New South Wales Consolidated Regulations
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WINGECARRIBEE LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL PLAN 1989 - REG 27
Protection of heritage items, heritage conservation areas and relics
27 Protection of heritage items, heritage conservation areas and relics
(1) Where is consent required? The following development may be carried out
only with development consent: (a) demolishing or moving a heritage item or a
building, work, relic, tree or place within a heritage conservation area,
(b)
altering a heritage item or a building, work, relic, tree or place within a
heritage conservation area by making structural or non-structural changes to
its exterior, such as to its detail, fabric, finish or appearance,
(c)
altering a heritage item by making structural changes to its interior,
(d)
disturbing or excavating a place of Aboriginal heritage significance or an
archaeological site while knowing, or having reasonable cause to suspect, that
the disturbance or excavation will or is likely to result in a relic being
discovered, exposed, moved, damaged or destroyed,
(e) moving the whole or
part of a heritage item,
(f) erecting a building on, or subdividing, land on
which a heritage item is located or which is within a heritage conservation
area.
Note: Provisions relating to the conservation of the Joadja site are
included in Part 5.
(2) What exceptions are there? Development consent is not
required by this clause if: (a) in the opinion of the consent authority: (i)
the proposed development is of a minor nature or consists of maintenance of
the heritage item or of a building, work, archaeological site, tree or place
within a heritage conservation area, and
(ii) the proposed development would
not adversely affect the significance of the heritage item or heritage
conservation area, and
(b) the proponent has notified the consent authority
in writing of the proposed development and the consent authority has advised
the applicant in writing before any work is carried out that it is satisfied
that the proposed development will comply with this subclause and that
development consent is not otherwise required by this plan.
(3) Development
consent is not required by this clause for the following development in a
cemetery or a burial ground if there will be no disturbance of human remains,
to relics in the form of grave goods or to a place of Aboriginal heritage
significance: (a) the creation of a new grave or monument,
(b) an excavation
or disturbance of land for the purpose of carrying out conservation or repair
of monuments or grave markers.
(4) What must be included in assessing a
development application? Before granting a consent required by this clause,
the consent authority must assess the extent to which the carrying out of the
proposed development would affect the heritage significance of the heritage
item or heritage conservation area concerned. Note: The website of the
Heritage Branch of the Department of Planning has publications that provide
guidance on assessing the impact of proposed development on the heritage
significance of items (for example, Statements of Heritage Impact ).
(5) What
extra documentation is needed? The assessment must include consideration of a
heritage impact statement that addresses at least the following issues (but is
not to be limited to assessment of those issues, if the heritage significance
concerned involves other issues). The consent authority may also decline to
grant such a consent until it has considered a conservation management plan,
if it considers that a development proposed should be assessed with regard to
such a plan.
(6) The minimum number of issues that must be addressed by the
heritage impact statement are: (a) for development that would affect a
"heritage item": (i) the heritage significance of the item as part of the
environmental heritage of Wingecarribee, and
(ii) the impact that the
proposed development will have on the heritage significance of the item and
its setting, including any landscape or horticultural features, and
(iii) the
measures proposed to conserve the heritage significance of the item and its
setting, and
(iv) whether any archaeological site or potential archaeological
site would be adversely affected by the proposed development, and
(v) the
extent to which the carrying out of the proposed development would affect the
form of any historic subdivision, and
(b) for development that would be
carried out in a
"heritage conservation area": (i) the heritage significance of the heritage
conservation area and the contribution which any building, work, relic, tree
or place affected by the proposed development makes to this heritage
significance, and
(ii) the impact that the proposed development would have on
the heritage significance of the heritage conservation area, and
(iii) the
compatibility of any proposed development with nearby original buildings and
the character of the heritage conservation area, taking into account the size,
form, scale, orientation, setbacks, materials and detailing of the proposed
development, and
(iv) the measures proposed to conserve the significance of
the heritage conservation area and its setting, and
(v) whether any landscape
or horticultural features would be affected by the proposed development, and
(vi) whether any archaeological site or potential archaeological site would be
affected by the proposed development, and
(vii) the extent to which the
carrying out of the proposed development in accordance with the consent would
have any effect on the historic subdivision pattern, and
(viii) issues raised
by any submission received in relation to the proposed development in response
to the notification or advertising of the application.
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