giving the case officer a clear, accurate and measurable picture of the development to assess against policy.
"It's just gravel" is a sentence that has cost a lot of rural landowners a lot of heartache. Even modest works on agricultural land can engage local plan policies you didn't know existed — particularly where designated wildlife or wetland networks are nearby. Get the right advice before the council writes the letter.
Hardstanding, gravelled access tracks, parking pads and similar works on agricultural land are some of the most frequently flagged rural retrospective cases. Most of them are approvable when the right policy arguments are made. The first conversation with us is free.
Even small rural works can have big policy implications. We can read your case in a single phone call.