PINHOE VILLAGE

FORUM AND COMMUNITY SUPPORT
In 2019, members of the new Pinhoe Village history group raised urgent concerns about the loss of local wildlife and the density and speed of local housing development

A sub-group elected as the Pinhoe Forum began to investigate the neighbourhood planning process with a steering group including representatives from Pinhoe’s community groups, charities and local councillors.

In first meetings with Exeter City Council, officers outlined the considerable demands and difficulties of undertaking Neighbourhood Planning and suggested working with the Council on a project basis instead.

BOUNDARY COMPLICATIONS
Pinhoe’s boundaries raise problems in defining the neighbourhood area: Pinhoe’s community field and Scout Hut cross into East Devon, residential streets are split in two by the district boundary and Westclyst, considered part of Pinhoe’s community despite being in East Devon, is already part of the Broadclyst Neighbourhood Plan and cannot be included.

TRAFFIC
The Forum’s Sustainable Travel Group held a public Traffic Meeting in February 2020, to discuss the community’s traffic concerns. Well supported by over 70 local residents, the meeting was also attended by County Councillor Hilary Ackland, Co-Cars and the Exeter Cycling Campaign.

This was followed by a Traffic Survey, completed by more than 160 people locally with over 170 detailed comments (see survey results, here).

Pinhoe Forum began a Community Speedwatch Team between lockdowns which was taken up by the local County Councillor in June 2022; volunteers continue to monitor traffic levels across Pinhoe, building a citizens science evidence base.

In 2021, Pinhoe Forum secured funding from Vision Zero for a mobile Speed Activation unit following consultation which identified residents’ safety concerns in three main areas: Main Road, Tithebarn Way and Harrington Lane. Full survey report here

COVID 2020-22
A month after Pinhoe’s Traffic Meeting, the Covid pandemic became a national emergency. When lockdowns were announced in March 2020, members of both the Forum and Pinhoe Village set up the Community Support Helpline. Quickly established with over 70 volunteers, the Helpline team stepped up to support the community when other local membership organisations were shielding and unable to operate.

GREEN SPACES
Higher Field on Church Hill was threatened with extended development in 2021 and Pinhoe Forum was approached by local residents keen to coordinate a community response. The Forum launched a petition which was supported by over 2100 signatories from across Exeter, triggering the opportunity to present our case for the field’s protection to a full council meeting. Following unanimous support by Council members, Pinhoe’s petition was sent for further examination by the Scrutiny Committee.

Working with Exeter Greenspaces Group (EGG) and local residents, Pinhoe Forum proposed a Ridgeline Park across the Northern Hills, connecting Exeter’s Mincinglake Valley Park to the Clyst Valley Park in East Devon, as an urban nature recovery network. Further info here

POST-PANDEMIC
Following continuing support for the Community Helpline and a dedicated volunteering team, the Pinhoe Village group is transitioning to a new community enterprise: www.pinhoevillage.org

Pinhoe Forum remains a Forum for Ideas. This public information resource is being developed as a Knowledge Exchange project by Kate Jago, working with the Pinhoe Citizens Panel: researching, commissioning and collecting evidence to inform and support a collective approach to decision-making. 

Northern Hills Campaign

The campaign begins HERE > Trees, hedges and fields along the top of Pinhoe are full of history, from Armada Beacons to Saxon Hoards and battle sites. They’re a network for wildlife and safeguard biodiversity in bramble-wild spaces.

Cheynegate Lane, tracking along the boundary fringe, is a magnificent holloway and one of the very few remaining (almost) intact in Pinhoe. Along its edges you can trace evidence of the Crackington Formation: deep time geology connecting all the way to the Jurassic coast, with resources of clay famously exploited by Pinhoe’s Brickworks.

The top of the village has magnificent views of the Exe estuary, which often surprise visitors from the rest of the city. When the wind blows in, you can breathe the sea air.

Local people walk these fields every day. Paths and bridleways are well worn and much loved. There are footpaths connecting to Beacon Heath, lined with fantastic high Devon hedgerows bursting with biodiversity along a quiet road which would make a wonderful Green Lane.

That’s why our campaign begins here: to protect these natural resources for all our community we need a STRATEGIC PLAN.

BUT THE CAMPAIGN IS FOR ALL OF PINHOE > Take a look at the holloway in Monkerton, along historic Pinn Lane which has been cut in two, cutting off safe access for pedestrians and cyclists, degraded by developers loading soil to its edge until sections collapse.

This is what it looked like in May 2019
And this is what it looked like in February 2020, with soil from the Sandrock development stored right up to its edge and collapsing through to the path

And Gypsy Hill Lane – look at the concrete steps which cut this historic path in two! The road at the top is one of the main routes into East Devon and was designed, agreed and put in place by the Monkerton Masterplan.

This was already happening in July 2019 and no amount of conversations with the site manager of Linden Homes was getting anything done to safeguard this beautiful lane

If you have photos to document the destruction of Pinhoe’s network of historic paths and hedgerows, please get in touch: mail@portfoliofive.co.uk

Ongoing research

A sorts of new models for participatory democracy have developed since the mutual aid movement transformed traditional community groups. Along with citizen assemblies, doughnut economics and lots of reports confirming the importance of place-making and its impact on wellbeing, here are a few interesting links:

• A useful new platform for community groups, to encourage participatory democracy, consultation and even enable crowdfunding > https://www.vocaleyes.org/

• We’re not alone in feeling like a village within our city: here’s the manifesto of a group building on the mutual aid community model we’ve been a part of, helping to build micro-local communications for communities > https://villageinthecity.net/manifesto/

• Sheffield’s amazing GREY TO GREEN project > showing how funding could be brought together to transform road space into green space > http://www.greytogreen.org.uk/phase_1.html

• There’s great enthusiasm to find a space in Pinhoe for a circle of blossom trees inspired by the National Trust’s project > https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/features/helping-communities-blossom?