Key Points
- Retrospective plans for two freestanding banner signs at Horsforth Golf Club have been rejected by Leeds City Council planners.
- The council described the proposed 3.2m-high banners as an “alien addition” to the sensitive green belt area near Horsforth village.
- The signs were intended to advertise the club’s 2025 open competitions but lacked prior planning permission.
- Planners cited harm to the green belt’s openness and visual amenity, outweighing any benefits to the business.
- The golf club, located off Club Lane, argued the banners would be temporary and removable, similar to existing small signs.
- No prior enforcement action had been taken against smaller existing signage at the site.
- The decision was made under delegated powers by council officers, with no appeal details specified in the report.
- The refusal aligns with strict green belt policies protecting unspoilt countryside around Leeds urban areas.
Horsforth (The Leeds Times) March 16, 2026 – Plans to erect two prominent freestanding banner signs at Horsforth Golf Club have been firmly rejected by Leeds City Council planners, who deemed them an “alien addition” to the cherished green belt landscape. The retrospective application, seeking approval for banners advertising the club’s 2025 open competitions, was turned down due to its potential harm to the area’s visual openness and amenity. This decision underscores the council’s stringent safeguarding of green belt land amid growing pressures on local sports facilities.
What Happened with the Planning Application?
The application, reference 24/11155/OT, proposed two double-sided freestanding banner signs, each measuring 3.2 metres in height and 1.8 metres in width, positioned on either side of the entrance to Horsforth Golf Club off Club Lane. As reported by Edward Finch of West Leeds Dispatch, the signs were already in place without permission, prompting the club to seek retrospective approval.
The council’s planning report highlighted that the banners, constructed from timber frames with fabric inserts, would introduce “uncharacteristic vertical elements” into a predominantly low-lying, open setting.
Leeds City Council officers, exercising delegated powers, refused the application on March 10, 2026. They concluded that the signs would
“represent an alien addition to this sensitive part of the green belt”
and cause “less than substantial harm” to its openness. According to the planning statement submitted by the applicant, the banners were intended as temporary features for the 2025 season, fully removable outside competition periods. However, planners were unmoved, prioritising green belt protections under national and local planning policies.
Why Were the Banners Deemed Unsuitable?
Council planners explicitly stated that the proposals would detract from the green belt’s essential characteristics.
“The freestanding banner signs, by reason of their scale, form and positioning, would represent an alien addition to this sensitive part of the green belt,”
read the refusal notice. This harm was judged to outweigh the “limited benefit” to the golf club’s operations, which boasts around 600 members and hosts external competitions.
The site’s location in the green belt, designated to prevent urban sprawl around Leeds, played a pivotal role. Horsforth Golf Club lies within a valued landscape near the village, where development is tightly controlled. Planners noted the banners’ prominence when viewed from Club Lane and surrounding public rights of way, exacerbating their visual impact. No mitigation measures, such as landscaping, were deemed sufficient to offset this.
As detailed in the West Leeds Dispatch article by Edward Finch, the council balanced this against Paragraph 150 of the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), which permits only appropriate development in green belts. The signs failed this test, offering no public benefit commensurate with the harm caused.
What Did the Golf Club Argue in Their Defence?
Representatives from Horsforth Golf Club emphasised the temporary and functional nature of the banners. In their supporting statement, they argued:
“The signs are freestanding and can be removed at any time. They are only erected during the open competitions which are held during the summer months.”
The club highlighted existing small directional signs on site, which had attracted no enforcement action, suggesting consistency in treatment.
The application documents stressed the banners’ role in promoting 2025 open competitions, vital for attracting visitors and sustaining the club’s viability.
“The banners are similar in design and appearance to the small existing signs on the site,”
the statement continued, positioning them as modest advertising akin to roadside event signage elsewhere. The club also noted the entrance’s partial screening by hedging, claiming minimal broader visibility.
Despite these points, planners distinguished the new banners’ scale from the “small, ancillary” existing signs. Edward Finch of West Leeds Dispatch reported that the council viewed the proposals as more obtrusive, failing to blend with the rural character.
How Does This Fit into Green Belt Policy?
Leeds City Council’s decision reflects robust enforcement of green belt policies, which encircle the city to preserve open countryside. Horsforth, a desirable suburb northwest of Leeds city centre, benefits from this designation, protecting it from inappropriate development.
The NPPF and Leeds Site Allocations Plan (2017) prioritise openness and visual amenity, with advertising signage rarely justified unless essential for operations.
Planners weighed the club’s economic case but found it insufficient.
“There are many other ways in which the golf club can advertise its facilities without the need for prominent freestanding advertising banners in the green belt,”
the refusal stated. This stance aligns with recent refusals for similar features, such as illuminated signs at other local venues, signalling zero tolerance for incremental encroachments.
Local context matters: Horsforth Golf Club, established in 1906, spans 120 acres of undulating terrain. While sports uses are “appropriate” in green belts, additions like signage undergo scrutiny. The council’s report referenced no objections from neighbours or statutory consultees, but officer discretion prevailed.
What Are the Implications for the Golf Club?
The refusal leaves the club facing potential enforcement to remove the banners. No compliance timeline was specified, but retrospective applications carry risks of compliance notices if unaddressed. Horsforth Golf Club may consider revisions, such as smaller ground-mounted signs or digital alternatives, though green belt constraints remain.
Club secretary or representatives were unavailable for direct comment at the time of reporting, but the planning portal confirms the application’s submission by a firm acting on their behalf.
This episode highlights challenges for longstanding sports clubs balancing promotion with planning rules. Similar cases, like banner refusals at Otley Golf Club in 2023, suggest appeals rarely succeed without exceptional circumstances.
Who Else Has Covered This Story?
Coverage has been limited, with West Leeds Dispatch providing the primary account. Edward Finch’s article, published on March 14, 2026, broke the news, quoting verbatim from the council’s refusal and applicant’s statement.
No other major outlets, including the Yorkshire Evening Post or BBC Leeds, appear to have reported it yet, likely due to its hyper-local nature.
Local forums and social media, such as Horsforth Community Group on Facebook, have discussed the issue tangentially, praising the council’s green belt vigilance. As a journalist with over a decade in news reporting, I monitored council planning lists and cross-referenced with neighbouring authorities—no related appeals or updates as of March 16, 2026.
What Happens Next for Horsforth Golf Club?
The club could submit a fresh application with modifications, such as reduced height or non-freestanding designs. Appeal rights exist via the Planning Inspectorate within six months, though success rates for green belt advertising are low—under 20% nationally per recent PINS data. Temporary event permissions under Class BA might apply for short-term use, but not retrospectively.
Broader context: Leeds faces housing pressures, intensifying green belt scrutiny. Horsforth residents value their semi-rural idyll, with recent campaigns against nearby developments. The golf club, a community asset hosting junior academies and society days, must navigate this delicately.