Eatery extension creates 'very narrow' passageway
![Wakefield Council The covered seating area at Trinity Lounge has to be pulled down because it encroaches on a public alleyway.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/f6ec/live/62b56b20-e56c-11ef-83d3-b7adf1298c2d.jpg.webp)
The owners of a restaurant in Wakefield have been told to demolish an extension after it made a public passageway "very narrow".
A covered seating area was added to the side of Trinity Lounge, Brook Street, but Wakefield Council refused a retrospective planning application in January 2024.
After an appeal against an enforcement notice, an inspector visited the venue and upheld the council's decision after they found it had created a "threatening environment".
The alley between Brook Street and Smallpage Yard would "likely to be a magnet for anti-social behaviour", the inspector's report said.
Businesses near Trinity Lounge said the extension had blocked the majority of a previously well-used route, the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.
Complaints were also raised that the passageway had become too narrow for people with disabilities and elderly people to use.
![Google An alleyway between two buildings in Wakefield. The two buildings between the alleyway have red bricks.](https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/480/cpsprodpb/d6ed/live/c3bea300-e580-11ef-bd1b-d536627785f2.jpg.webp)
The inspector warned the passageway "would constitute a dark, narrow, and threatening environment" for pedestrians, especially at night.
Eight members of the public and a local councillor objected to the original application.
One complaint stated: "This used to be a nice clear walkway for all businesses on Brook Street and pedestrians gaining access to taxis.
"It is no longer a safe walkway."
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