Detailed proposals for the planned Honiton Road Moor Exchange retail park have been submitted for approval.
The city council approved outline plans for the development two years ago.
Independent, investigative, in the public interest Upgrade to paid
Martin Redfern
Detailed proposals for the planned Honiton Road Moor Exchange retail park have been submitted for approval.
The city council approved outline plans for the development two years ago.
Exeter Observer publishes the independent investigative journalism our local democracy needs.
It can do this because it is the city's only news organisation that doesn't have to answer to corporate advertisers, remote shareholders or those in power.
Instead, its not-for-profit public interest business model is simple.
It depends on readers like you to sustain our reporting by contributing a small amount each month.
Lots of people currently chip in like this, but it's not enough to cover our costs. We need more paying subscribers to keep publishing.
135 of the 300 readers we need have signed up so far. Help us reach our goal by joining them today.
Support our work from less than £2/week and get access to exclusive premium content and more.
Developers revise application for full planning permission for 813-bed seven-block complex submitted in May as similar proposals proliferate across city centre.
Boneyard arcade seeking permission to change use of empty Brighthouse retail unit after making way for “co-living” block at previous Red Lion Lane location.
Changes include increased building footprints and removal of twelve rooms to provide eleven communal kitchens – between residents of 297 studios – while gates obstruct pedestrian thoroughfare and site’s historic setting and significance essentially ignored.
Exeter Observer analysis finds more students living in city centre than residents as council bid to include PBSA in housing delivery figures weakens local planning policy – but does not remove it from decision-making altogether.
, updated
Council land disposal to include rights to lay underground distribution pipework across River Exe floodplain following “low-to-zero carbon” Grace Road Fields heat plant planning approval in face of Environment Agency sequential test concerns.