The hotel that hosted world leaders for the G7 summit has been ordered to pull down meeting rooms which were built without planning permission.
The Carbis Bay Hotel had built the rooms which it said were required for the event in June but did not have planning permission to do so.
After protesters highlighted the works the hotel submitted a planning application seeking retrospective permission for the development.
More than 400 people had objected to the planning application for the development.
However it has now been announced that the hotel owners have now withdrawn the planning application and Cornwall Council has therefore launched enforcement proceedings.
The council said that it would be telling the hotel to demolish the buildings and return the site to its original form.
In a statement Cornwall Council said: “Cornwall Council can confirm that the planning application (PA21/02527) relating to the Carbis Bay Hotel has been withdrawn by the applicant.
“As a result, the council has proceeded with enforcement action, which will require the unauthorised developments to be removed and for the land to be reinstated to its former levels, gradients and condition.”
The enforcement notice does not come into effect until October 18 and the landowner has the right to lodge an appeal with the planning inspectorate against the notice before it comes into effect. If no appeal is lodged they have six months to comply.
The hotel had submitted similar plans to the council previously to build lodges on the site but that application was refused due to the impact it would have on the area.
After the works started earlier this year campaigners asked why Cornwall Council was not taking immediate enforcement action to stop the development. The council said that once a planning application had been submitted it was decided to let that be decided in the usual process before deciding whether action should be taken.
Linda Taylor, Conservative Cornwall councillor for Carbis Bay, had asked that the application should go to a planning committee for determination by elected councillors. But now it has been withdrawn and that will not be necessary.
When the hotel submitted its latest plans it was spotted that some elements of the design and access statement included had been lifted from the previous application. Many objectors claimed that the buildings would not be meeting rooms but would be used as lodges.
The hotel claimed that the rooms had been required for hosting the G7 summit but the Cabinet Office said it had not asked the hotel to carry out the work.
In June world leaders including Prime Minister Boris Johnson and US President Joe Biden met in Carbis Bay to discuss everything from Covid-19 vaccines to climate change.
The event saw the world leaders not only holding business meetings but also enjoying a barbecue on the beach at Carbis Bay which also included a flyover display by the Red Arrows.
Cornwall Council has not indicated whether there is a timescale for when the hotel has to carry out the required works under the enforcement action.
The Packet has contacted the Carbis Bay Hotel for a response.
The design and access statement issued with the hotel's now withdrawn planning application stated: “The hotel is currently engaged in a major expansion of its water front offering, including a recently completed multi-use venue building, which is part funded by the Coastal Communities Fund, and also recently completed eight no. luxury beach front lodges.
“This investment combined with the hotel’s reputation and unrivalled location have attracted international renown to an extent that the hotel has been successful in hosting the upcoming G7 Conference.”
It goes on to add: "The new conference rooms will provide an ongoing legacy for the hotel and local economy following the Summit, creating an additional 12 full time equivalent jobs and providing additional hotel space that is in great demand.
"These spaces will also be used to provide staff training within the hotel and wider tourism industry; a further aspect of a standalone entity within the wider estate."
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