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Long used as shorthand for a bland, patriarchal, suburban type of nostalgia, I actually feel like “Leave it to Beaver”, the TV series, has mostly been reevaluated, with its stubbornly child’s point of view, well-meaning fatherly advice that unerringly causes more problems than it solves, mom who often seems to be on her last nerve, and of course obnoxious teenage hipster Eddie Haskell.
LEAVE IT TO BEAVER WALLY SERIES
In 1960-61, Cleary was the obvious choice to adapt “Beaver” into a series of tie-in novelizations to the TV show. When I have reviewed Beverly Cleary’s work here in the past, I have opened by invoking “Leave It To Beaver,” and it’s not just because both works present a kid-centric view of growing up in the 1950s and 60s. Mrs Polletti said residents had been delighted when TMBC councillors had voted unanimously to refuse permission for the Hermitage Park extension in October.You’ve had fun watching Beaver on T.V. She said: "There is one other small area of woodland behind the DHL Depot, but that too has been shown as an area for development in TMBC's draft Local Plan." "There is one tiny area of woodland at the bottom of the Bunyards site, which NAAG managed to get a Tree Preservation Order on, that remains safe." The red outline shows the proposed development site adjacent to the rail-line "Most of these development falls within the Tonbridge and Malling borough, but they are right on the border with Maidstone, and their traffic will spill out into Maidstone. This was previously known as the Gladmans site, but in fact, Barrett David Wilson has recently acquired the land from Gladmans, bringing to a total of 1,406 homes in the immediate area that this company is now responsible for.Īngela Polletti of the New Allington Action Group (NAAG) said: "This latest scheme from Barretts leaves no part of the strategic gap unthreatened. To the north of Barming station, on a site that stretches from Hermitage Lane right across to the A20 London Road is an area that already has outline permission for 840 homes.
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To the west of the Bunyards site and south of Barming Station, lies residents' only hope of retaining some open space.Ĭroudace recently had its application for 330 homes rejected by Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council, (TMBC) but the developer is expected to appeal the decision, and since the borough has no Local Plan in place and cannot show that it has a five-year land supply, the odds are in favour of the developer.Ĭroudace sees the site as an extension to its newly built Hermitage Park estate, immediately to the south, where it has just completed 500 homes. Opposite the entrance to Beaver Road, on the other side of the A20 London Road, is the newly built Barrett Orchards Estate, comprising of 143 homes, though perhaps the Former Orchards Estate would have been a more appropriate name.
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Immediately to the east of the Bunyards site, also accessed from Beaver Road, lie fields on which Clarendon Homes has already gained planning permission for 106 homes. The area known as Bunyards, which covers 15 hectares of agricultural land north of Beaver Road is all that is left of the so-called strategic gap between Allington and Aylesford. The last remaining green space in Allington is shortly to become the subject of a planning application for 435 homes from developer Barratt David Wilson.