Lidl decision deferred at packed meeting
Daniel HodgsonCouncillors have deferred making a decision on a new Lidl store, over proposals to close a nearby road for traffic management.
The proposed Middlesbrough store, where the now demolished Northern School of Art used to be, was debated in front of a packed public gallery on Thursday.
Members of the town's planning committee were unhappy about plans to close Thackeray Grove and wanted a "satisfactory" alternative to be achieved.
Lidl's planning agent spoke of the potential multi-million pound investment in Linthorpe, creating new jobs and making use of a brownfield site.
The heated debate lasted more than 75 minutes, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.
A majority of the letters received, as part of the consultation process, were in support of the store.
Members had been recommended by council officers to accept the plans for the Lidl-owned site on the corner of Green Lane and Roman Road.
Daniel HodgsonSimon Thompson, from the Labour-led council's highways department, said if plans were approved, Thackeray would be shut at the point where it meets Green Lane, with a "three-arm signal controlled junction" on the remaining Green Lane and Roman Road.
Ian Morrish of the Middlesbrough Independent Councillors Association (MICA) queried whether signalisation of the staggered junction would negate the need to close off Thackeray Grove.
Thompson said the "more arms" put into a signalised junction, the more delays there are.
He said Roman Road and Thackeray Grove would not be able to run at the same time, meaning "much more delay, much more frustration", and longer waits for pedestrians.
Residents previously voiced safety concerns about the closure of Thackeray, specifically the impact it would have on Walton Avenue and Kingston Avenue.
Lidl GBLabour councillor Julia Rostron proposed a deferral of plans until "further consideration" was given to the proposal to close Thackeray Grove, to look for an "alternative" that was "satisfactory to both the council and the residents".
Plans to defer were unanimously agreed by the planning committee.
Previous applications by Lidl were rejected in 2023 and 2024.
