Do we really want to lose these TWO green fields for ever?
Called in to the Development Management Committee (DMC)
Awaiting officer recommendation and committee date
Earliest possible committee date: 6 July 2026. Agendas are published one week before each meeting and will confirm whether either application is to be considered.
Green Man: Awaiting several statutory consultee responses
Shottfield Close: Most statutory consultee responses received
Save Our Sandridge continues to monitor developments and review newly submitted documents.
We have contacted the planning officer and members of the DMC to request that the Shottfield application be deferred until appropriate skylark mitigation measures are agreed. See our letter here.
We have written to the Woodland Trust which the Senior Ecologist recommended as a potential recipient of compensation payments if the development proceeds, asking whether this would align with their long-term ecological objectives for Heartwood Forest. We did not receive a reply to our February email so have sent a follow up.
We have also objected to the (NHS) ICB's reliance on the proposed Woollam Park GP facility, as that project remains unapproved and is not a secured healthcare mitigation measure. See our letter here.
We have submitted 12 separate videos of skylarks, along with records of deer and badgers, from the Shottfield Close site to HERC and are awaiting confirmation that these records have been added to the local ecological database. As skylarks are a UK Red List species, documenting their presence is important in assessing the ecological impact of the development.
We have revised our Q&A Page and added Jargon Buster should you be bamboozled by some of the terminology!
Please send us any photographs, videos or records of wildlife from the Shottfield Close or Green Man sites and surrounding areas. Records of skylarks, badgers, bats and other protected or notable species are particularly valuable. Please include the approximate location and date of any sightings.
Every verified wildlife record helps build a clearer picture of the ecological value of these sites.
A map showing the various developments approved and proposed on green belt near Sandridge😢
(more information on our Maps page)
No matter how small, we appreciate every single donation received, and all funds will go directly towards independent specialist reports. It's the efforts of individuals and contributions of many, that will make a difference!
We are at the stage in the campaign where we need to pay for reports for both proposed developments – firstly Highways, and next will be Ecology and Flood Risk. Initially we are looking at raising £5,000.
Please click the gold bag, or here to donate.
We are well on the way, with just over £1,000 raised so far. Thank you!
Do you really want to lose these TWO green fields for ever?
1.5 millon+ derelict homes renovated.
1 million+ unbuilt homes already with permission, built.
1.4 million homes developed on brownfield sites, first.
165,000 empty commercial properties repurposed.
26 million empty bedrooms incentivised for rental.
Millions of homes left undisturbed for nature.
Country's entire carbon budget not used up.
Woollam Park - this outline planning application for 1,000 homes on the fields between Harpenden Road and the railway line will have a big impact on Sandridge - not just the extra road traffic, but also because they intend to close Sandridgebury Lane, forcing Sandridge residents who need to access North St Albans (eg STAGS and Townsend schools) to negotiate the two extremely busy junctions at the King William and Ancient Briton. There is still time to comment on the planning portal 5/2024/2271 - the plans are so vast that the Council made a separate website for all the plan documents here. We have now submitted an objection on behalf of Save Our Sandridge (SOS) - you can read it here.
NPPF - we have submitted our response to the Government's proposed reforms to the National Planning Policy Framework - you can read it here. We copied our MP Victoria Collins on our submission, you can read her detailed reply to SOS here.
Publicity - We walked around both Sandridge sites with Matt Adams, the editor of the highly respected St Albans Times newspaper, and his in-depth article was published on 9th October 2025 [link]. With a follow-up on 26th January 2026 [link].
Alternatives to Development - We've added links to three organisations which ALL explain how to tackle the housing crisis WITHOUT destroying green fields!
Archaeology - We've added a section about the Sandridge Gold Hoard which was discovered in 2012. It illustrates how this is an important area to preserve and protect, not to build upon!
Sewage & Flooding - We've added a section about the sewage and surface water problem (see here) and have been in touch with our MP. You can read her reply here.
The Community Planning Alliance have published their Grey Belt Tracker results:
68,000 'grey belt' houses shown in our tracker
Of which 65% are at planning application, 14% at appeal and 17% in local plan review.
Sites are listed as mostly arable, meadow, pasture & paddock (plus 14 entries that are flood plain).
Not a disused petrol station or car park in sight.
80% are for housing, 7% industrial and 7% solar (the rest other)
The three worst affected Green Belts are Metropolitan, North West and West Midlands.
AT LEAST 5,800 acres at risk (many submitting were uncertain about the amount of land at risk, for example during a local plan review).
Here are the sites mapped - you can click on each marker to find out more.
You can add any green belt applications you are aware of to the tracker here.
And here is the Greying the Green Belt Report: click here.
Don’t forget they have a day of action for nature, parks and green spaces on 18th April. Click here for more information.
NPPF consultation resources are here.
“Green Belt is often portrayed as unattractive ‘scrub land’, an argument used to say it is worthless and should be developed. But national planning policy states: ‘Once Green Belts have been defined; local planning authorities should plan positively to enhance their beneficial use.’ And Green Belt is increasingly needed to plant forests, help manage rainfall, moderate the urban heat island effect, provide habitat to address species decline, grow food locally to cities, and provide space for recreation.
Talking about building on Green Belt as a means to solving the housing crisis is a red herring, a distraction.” (CPRE, February 2025)
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This website was most recently updated on Mon 08-Jun-2026
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