With a deep understanding of UK's unique landscapes, our team of experts delivers assessments that are both comprehensive and tailored to the specific needs of each project.
Expertise Tailored to Your Project Needs
EnviroPass offers a variety of services designed specifically for the diverse landscapes of Kent, including:
Ensuring Compliance and Excellence
Our extensive experience working with Local Planning Authorities (LPAs) across the UK equips us to meet the specific needs of landscape assessments in Kent. We ensure compliance with local regulations while maintaining the highest standards of quality.
Collaborative Methodology for Comprehensive Insights
At EnviroPass, we adopt an integrated approach to landscape assessment. This involves collaboration with experienced landscape architects and planning consultants, ensuring a complete and nuanced understanding of both the aesthetic and functional aspects of UK’s landscapes.
Thorough Analysis and Practical Solutions
Our Landscape and Visual Impact Assessments offer:
Understanding UK’s Unique Landscapes
Landscape Character Appraisals are essential for comprehending the specific landscape character of an area. These appraisals guide planning decisions in line with the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), emphasizing the intrinsic character and beauty of the countryside, particularly relevant to UK.
Tailored Analysis for the UK Context
Our Landscape Assessments in UK provide:
Essential Tool for Navigating Landscape Dynamics
For major developments or in areas with significant landscape impact, an LVIA is vital. It provides clarity on the development’s impact on the landscape and visual aspects, crucial for project planning in UK.
Versatile Expertise for Comprehensive Assessments
Our team has extensive experience in conducting LVIAs across various sectors, including residential, commercial, industrial, and energy projects, ensuring a well-rounded approach to every assessment.
State-of-the-Art Technology for Enhanced Clarity
Our assessments use advanced techniques such as:
Inclusive and Effective Project Management
At EnviroPass, we believe in a collaborative approach, ensuring all stakeholders are involved in the process, leading to more effective and inclusive landscape solutions.
In conclusion, EnviroPass is dedicated to offering exceptional Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment Services in UK. Our detailed, customised approach, coupled with our extensive expertise, makes us the ideal choice for landscape assessments in UK. Landscape assessments start from £800, but quotes are site and proposal specific, so please call us on 0203 488 0225 for more information.
For additional insights on landscape assessments, visit the UK Government's Planning Practice Guidance, providing comprehensive information on planning policies and guidelines.
Most local authorities require an LVIA for "major" developments or those in sensitive areas like Green Belt, Conservation Areas, or National Landscapes (formerly AONBs). Enviropass provides the technical rigor needed to validate your application, ensuring your project is assessed against the latest GLVIA3 standards to avoid costly delays at the validation stage.
An LVIA (Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment) is a formal, comprehensive study often required for EIA-scale projects to judge the "significance" of effects. An LVA (Landscape and Visual Appraisal) is a lighter-touch version for smaller, non-EIA projects. Enviropass advises on the most proportionate and cost-effective route for your specific site, preventing you from over-spending on unnecessary detail.
Costs vary based on the scale of the development and the number of "representative viewpoints" required by the council. Enviropass offers transparent, fixed-fee quotes for both LVA and LVIA services. We focus on providing high-quality visualisations and expert analysis that offer the best chance of planning success.
A ZTV map is a digital model that predicts where a development might be visible from across the wider landscape. Enviropass uses advanced GIS software to generate these maps, helping developers identify potential "visual receptors" (people) early in the design process to mitigate objections before they arise.
Yes, but the bar for "conserving and enhancing" the landscape is high. Enviropass specialises in Landscape and Visual Appraisals for sensitive sites, providing the design-led mitigation—such as strategic planting or bespoke materials—needed to prove your home integrates perfectly with its protected surroundings.
Verified views (also known as Accurate Visual Representations or AVRs) are scientifically accurate "before and after" images of a development. Enviropass produces high-fidelity visualisations that planners trust, clearly demonstrating how your project will actually look from agreed viewpoints.
While Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) focuses on habitat units, an LVA focuses on how that habitat looks. Enviropass ensures your BNG plan works in harmony with your landscape requirements—for example, ensuring new woodland for biodiversity also acts as an effective visual screen for your neighbours.
Landscape character is the unique "sense of place" created by landform, vegetation, and history. Enviropass assesses how your project impacts this character, using National Character Area (NCA) profiles to ensure your development feels like a natural extension of the existing environment.
Councils often request "worst-case" winter views when deciduous trees have lost their leaves. Enviropass manages these seasonal requirements proactively, providing both summer and winter assessments to ensure your report is robust enough to withstand a planning appeal.
To discharge these conditions, you need a detailed Landscape Management Plan (LMP). Enviropass produces professional planting schedules and maintenance strategies that satisfy the council's long-term requirements while keeping your on-site management costs practical.
This principle suggests that new developments shouldn't unfairly impact existing views or the character of a local area. Enviropass uses landscape visual assessments to document the "baseline" character, protecting your interests by proving your project maintains the visual amenity of the site.
In UK planning, there is no "right to a private view," but councils do protect "visual amenity." Enviropass provides the technical evidence to show that while a development may be visible, it is not "oppressive" or "overbearing," helping to de-escalate local resident objections.
These are specific locations (like footpaths, roads, or parks) from which the council wants to see the impact of your building. Enviropass negotiates these viewpoints with the Planning Officer early on, ensuring the assessment covers the areas that matter most to the decision-makers.
Renewable energy projects almost always require a full LVIA due to their scale and height. Enviropass has extensive experience in the renewables sector, providing the 3D modelling and glint-and-glare analysis required to secure permission for "green" infrastructure.
A standard LVA typically takes 2–4 weeks, while a full LVIA for a major project can take longer. Enviropass prides itself on efficiency, coordinating site visits and desk-based research to deliver your report in line with your planning submission deadlines.
Sensitivity is a combination of how "important" a landscape is and how well it can absorb change. Enviropass consultants use professional judgment to accurately grade sensitivity, ensuring your report is neither overly optimistic nor unnecessarily pessimistic about the impact of your project.
Yes. In cities, this is called a Townscape and Visual Impact Assessment (TVIA). Enviropass applies the same GLVIA3 principles to urban environments, assessing how new buildings impact streetscapes, heritage settings, and the "human scale" of the city.
A CEMP often includes a section on protecting existing trees and managing visual "clutter" during construction. Enviropass coordinates these sections to ensure your build phase doesn't result in permanent landscape damage or temporary visual nuisance for neighbours.
While often part of a Daylight/Sunlight assessment, shadowing on public parks or gardens is a landscape concern. Enviropass provides "Sun-on-Ground" studies to prove your development doesn't leave vital public green spaces in the dark.
Yes, especially for "Paragraph 80" homes (homes of exceptional architectural quality). Enviropass provides the specialized, high-detail Landscape and Visual Appraisals required to prove a single dwelling enhances its rural setting rather than detracting from it.
A wireline is a 3D outline of the building, whereas a photomontage is a fully rendered, photo-realistic image. Enviropass provides both, using wirelines for early-stage design and high-quality photomontages for final planning submissions and public consultations.
While not always mandatory by law, the "openness" of the Green Belt is a key planning test. Enviropass uses landscape visual assessments to prove your project preserves this openness, which is often the difference between a refusal and a successful "Very Special Circumstances" argument.
Yes, the Guidelines for Landscape and Visual Impact Assessment (3rd Edition) is our "Bible." Enviropass ensures every report is 100% compliant with these industry-standard methods, providing you with a "legally defensible" document for planning committees or appeals.
This looks at how your development interacts with other proposed or existing projects in the area. Enviropass conducts cumulative assessments to ensure your project isn't the "tipping point" that causes a council to reject a scheme based on over-development.
Because we are planning-focused consultants. We don't just "report" on impacts; we help you design them out. Enviropass works as an extension of your design team, recommending the exact mitigation needed to turn a "High Impact" project into an "Approvable" one.