The five barns would become 10 new properties under the proposals
Barns which belonged to the notorious Norfolk farmer, Tony Martin, could be turned into new homes. The barns are part of the farm at Bleak House near Emneth in Norfolk. Bleak House became well-known following the shooting of two burglars in 1999 which ignited a national debate on householders’ rights.
Martin was sentenced to life for murder after fatally shooting 16-year-old Fred Barras in August 1999. Barras had broken into the semi-derelict site alongside his accomplice, Brendon Fearon, 29. They’d travelled from Newark, Nottinghamshire to raind the property where Martin stored antiques.
When Martin heard them, he opened fire from an upstairs bedroom with a pump-action shotgun. Both burglars were shot, with Barras dying at the scene. Fearon was treated in hospital.
His charge was later downgraded to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility. After serving time, he returned to his Norfolk farm, in 2003.
Plans have been submitted by Jacqueline and David Wadsley, who Martin left his estate worth over £2.5 million to following his death, aged 80, last year. The five barns would become 10 new properties under the proposals.
Martin and Mrs Wadsley first met more than two decades ago when she was the landlady at the Hare & Hounds, the village pub he frequented after his release from prison.
In a planning statement issued to the Borough Council of King’s Lynn and West Norfolk, the couple say they hope to convert five barns, described as “functional agricultural buildings and modest in appearance”, into homes.
The planning statement by the Wadsleys’ agent says: “The site comprises a group of detached agricultural barns located within a rural farmstead setting. The barns are arranged in clusters across the site and are set within areas of hardstanding and grassland, surrounded by mature trees and open fields.
“Two of the barns are steel-framed structures, whilst the remaining three are of traditional brick construction with roofs finished in metal sheet cladding. The structures are characteristic of functional agricultural buildings and are modest in appearance.”
The couple are asking the council for consent under permitted development rights which allow agricultural buildings to be turned into homes without full planning permission.
Bleak House is not included in the plans.



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