Dudley Local Plan Part One
Glossary
|
Word/Phase/Acronym |
Abbreviation |
Meaning |
|---|---|---|
|
Accessible Neighbourhoods: |
Where land uses (local services, schools, employment and housing) are better aligned, spatially, with transport planning (transport infrastructure), to make it easier for people to walk, cycle and use public transport. |
|
|
Active Travel Storage |
The provision of secure, accessible facilities designed to accommodate equipment associated with active modes of transport – such as bicycles, helmets and walking gear. These facilities support and encourage walking, cycling and other forms of active travel and enhance connectivity with sustainable transport networks. |
|
|
Aggregates: |
Term used to describe minerals used for construction purposes, such as sand and gravel, which can be used as hardcore or to produce mortar, cement, concrete and other building products, and hard rock, which can be crushed and used for foundations or as road stone. Aggregates can be “primary” (virgin materials quarried from the ground), “secondary” (produced as a by-product of other mineral working or industrial processing), or “recycled” (Produced from recycled waste). |
|
|
Archaeological Priority Areas |
APA |
Sites with high potential for archaeological remains of regional or national significance that have not been considered for designation as scheduled monuments, or where there is insufficient data available about the state or preservation of any remains to justify a designation. APAs are likely to have high archaeological or historic interest. |
|
Areaof High Historic Townscape Value: |
AHHTV |
Areas of High Historic Townscape Value are identified in order to illustrate the distribution and extent of areas where built heritage makes a significant contribution to local character and distinctiveness across the borough. These areas exhibit a concentration of historic assets that in combination make a particularly positive contribution to local character and distinctiveness. This was assessed alongside the contribution of the streetscape, landscape features (including views) and their historical associations. The areas selected as warranting designation as an AHHTV are those considered to be of particular value within the Borough. |
|
Area of High Historic Landscape Value: |
AHHLV |
Areas of High Historic Landscape Value refer to Landscape Heritage Areas identified by the council, which demonstrate that it is the importance of the elements of the historic environment to the character and distinctiveness of these areas that is recognised by their designation. The value of High Historic Landscape Values resides primarily in the quality of the wider landscape, such as areas of open space, woodland, watercourses, hedgerows, and archaeological features and their historic. Communal, ecological and aesthetic values. |
|
Biodiversity: |
The variety of life on Earth or in a specific region or area. |
|
|
Biodiversity Net Gain: |
BNG |
A way to contribute to the recovery of nature while developing land. |
|
Blue Infrastructure |
Blue infrastructure relates to urban water infrastructure. Including ponds, lakes, streams, canals, rivers and storm water provision. Sustainable drainage schemes (SuDs) are usually included within blue infrastructure. |
|
|
Community Gardens |
A piece of land gardened or cultivated by a group of people individually or collectively. |
|
|
Cultural Heritage |
Artifacts, monuments, a group of buildings and sites, museum that have a diversity of values including symbolic, historic, artistic, aesthetic, ethnological or anthropological, scientific and social significance. |
|
|
Deliverable |
Refer to definition stated in most up to date National Planning Policy Framework and National Planning Guidance. |
|
|
Designated Heritage Asset |
A world Heritage Site, Scheduled Monument, Listed Building, Protected Wreck Site, Register Park and Garden, Registered Battlefield or Conservation Area designated under the relevant legislation. |
|
|
Designed Landscapes of High Historic Value |
DLHHV |
Landscape areas that make an important contribution to local historic character but do not meet the criteria for inclusion on the national Register for Parks and Gardens. The significance of these areas is likely to arise from their historic, artistic and architectural interest, although such areas may also contain remains of archaeological interest. |
|
Energy from Waste: |
EFW |
The use of waste to generate energy in the form of electricity or heat and power. The term is most often used to describe facilities that generate energy from the combustion of municipal waste. There are two examples of this type of facility in the Black Country, at Lister Road in Dudley and at Crown Street in Wolverhampton. Energy can also be generated from waste using technologies, such as anaerobic digestion (AD), mechanical and biological treatment (MBT), and the capture of landfill gas. Organic wastes can also be used as “biomass” to power generators and power plants. |
|
Flood Zone |
A geographic area within which the flood risk is in a particular range (as defined by PPG). These are defined as Zone 1(low probability as having a less than 1 in 1000 years chance of flooding). Zone 2 (medium probability of between 1 in 100 and 1 in 1000 years chance). Zone 3a (high probability a 1 in 100 years or greater chance) and Zone 3b (functional floodplain a 1 in 20 years chance). These are mapped in the Dudley SFRA. |
|
|
Geodiversity |
The variety of rocks, fossils, minerals, landforms and soils along with the natural processes that shape the landscape. |
|
|
Green Infrastructure |
A network of multi-functional green and blue spaces and other natural features, urban and rural, which is capable of delivering a wide range of environmental, economic, health and wellbeing benefits for nature, climate, local and wider communities and prosperity. |
|
|
Growth Network |
The area covered by the Strategic Centres and Regeneration Corridors in the Black Country where growth and regeneration and land use change will be concentrated. |
|
|
Heritage Asset |
A building, monument, site, place, area or landscape identified as having a degree of significance meriting consideration in planning decisions, because of its heritage interest. It includes designated heritage assets and assets identified by the local planning authority (including local listening). |
|
|
Historic Environment |
All aspects of the environment resulting from the interaction between people and places through time, including all surviving physical remains of past human activity, whether visible, buried or submerged, and landscape and planted or managed flora. |
|
|
Historic Environment Record |
Information services that seek to provide access to comprehensive and dynamic resources relating to the historic environment of a defined geographic area for public benefit and use. |
|
|
Household Waste Recycling Centre: |
HWRC |
A facility operated by or on behalf of a waste collection authority, where the public can take bulky wastes which would not normally be collected, such as rubble, large household items, and surplus waste they need to dispose of outside of the normal collection arrangements. Generic term to describe structures or buildings, services and facilities which support residents, animals and nature residing in certain areas. This could be in terms of transport, for example walking, cycling paths and public transport infrastructure, in social infrastructure in the form of community or health facilities, measures to improve the emergency services or measures to improve and encourage nature and climate change adaptation and mitigation in the form of green and blue infrastructure. |
|
Landfill |
A method of disposing of waste or pre-treated waste residues without attempting further re-use or recycling. Most landfill sites are former quarries where the waste is used to fill the void and help restore the site to a beneficial end-use (restoration by landfilling with waste is normally a condition of the mineral permission). |
|
|
Local Green Space: |
LGS |
Local Green Space designation is a way to provide special protection against development for green areas of particular importance to local communities. |
|
Local Nature Reserve: |
LNR |
A Local Nature Reserve or LNR is a statutory designation made under Section 21 of the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 by principal local authorities in England, Scotland and Wales. Local Nature Reserves (LNR’s) are for both people and wildlife. They are places with wildlife or geological features that are of special interest locally. They offer special opportunities to study or learn about nature or simply to enjoy it. |
|
Metal Recycling Site: |
MRS |
Any facility involving or related to metal recycling, such as a scrap yard, a metal processing facility, or a vehicle dismantler/ car breaker. |
|
Micro Mobility |
The use of lightweight, single-person vehicles for short-distance travel, including human-powered and electric options such as bicycles, scooters and skateboards. |
|
|
Minerals Planning Authority: |
MPA |
A planning authority with a statutory duty/ responsibility for mineral planning within their area, meaning that they have to prepare LDF policies on minerals and deal with planning applications for mineral development. All unitary authorities (including the Black Country Authorities) are mineral planning authorities. |
|
Mineral Safeguarding Area: |
MSA |
An area designated by minerals planning authorities which covers known deposits of minerals which are desired to be kept safeguarding from unnecessary sterilisation by non-mineral development. |
|
Municipal Waste: |
MSW |
(Sometimes referred to as Municipal Solid Waste or MSW for short): Waste collected by waste collection authorities (see below) from households and traders/ businesses or deposited at household waste recycling centres/ Civic amenity sites. It is the responsible of the waste disposal authority (see below) to manage the municipal waste arising within their area. |
|
National Nature Reserve: |
NNR |
National Nature Reserves were established to protect some of our most important habitats, species, and geology, and to provide “outdoor laboratories” for research. There are currently 221 NNRs in England with a total area of over 105,00 hectares. |
|
Park Mark |
The Safer Parking Scheme is a national standard for UK car parks that have low crime and measures in place to ensure the safety of people and vehicles. Each car park undergoes a rigorous assessment by specially trained police assessors and a Park Mark is awarded to each car park that achieves the challenging standards. A park mark is awarded to parking facilities that have met the requirements of a risk assessment conducted by the Police, meaning the operator has put in place measures that deter criminal activity an anti-social behaviour. |
|
|
Secured by Design |
SBD |
The official police security initiative that is owned by the UK Police Service with the specific aim to reduce crime and help people live more safely. The police seek to improve the physical security of buildings using products, such as doors, windows, locks and walling systems that meet SBD security requirements. In addition, the Police include proven crim prevention techniques and measure into the layout and landscaping of new developments, such as maximising natural surveillance and limiting excessive through movement. |
|
Setting of a heritage asset |
The surrounding in which a heritage asset is experiencing. Its extent is not fixed and may change as the asset and its surrounding evolve. Elements of a setting may make a positive or negative contribution to the significance of an asset, may affect the ability to appreciate that significance or may be neutral. |
|
|
Significance (for heritage policy) |
The vale of a heritage asset to this and future generation because of its heritage interest. The interest may be archaeological, architectural, artistic or historic. Significance derives not only from a heritage asset’s physical presence, but also from its settings. |
|
|
Site of Importance for Nature Conservation: |
SINC |
These are the most important areas for ecology and/or geology outside of sites with statutory protection. They are broadly of a quality to be important within the Birmingham and Black Country sub-region. The schedule of SINCs in Birmingham and the Black Country is maintained by the Local Sites Partnership. |
|
Site of Local Importance for Nature Conservation: |
SLINC |
These sites are broadly of a quality to be of importance for ecology and/or geology at the borough/city level. The schedule of SLINCs in Birmingham and the Black Country is maintained by the Local Sites Partnership. |
|
Site of Special Scientific Interest: |
SSSI |
A formal conservation designation describes an area that’s of particular interest to science due to the rare species of fauna and flora it contains, as well as important geological or physiological features that are within the designation area. |
|
Special Areas of Conservation: |
SACs |
Strictly protected sites designated under the EC Habitats Directive. The habitat types and species for which these sites are designated, are those considered to be most in need of conservation at a European level. |
|
Social Cohesion |
The extent of connectedness and solidarity among groups in society. |
|
|
Strategic Flood Risk Assessment: |
SFRA |
A study to assess the risk to an area or site from flooding, now and in the future, and to assess the impact that any changes or development on the site or area will have on flood risk to the site and elsewhere. It may also identify, particularly at more local levels, how to manage those changes to ensure that flood risk is not increased. The Dudley SFRA identifies those areas that have 'low', 'medium' and 'high' probability of flooding and recommends possible flood risk mitigation solutions where flood risk has been identified as a potential constraint to future development. |
|
Sustainable Development: |
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It is central to the economic, environmental and social success of the country and is the core principle underpinning planning. Simply stated, the principle recognises the importance of ensuring that all people should be able to satisfy their basic needs and enjoy a better quality of life, both now and in the future. |
|
|
Urban Greening: |
Public landscaping and urban forestry projects that increase the number of green spaces within cities. |
|
|
Urban Historic Landscape Characterisation: |
UHLC |
A method of identification and interpretation of the varying historic character within an urban area that looks beyond individual heritage assets as it brigades understanding of the whole landscape and townscape. |
|
Wheeling |
An equivalent alternative to foot/pedestrian-based mobility, for example the use of wheelchairs and mobility scooters or other mobility aids (that are similar to the speed of walking). |