Category:
Impact on Views
Windmills planned for New Orleans' riverfront park
January 23, 2009 by Jen DeGregorio in The Times-Picayune
January 23, 2009 by Jen DeGregorio in The Times-Picayune
Along with the flower beds, trees and footpaths that are fundamental to any public park, the designs for a renovated New Orleans riverfront have some unexpected flourishes.
A field of modern windmills is slated for the east bank of the Mississippi River ...
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Impact on People|
Louisiana]
The council has moved to ban turbines from Battle Hill Regional Park near Pauatahanui, park land that was once part of a major wind farm proposal.
The rule change which is included in a revised draft of the park's management plan comes just five months after the council revoked permission for RES New Zealand to build three turbines in the park as part of a larger wind farm project.
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Impact on Landscape|
Australia / New Zealand]
The winds of skepticism gusted through the auditorium of Sir Wilfrid Laurier Collegiate last night as about 500 Scarborough residents gathered to learn more about a proposed wind power development off Toronto's eastern shoreline.
Toronto Hydro is considering a plan to install up to 60 wind turbines in Lake Ontario, on a natural reef two to four kilometres offshore.
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Impact on People|
Canada]
A campaign to stop a huge wind farm being built near Abbots Bromley has been dealt a blow after heritage experts claimed it did not pose a risk.
Council-hired consultants - in their first appraisal for 12 years - have ignored fears that plans to put up eight 115 metre-high turbines in Bagots Park could ruin the village's conservation area.
Instead, they say the damage caused to historic buildings by juggernauts rumbling down the high street is a more pressing concern.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
The region is also recognized as the heart of a long-running and contentious debate over whether the country's first offshore wind farm should be built in Nantucket Sound.
Now, the lead federal agency to review the proposal by Cape Wind Associates to build 130 wind turbines in the Sound has found that the project would have an "adverse effect" on the view from 28 historic properties as well as the ceremonial practices and traditional cultural sites of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) and Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe.
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Impact on Landscape|
Massachusetts]
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Groups question how MMS is handling Cape Wind historic preservation issue
December 25, 2008 by Jim Kinsella in Cape Cod Today
December 25, 2008 by Jim Kinsella in Cape Cod Today
In a Dec. 17 letter, the federal Advisory Council on Historic Preservation notified the U.S. Minerals Management Service, the lead federal agency for permitting the proposed 130-turbine wind farm on Horseshoe Shoal in Nantucket Sound, that the MMS needs to take account of historic preservation concerns linked to Cape Wind before or concurrently with issuing a record of decision on the wind farm, and not after. ...[The] council questions whether the agency has completed key aspects of that process, such as documenting to the Massachusetts state historic preservation officer its findings on the area of potential effects on historic properties posed by the wind farm.
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Impact on Landscape|
Massachusetts]
Town Of Westfield residents updated on visual impact assessment
December 11, 2008 by Sara Herrmann in The Observer
December 11, 2008 by Sara Herrmann in The Observer
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
New York]
Avista Corp. will delay building a wind farm south of Reardan by at least two years, citing the high cost of the wind turbines.
"This stuff is really expensive," said Hugh Imhof, a spokesman for the Spokane-based utility. "Why build a $125 million wind farm if we don't need it for another two years?"
Heritage agency hits out at attempt to extend windfarm
November 24, 2008 by Jamie Buchan in The Press and Journal
November 24, 2008 by Jamie Buchan in The Press and Journal
A bid to extend a controversial windfarm near a historic Banffshire castle has been criticised by Historic Scotland officials and council planning chiefs. ...Historic Scotland had raised concerns that the two turbines would have a "severe" visual impact on the unoccupied castle. ...The proposed turbine would be some 3,700ft from the castle, while the other two would be closer, around 2,600ft away.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Energiekontor Uk Ltd wants to put five 328ft (100m) turbines at Brightenber Hill near Gargrave, Skipton.
A 250-strong group of residents have formed Friends of Craven Landscape and are campaigning against the plans.
Craven Council has received 600 letters of objection and a 600-signature petition, but its planning committee has been asked to approve the plans.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Planned wind farm 'will kill the Vale countryside'
November 20, 2008 by Katie Thompson in Evesham Journal
November 20, 2008 by Katie Thompson in Evesham Journal
The skyline of the Vale of Evesham will be dominated and the countryside killed if a wind farm is built in Lenchwick, a newly-formed group has warned.
Vale Villagers Against Scottishpower (VVASP) are urging residents to find our more about the multi-million pound project - which could see up to 10 turbines, each 410 ft (125m) tall built in the Lenchwick area.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
City council takes stance on windmills viewshed issue
November 6, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
November 6, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
The city council doesn't want to see windmills surrounding Milton-Freewater.
Thursday morning, about six hours before a Umatilla County Planning Commission meeting to discuss windmills, the city council unanimously approved a resolution and letter to the commission declaring its "serious concern" with windmills going up in the viewshed along the Blue Mountains.
It asked the planning commission to come up with rules for where it places wind farms and power lines within the viewshed.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning|
Oregon]
Proposed wind turbine in Comstock stirs debate
September 29, 2008 by Karren Rhodes in Reno Gazette-Journal
September 29, 2008 by Karren Rhodes in Reno Gazette-Journal
Residents weighed the greenness of wind power with the amount of visual pollution that the tall towering structures could bring to the popular 1860s-era tourist destination communities in the Comstock Historic District, designated a National Historic District. ...If placed on the ridge lines as the company proposes, the wind "turbines would be highly visible from Virginia City, Gold Hill and American Flat," [resident Ron] Reno said.
Most of the wind turbine towers would be installed within the National Historic District and about half would in the Comstock Historic District.
The power of the people must be used to stop windmills from sullying the Tararua landscape - or the district will be ruined forever, Waitahora wind farm opposers say. ...[deputy chairman Stuart] Brown is urging people to read these submissions carefully.
Power companies want to remove the protection of natural features, such as the skyline of the ranges, currently included in the plan, Mr Brown said. And their suggestions that council should consider windmills as "key parts of the natural landscape" and view all rural areas as "industrial" are ludicrous, he said.
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Impact on Landscape|
Australia / New Zealand]
Protesters campaigning against a wind farm in the countryside straddling Barnsley and Sheffield have been dealt a blow with a fresh council report which suggests the benefits of the scheme would outweigh the visual impact.
The planning application for the five turbines, which would be 400ft tall, has gone to Barnsley Council because the land where they would be sited at Sheephouse Heights falls within the town's boundaries.
But they would be so close to the border with Sheffield that the council there has been asked to comment before the application is considered.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Citizens discuss frustration over wind turbines in Blue Mountains
September 21, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
September 21, 2008 by Samantha Bates in The East Oregonian
The idea of looking out onto the foothills of the Blue Mountains from Highway 11 or Milton-Freewater and seeing wind turbines sounds like a nightmare for some people who look at that view every day.
But not many of those people have had much of a chance to express their frustration.
Citizen Richard Jolly hosted a meeting Thursday in Milton-Freewater where many people got a chance to vet their frustrations and discuss their concerns.
A government "in a muddle" over its energy policy has been accused of allowing developers to make a fortune out of ruining the countryside. Ivor Russell, secretary of the Carmarthenshire branch of the Campaign for the Protection of Rural Wales, said ..."What will our children make of it if they look back in a desert of useless wind turbines that have been made redundant by other major factors like nuclear power?" said Mr Russell in an address to the branch's annual meeting in Llanarthne on Saturday.
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Impact on Landscape|
UK]
Wind farm plan stirring a whirlwind of questions
September 5, 2008 by Karen Woodmansee in Nevada Appeal
September 5, 2008 by Karen Woodmansee in Nevada Appeal
Hamilton is proposing a wind turbine farm on Bureau of Land Management property along the ridgeline of the Virginia Range, just east of Washoe Valley and west of Virginia City. The 72 turbines would be placed where the wind is strongest, beginning at McClellan Peak and extending northward to Geiger Summit, touching Carson City, Washoe County and Storey County.
The whirlwind, if it comes, could be from officials and residents of Storey County, especially the Comstock Historic District, who aren't crazy about modern wind turbines being in view of the 1860s-era communities of Virginia City, Gold Hill and Silver City.
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Impact on Landscape|
Nevada]
Push to end protection of ranges; Energy companies want wind farm restrictions lifted.
September 5, 2008 by Michelle Duff in Manawatu Standard
September 5, 2008 by Michelle Duff in Manawatu Standard
Genesis Energy, Trustpower, Meridian Energy and Mighty River Power have all made separate submissions to the Tararua district plan, currently up for review.
They are campaigning for new policies to make wind farms a priority in the district, and pushing for a slackening of present guidelines.
In the current policy on environmental heritage, the skyline of the ranges in the district is considered a protected natural feature.
Trustpower wants this wording cut, with references to the protection of the "skyline of Tararua Ranges, Ruahine Ranges, Puketoi Ranges, and Manawatu Gorge", deleted from the plan entirely.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Australia / New Zealand]
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