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Bramley’s Against the Grain to open second bar in Yeadon

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swinnow grange mills
Swinnow Grange Mills. Photo: Google

by Don Mort, local democracy reporter

A popular bar will expand into a second venue after an application for a new premises licence was successful.

Against the Grain, which opened two years ago in Bramley, is set to open a new premises in Yeadon.

An application for the sale of alcohol at the venue at Regency House on Kirk Lane was granted by Leeds City Council’s licensing sub-committee.

A hearing on Tuesday was told the application had attracted one letter of objection on the grounds of public nuisance. The hours alcohol will be sold were reduced to 11am-10pm each day.

Owen Wilson, the dedicated premises supervisor, told the hearing: “We are not a club. We’re not a city centre bar. We are trying to build a local community pub that people feel safe to come to. We want to operate a business that will stand the test of time.”

Against the Grain has an existing venue at Swinnow Grange Mills, Stanningley Road, Bramley. As reported by WLD last June, the owners received planning permission to expand the premises following a successful opening two years ago.

Against The Grain offers craft beers, cocktails and food including pizza, meat and cheese platters.

The new licence application was granted, subject to conditions agreed with the council.

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Armley nets £75k town centres cash to help boost footfall

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armley town street
Which way next for Armley Town Street? Photograph copyright Phil Kirby/theculturevulture.co.uk

Armley is set to benefit from a £75,000 grant to boost trade and the vitality of the Town Street area, council documents have revealed.

Leeds City Council’s local centres programme has awarded the money to Armley as part of an overall city-wide programme to support the vitality, viability and resilience of town and local centres.

It hasn’t been decided exactly what the money should be spent on in Armley, but a council report released this week says initial ideas include:

  • Introducing signage at the bottom of Branch Road to welcome people to Armley Town Street shopping area;
  • Increasing the number of street markets on Armley Moor and Town Street and the creation of flexible public realm areas to enable this;
  • Improved street lighting on Armley Town Street;
  • Provision of public toilets on Armley Town Street.

The report adds that Armley councillors have agreed to use the £75,000 as match funding towards a separate £2.9 million scheme to revitalise Town Street, funded by Active Travel England, the government’s executive agency responsible for making walking, wheeling and cycling the preferred choice for people to get around.

The scheme was announced last May and WLD understands could include the partial pedestrianisation of Town Street and the installation of a bus gate. Public consultation – which was called for in July last year – is still to be held over the £2.9m scheme, with last week’s Armley Forum meeting being told no consultation would be held until after May’s local elections.

The local centres report published yesterday added: “The £75k of [local centres] funds will create added value to the Armley Town Street Active Travel scheme with a series of project ideas being promoted by the Armley ward members in conjunction with local stakeholders that will generate additional footfall to the town centre thereby supporting local businesses and the local economy.”

It is anticipated that work on the main Active Travel Armley Town Street scheme will start on site towards the end of the 2024/25 financial year and be completed by the end of the 2025 calendar year.

The local centres report can be read in full here.

WLD reported in 2018 that local centres funding was originally due to be spent on a ‘New Wortley Gateway’ scheme. Improvements includes potential green space and public realm enhancements to the corner of Green Lane and Tong Road, but it is understood those proposals never progressed.

Farsley Celtic submits plans for new artificial pitch

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The Citadel is the home of Farsley Celtic.

Bosses at Farsley Celtic Football Club have submitted plans for what they say will be a ‘world-class’ artificial pitch to replace the existing sub-standard grass playing surface.

The club says the proposals feature the latest in synthetic turf technology, with the highest specification shock pad and drainage facility underneath. The planning application says it will have a FIFA 2* grading and feature bio-degradable cork infill as opposed to the usual rubber crumb found on other artificial pitches.

It’s hoped the installation of a new state of the art artificial pitch will allow the club’s deaf, women’s and numerous youth teams to use the facilities all year round and cement the club’s position as a sports hub at the heart of the community. Farsley Celtic currently runs more than 40 teams for a wide range of age groups.

A design and access statement submitted with the application stated: “Unfortunately many of the facilities at the club are dated and becoming obsolete.

“The most important asset at any club is its pitch. The one at Farsley is over 40 years old and is now becoming a major liability, threatening the club’s existence. The substructure is beginning to collapse due to its age and the amount of use it has had. It no longer meets the stringent National League specifications, and has been labelled as dangerous.”

In a social media post, chairman and owner Paul Barthorpe said the proposals were a ‘significant financial investment’ in the club’s infrastructure.

He said: “This development is essential to ensure the long-term survival of our club, for a number of reasons:

“Firstly, our current pitch is old, it cuts up very badly and despite the tireless efforts our groundsman it is in desperate need of replacing. We have lost significant revenues from games being called off due to poor weather, and the continued risk of injury is always there.

“Secondly, our grassroots, development and academy teams currently don’t get to train or play at the club, which is totally wrong for a community club such as ours. They should be training and playing at our home and learning what we are all about and what representing a true family and community club is all about, and making lifelong memories with our club at the centre of that.

“Thirdly, our deaf team can only play on a synthetic surface between the months of November and February, which again currently means that we can’t be fully inclusive to a number of our teams with special requirements, which is wholly unacceptable. We are also looking to massively grow our pan-disability footballing activities over the next few years and we need a synthetic pitch to be able to do this.

“Fourthly, The cost implication of all of the academy, grassroots, development, deaf and our mens and ladies first teams training and playing away from our home is huge. These monies would be saved and reinvested back into the club to help it develop and grow further.

“So this exciting development is essential to ensure not only the long-term survival of our club, but also to be able to offer a better and safer environment for all of our pitch’s users and to allow us to be more inclusive to those who need the specialist facilities we don’t currently have.”

Leeds City Council is aiming to decide the application by Wednesday, 15 May 2024.

The plans can be viewed in full here.

Farsley Celtic is also preparing separate planning applications to install new LED floodlights at the ground, which is situated off Newlands, and another for a fully integrated digital scoreboard system. There are also plans to install new indoor pitches on the existing pitch behind the sports hall.

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Edwardian book reveals tragedy and trouble at Armley mill

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John McGoldrick, Leeds Museums and Galleries’ curator of industrial history, with the accident book in Armley.

An Edwardian accident book detailing the harrowing injuries and tragic deaths suffered by workers who toiled in one of the world’s largest textile mills has been discovered in Leeds.

The fascinating trove of historic employee records was found stashed in a box by curators at Leeds Industrial Museum, in Armley, which was once a massive, globally renowned hub for wool and fabric production.

Carefully listed within were scores of incidents which lay bare the harsh working conditions and gruelling lifestyle endured by the city’s textile workers shortly after the turn of the 20th century.

Among the tragedies described is the sad death of 44-year-old William Bell, who in February of 1905 was killed when a milling machine he was moving with his fellow workers unexpectedly toppled onto him.

The looms at Armley Mills.

A newspaper report at the time described the death as a “tragic accident” and said Mr Bell and his colleague Albert Holdsworth had been moving a cloth milling device weighing around two tonnes from one side of a room to the other using rollers.

It added: “Suddenly, and without warning, the machine fell onto Bell and Holdsworth. Assistance was immediately at hand and the unfortunate men were extricated with difficulty.”

Mr Bell, who had worked at Armley for four years, was killed instantly, leaving behind a wife and three children, while his co-worker suffered an injury to his left leg. Sadly, the records reveal that was not the only death recorded at the site.

In 1909, W. Hinchcliffe, a 40 year-old engineer, was also killed while removing the firebars, used to support fuel, from a boiler before a formal inspection in September 1909.

Other workers suffered many more injuries including severed fingers and a fall down the stairs while carrying a warp, which was used to prepare fabric for weaving. Later incidents saw Doris Gatenby, an 18-year-old weaver, fall foul of a common accident in weaving departments, when in May 1922 she received a cut near her temple after a shuttle flew out of a loom and hit her on the head. And in September 1935 filler and minder Edna Atkinson had three fingers of her left hand crushed in the rollers of a ‘Scotch Feed’ carding engine.

In June 1937, William H. Waddington, a spinner, also fractured his arm while repairing the leather belt on a loom. Also included in the documents, which all date from when the mill was owned and operated by Bentley and Tempest, is a list of the names and addresses for workers who, despite the harsh conditions, were aged under 16 and under 18.

John McGoldrick, Leeds Museums and Galleries’ curator of industrial history, said: “We know that for hundreds of years, the museum was a bustling, hugely productive centre for the manufacture of textiles, which employed hundreds of people from the local area.

“But until now, we haven’t known a great deal about the individuals who worked here, so finding these documents is a real treasure trove of information from which we can start to build a much more complete picture of life at the mill.

“In particular, seeing such stark details of the injuries and deaths suffered by workers here more than a century ago paints a very vivid picture of how difficult and gruelling their working conditions must have been, and helps us to better understand the impact of the textile trade on the lives of people in Leeds.”

Built in at least the 1600s, Armley Mills was bought in the late 1700s by Colonel Thomas Lloyd, a Leeds cloth merchant. He expanded operations on the site dramatically, so much so that Armley was soon the world’s biggest mill of its kind.

Although production ended in 1969, the site reopened as Leeds Industrial Museum in 1982 and today displays vintage machinery including traditional looms and other textile equipment once used by workers.

£51m Dawsons Corner scheme: Work ‘could start in summer’

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Scheme: Dawsons Corner. Photo: Google

A £51.9 million scheme to reduce waiting times and introduce a raft of road improvements at Dawsons Corner and along Stanningley Bypass has moved a step closer to reality.

A council report has revealed the final design layout of the scheme, and given the go ahead to submit a final business case to the Department for Transport to inject funds into the major highways project.

The scheme includes:

  • Improved pedestrian and cycling facilities at the Dawsons Corner junction linking in with the Leeds Bradford Cycle Superhighway
  • Improved bus facilities with dedicated bus lanes on the A647 Bradford Road;
  • Widening the carriageway on the A6120 Ring Road to improve the junction and accommodate a shared pedestrian/cycle route;
  • Widening the A647 Stanningley Bypass to accommodate additional traffic lanes;
  • Replace joints on the A647 Stanningley Bypass to avoid carriageway buckling in hot weather;
  • Deliver landscape mitigation for the removal of some trees at Dawsons Corner.
A draft of the final scheme at Dawsons Corner.

Work is expected to start in summer 2024, subject to the Department of Transport agreeing a final business case to fund the scheme. There will be an 18-month construction period, with completion scheduled for winter 2025/26.

The government is set to provide £43.446m and West Yorkshire Combined Authority has injected up to £8.48m to enable works to be carried out.

The council report added: “The resultant scheme will reduce congestion and delays at this junction helping to support economic growth across Leeds and Bradford. The reduction in congestion will also lead to a better environment in terms of improved air quality.”

The council has also given the go ahead to award a contract to carry out the works. As previously reported by WLD, the scheme also involves purchasing land next to Dawson’s Corner, known as workhouse charity land and owned by the Calverley Charity.

A planning application for the scheme was approved in October 2022. The scheme was one of a number across the region delayed by West Yorkshire Combined Authority due to spiralling costs in 2022.

You can read the full report here.

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WLD community quiz night returns – but has new venue

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Venue: The Owl, Rodley.

Are you a quiz-night king or queen? Here’s your chance to have some fun and meet the West Leeds Dispatch team at our latest community quiz night.

Join us for our friendly and relaxed quiz at the The Owl Inn, Rodley on Wednesday24 April at 8pm.

Quiz night fun. Photo: Simon Cullingworth

Bring your friends, meet fellow Dispatch readers, our board, community reporters and editor for an informal evening and test your general knowledge against quizmistress Jill Stocks’ challenging questions. 

There will be prizes and food and it’s free to enter.

Slideshow: Farnley Reservoir clean up retrieves prams, knives and bike

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Some of the volunteers carrying out the clean-up at Farnley Balancing Reservoir.

Volunteers found a pram, bike, pushchair and knives as they carried out a clean-up of Farnley Balancing Reservoir at the weekend.

WLD last week reported on residents’ concerns over household items and litter being dumped in to balancing reservoir, which prevents flooding further down the Wortley Beck catchment area.

This weekend a group of magnet fishers decided to do something about it – and have shared photos of what they found. View the slideshow below:

Brian Woolhouse told WLD: “We, as a group of magnet fishers, attack the spot and successfully managed to get several trollies out, a multitude of kids’ play vehicles, several knives, bike, pushchairs and many other things.

“Quite a few people commented on what we were doing and gave us a lot of praise. There are other areas which we could not get to sadly – hopefully whoever owns the reservoir [Yorkshire Water] will take note of what we had done. The group had consisted of Magnet Fishing for Amateurs, 1Man1Magnet and the 4 Magneteers.

“Overall it was a very rewarding day, this being the second environmental clean up we had done in seven days – the other being Ross Mills in Rodley where somebody fly tipped TVs, windows, doors and general rubbish.”

The knives will be handed over to the relevant authorities.

Yorkshire Water said last week that they are ‘looking at longer-term plans for the reservoir’.

Bramley Care Bears promise Easter family fun

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Venue: Broadlea Community Centre

By Paul Abraham

It will be Easter fun all the way at the Broadlea Community Centre in Bramley this Saturday (30 March), as the Bramley Care Bears are hosting their free Easter event, which will run from 1pm to 3pm.

The fun includes an Easter egg hunt, the making of Easter cards and a “name the bunny” event which entry costs a mere 50p and could result in you taking the bunny home with you.

There will be free juice available for children and a hot dog, with or without onions free for everyone attending while a good cup of tea or coffee will cost just a pound a cup.

It promises to be a memorable and enjoyable event.

Contact Angela McConnell on 07805 225 270 for further details.

Check out WLD‘s what’s on section for more events in West Leeds.

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Volunteer Wombles target Bramley streets

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Bramley Wombles have been busy this weekend.

Volunteers turned out in force for the Bramley Wombles’ community litter pick covering the Rossefields and Landseers.

Alongside a number of solo litter pickers in other areas of Bramley and Stanningley, 40 bags of rubbish were collected by 16 volunteers as part of the city-wide litter picking initiative, Leeds Goes Purple. 

It was a real intergenerational turnout with young and older people getting involved, said Councillor Kevin Ritchie (Lab, Bramley & Stanningley).

“It has been a fantastic Bramley contribution to Leeds Goes Purple, a huge thank you to everybody involved,” he said. “We have made a positive difference to keeping Bramley & Stanningley litter free.”

Leeds City Council’s Cleaner Neighbourhoods team will collect the bags and additional fly tipping.

More information on how you can get involved with the Bramley Wombles can be found here.

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Kirkstall: Area off A65 no longer an air quality concern

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Clean air: The Normans, in Kirkstall. Photo: Google

An area of Kirkstall will no longer be one of six air quality management zones across Leeds, a council report has said.

The Normans, situated off the busy A65, was has been an air quality management area (AQMA) since 2010 which has been closely monitored for the quality of its environment – but the council now says air quality has improved in five of the those areas and they no longer need close management.

The report says local authorities have a duty to monitor the quality of air, produce an annual status report and designate special management areas known as where pollutants exceed UK targets.

It adds: “Comprehensive monitoring within the AQMA’s has identified that air quality within five of the AQMAs is now within UK objectives and has been consistently so, for a number of years.”

Monitoring results for 2020 were disregarded due to the Covid lockdown restrictions in place that year, which significantly reduced vehicle traffic and commercial activity.

The report concluded: “The revocation of AQMA status does not mean that air quality monitoring will cease. Monitoring will continue at the same locations for the foreseeable future to ensure continued compliance with UK objectives and to identify any future trends in air quality.”

The five AQMA’s being revoked are:

  • Ebor Gardens, Burmantofts
  • Caspar Apartments, Little London
  • The Normans, Kirkstall
  • The Tilburys, Holbeck
  • Chapel Hill, Morley

The air quality management area in Pool-in-Wharfedale will remain in place.

The report can be read in full here.

In photos: The Goit runs brown and strong from Kirkstall

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The Goit running brown and strong from Kirkstall and Bramley blooms braving the wind have been captured by photographer Susan Tellum.

Here’s a slideshow of some of her photos:

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West Leeds planning applications: 24 March 2024

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Each week we publish a list of the latest planning applications related to the six council wards in West Leeds.

The following new applications were published on the Leeds City Council website in the past seven days:

Armley Ward

Bramley & Stanningley Ward

Calverley & Farsley Ward

Farnley & Wortley Ward

Kirkstall Ward

Pudsey Ward


Decided applications

Here are the planning applications decided by Leeds City Council this week:

Armley Ward

Bramley & Stanningley Ward

Calverley & Farsley Ward

Farnley & Wortley Ward

Kirkstall Ward

Pudsey Ward

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