Friends of Kingstone Green Belt Kingstone · Barnsley · South Yorkshire
A Community Group

Protecting the open countryside of Kingstone.

Friends of Kingstone Green Belt is a group of local residents working to ensure that planning proposals affecting our Green Belt are properly examined, properly evidenced, and properly contested where they should be.

Area
Kingstone, Barnsley
Designation
Metropolitan Green Belt
Founded
May 2026
Land south of Keresforth Hill Road, May 2026

A national housebuilder is preparing to build on Green Belt land.

Bellway Homes — one of the UK's largest housebuilders — has held a contractual interest in land south of Keresforth Hill Road, Barnsley, since December 2021. Through the spring of 2026, their contractors have been undertaking extensive ground investigations on the site, including borehole drilling, trial pits and ground gas monitoring.

No planning application has yet been submitted. The scale of investment in pre-application technical work, however, strongly suggests that one is being prepared for submission within the coming year.

The site is crossed by a well-used bridleway — a public right of way that draws walkers and riders from well beyond the immediate area, and which connects to a wider network of paths through the countryside south of Barnsley.

The land in question has been designated Green Belt for many decades. Under national planning policy, most development on Green Belt is automatically classed as "inappropriate" and should be refused unless the developer can demonstrate "very special circumstances" — a deliberately high bar.

Friends of Kingstone Green Belt has been formed by local residents who intend to engage constructively and properly with the planning process when an application is submitted, and to make sure the public interest is properly represented.

A third major housing scheme. The same small corridor.

The Keresforth Hill Road site is not being proposed in isolation. Two further housing schemes are also being advanced nearby — on land that was released from the Green Belt through the 2019 Local Plan. All three sites share the same road network, schools, GP surgeries and emergency service provision.

i
South of Keresforth Hill Road
Bellway Homes · option agreement since December 2021 · site investigations underway
approx. 100 homes · Green Belt
ii
Keresforth Road (west of M1)
Separate proposed scheme · access proposed from Keresforth Road
approx. 130 homes · former Green Belt
iii
Smithy Wood Gate, Gilroyd
Separate proposed scheme on land near Gilroyd
approx. 180 homes · former Green Belt
400
new homes proposed across three sites in one corridor, sharing the same local infrastructure. This corridor has already absorbed substantial Green Belt release through the 2019 Local Plan — the Bellway site is the one piece of remaining protected Green Belt.

We are not opposed to all development. We are for the proper protection of the Green Belt.

Protecting open countryside

The Green Belt around Kingstone exists to safeguard countryside from encroachment and to keep land permanently open. This is what national planning policy was designed to defend.

Defending public rights of way

The bridleway across the site is a public right of way used by walkers and riders from well beyond Kingstone. Its protection — from loss, diversion, or degradation by surrounding development — matters to a wide community.

Proper scrutiny of cumulative impact

When multiple sites are proposed in one corridor, the combined effect on roads, schools, GP capacity and emergency services must be properly assessed — not considered in isolation.

Evidence-based engagement

We are building a careful evidence base on every relevant material consideration so that our engagement with the planning process is credible, accurate and effective.

How a planning application of this kind typically proceeds.

  1. Pre-application investigations
    Where we are now. Borehole drilling, ground gas monitoring, ecological surveys and tree assessments inform the developer's design and risk assessment.
  2. Planning application submitted
    Likely later in 2026 or early 2027. At this point a formal public consultation begins and neighbours can submit written objections to Barnsley Council.
  3. Statutory consultation
    Statutory consultees including National Highways, the Coal Authority, Yorkshire Water, NHS South Yorkshire and others are formally asked for their views.
  4. Council decision
    The case officer makes a recommendation. Significant applications are decided by the council's planning committee in public, where objectors can address councillors directly.
  5. Appeal — if refused
    The developer may appeal a refusal to the Planning Inspectorate, leading to a further public process where the case is reconsidered.

If you live in Kingstone and could be affected, we want to hear from you.

The more residents who are informed and ready to engage when an application is submitted, the stronger the community's voice will be. There is no fee to join, no commitment required, and no obligation beyond keeping in touch.

Get in touch
hello@friendsofkingstonegreenbelt.org.uk

We are also happy to hear from journalists, councillors, planning professionals, ecologists or anyone with relevant expertise willing to support the group's work. Please get in touch via the email address above.