Construction News

Fri April 26 2024

Related Information

Council takes noisy contractor to court

10 Nov 14 Building contractor Watkin Jones & Son has been fined £6,000 and ordered to pay more than £3,000 for making too much noise on a site in Brighton.

Artist's impression of the finished development
Artist's impression of the finished development

It is the second time that the council has prosecuted the contractor for noise pollution on this site.

Bangor-based Watkin Jones & Son is redeveloping the former Co-op building at 94-103 London Road, Brighton, turning it into student accommodation for the University of Sussex.

The council imposed a condition that construction work be limited to between 8am and 6pm Monday to Friday and 9am to 1pm on Saturday. However, local residents have complained about noise through weekends, early in the morning and late at night.

Noise included lorries moving about late at night, the noise of nail guns and saws all day Saturday, a generator running until 10pm, builders throwing items from the top floor of the new building down into a skip at ground level, skips being collected at 6.30am in the morning and forklift trucks continuously using reversing bleepers straight into a resident’s living room.

The case was in front of Eastbourne magistrates on Friday 7th November. Watkin Jones & Son, of LLandegai Industrial Estate, Bangor, was not represented in court, but a director acknowledged the summonses and indicated a guilty plea.

Related Information

The company was convicted of four charges of breaching section 61 of the Control of Pollution Act 1974 and fined £1,500 for each offence. It was instructed to pay costs of £3,511.48 to the council and a victim surcharge of £120.

The court heard that the company was convicted of two similar charges last year in respect of the same site when they were ordered to pay fines and costs totalling £2,900.00.

Brighton & Hove City Council’s environmental protection team prosecuted the company in November last year for noise but it continued to cause problems, failing to respond to numerous letters and warnings from the council and ignoring a ‘Section 61’ agreement to minimise noise for residents and restrict hours of construction work. Council officers witnessed the noise outside working hours and responded to residents’ numerous complaints.

Councillor Pete West, chair of the city’s environment committee, said: “Large redevelopments such as this one should be carried out within reasonable hours and with consideration to people living nearby. This company has given residents no respite, with noise from the site seven days a week causing considerable stress and disturbance. We had no hesitation in taking legal action to protect residents and make sure the company, which agreed to control noise from the site, takes steps to do so.”

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »