Balerno Community Council
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Local Place Plan survey

9/5/2026

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LOCAL PLACE PLAN UPDATE: Mark Galloway, Local Place Plan project leader on behalf of Balerno Community Council, outlines aspects of the recent survey to a local resident at the Balerno Gala

LATEST: Public meeting on the Local Place Plan on Thursday, July 9 (7.30pm) in St Joseph Hall next to Balerno Parish Church

Balerno is pro-improvement and the local residents want better schools, healthcare, facilities, affordable and appropriate housing, and environmental enhancement. Balerno is not anti-change but clearly anti-expansion.  
That is the overriding finding of a recent survey conducted as a working group prepares a Local Place Plan (PPP) to submit to the City of Edinburgh Council by September.
Residents firmly oppose Green Belt development, large-scale housing growth and infrastructure lagging behind development.
Locals want preservation over expansion, better basics (roads, access, healthcare) before new development and a more inclusive, accessible, and community-focused village .
The responses on the Main Street point clearly toward physical prevention and consistent enforcement, a real change, as without both, rules are ignored and safety concerns persist
The feedback for Balerno High School is unusually consistent and this is not a “minor upgrade” situation.
The community expects either a new school or a transformational overhaul, combined with safer transport and stronger community integration.
Physical infrastructure in Dean Park School is lagging behind population growth, traffic is the most urgent day-to-day problem and people want a modern, community-focused, future-proof school.
The biggest opportunities are youth provision, upgrading of existing assets (parks, school, library) and the creation a true community hub.
On the potential proposal for a church being built opposite Balerno High School, residents want any future proposal to demonstrate careful consideration of alternative sites, robust mitigation of traffic and parking impacts and clear justification for development on greenfield land, in the context of strong community resistance. Failure to address these issues is likely to result in continued and significant local opposition.
The Pentlands are highly-valued, but visitor pressure is now exceeding what current management can handle. People are not asking for major development, they are asking for stronger protection, better basic infrastructure, clear rules with real enforcement and careful balance between access and preservation
Ravelrig Quarry, operated by Tarmac, produced a layered opinion. The community isn’t divided and everyone wants green/nature, most want access, some want activities, almost none want housing or landfill.
The safest and most supported direction is a rewilded, accessible country park with carefully integrated recreation.
Overall, residents are saying: “We like Balerno, but the infrastructure hasn’t kept up, and what we have needs modernising.”
Residents are not asking for major transformation, they overwhelmingly want protection of what exists, better maintenance, targeted improvements (paths, play, trees, amenities) and any strategy should therefore focus on “protect, maintain, enhance” rather than “develop.”
THE NEXT STEP: BCC want to thank everyone who responded to the consultation and a working group has been tasked with reviewing all responses. They will put forward draft proposals based on comments submitted. 
BCC had survey results available for view at the recent Gala Day on May 23 and residents can also give their opinion at the next Balerno Farmers’ Market on June 13. A public meeting will be held on Thursday, July 9.
After this, LPP will be written and agreed by the BCC and made available for public viewing before submission to CEC. 

For more details and documents look at the Local Place Plan section.

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Balerno Community Council, May meeting summary

8/5/2026

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Proceedings at Balerno Community Council’s monthly meeting on 7 May were dominated by debate on preparation of the village’s LOCAL PLACE PLAN (LPP) with one issue in particular dominating discussion, that being the possibility of development by St Mungo’s Church on their field opposite Balerno High School on Bridge Road.
Members of the public joined in the debate which was sometimes passionate despite BCC chairman Richard Henderson reminding all present that no application for planning permission had yet been submitted to the City of Edinburgh Council by St Mungo’s. 
The meeting was advised that a public meeting would be held when the LPP was sufficiently developed to allow for informed exchanges. At present work was being undertaken by a BCC working group to provide an overview of the local place plan. 
The views of local people, he said, would be taken into account and Mark Galloway, who is leading the community council’s LPP team, outlined steps which have already been taken to canvas local opinion. These include a survey to which more than 200 locals have responded, and canvasing at recent Farmers’ Markets in Balerno.
Members of the public said that the issue had come to the fore because of recent articles in the local press and Galloway said that it was important to get feedback from locals as the LPP feeds into the 2040 plan for the City of Edinburgh.
The deadline for final submission of the LPP to the City Council is September and issues raised so far by local people include the preservation of the Green Belt, public transport, schools, the future of the nearby quarry, issues surrounding the Main Street, including parking, speeding, and infrastructure.
All comments have been logged in a spreadsheet which now contains hundreds of suggestions and that information is currently being collated by the working group which meets regularly.
To speed up the process, Galloway has used AI, and he also confirmed that the Community Council would be represented at local events, including the Farmers’ Market and the up-coming Gala Day, so that locals can provide their views on the future of Balerno. 
A member of the public stressed the need for transparency in the LPP process and another told the council: “A lot of people are now waking up to the Local Place Plan and their views need to be reflected.”
Galloway said a date for a public meeting would be widely publicised and added: “The public still have an opportunity to feed into the LPP.
COUNCILLORS REPORT: City of Edinburgh Councillor, Graeme Bruce, attended part of the June BCC meeting and two issues were raised by members of the public, the need for double yellow lines on Bridge Road to prevent parking outside Balerno High School, a real concern for parents, and the need for a crossing at Bavelaw Road, once again for the safety of school children.
RATS: Residents attending the meeting reported that rats had been seen as far down the village as the entry to the woods near Cockburn Crescent and chairman, Richard Henderson, said that would be communicated to the City of Edinburgh Council.
TREES AT WILLIOW TREE PLACE: Richard Henderson, chair, said that the issued would once again be raised with the relevant department of the council, but it was up to local people to keep pressing this.
WEEDS: The Council will also raise again with CEC the perennial issue of weed control. 
GREEN BRIDGE: Phil Thomas, Chair of Balerno Pathways Limited, updated the Council on the current position in which the a company is in discussion with its consulting engineers about final sign off of the bridge. The company is also undertaking finishing work on the piers and balustrades. 
RAVELRIG QUARRY AND TARMAC: Lawyers representing BCC and Tarmac, who operate the Ravelrig Quarry, are in on-going discussions to conclude a Good Neighbour Agreement.
WELCOME STATION: Emma Galloway, chair of the Balerno Village Trust, said work was progressing on completion of refurbishing of the former Police Station,  including toilet provision – there will public access – installation of solar panels, drainage, creation of office space, and provision for an after-school club and for public meetings. A space had been found for a coffee machine.
CURRIE CHIEFTAINS: BCC congratulated Currie rugby club on reaching a the Cup Final at Murrayfield, and on a tremendous match in which they lost very narrowly to Ayr.       
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