A-The general framework
Following the closure of the mechanical sector of Giat Industries of Tarbes (30 June 2006) The City has embarked on a restructuring of the industrial area consisting of two large wasteland that of GIAT industry and that of the old factory-Hughes Tool, disused since 1981, now private property.
Both sites are former classified installations for environmental protection (ICPE).
The former site of GIAT was the subject of two separate procedures: one was conducted by the former operator in respect of retirement for use industrial, the other by the City for a change of use, that is to say to use to create a sensitive habitat area.
The fallow-Hughes Tool should be a management plan for a change of use by its current owner, the Mondin company Salas, who has planned to implement a habitat area. This management plan does not currently exist because there is no soil analysis was performed.
These two sites are, as BPI, supervised by the environmental code. Their evolution is followed by DREAL. As part of the administrative procedure for cessation of activity or change in use, the administrative authority can impose restrictions on use as public easements necessary then to POS.
Opening these lands to urbanization must take into account the compatibility of use with residual pollution former BPI. This led the City to oversee the licensing of planning by introducing the concept in the regulation of the use is compatible with residual pollution.
Specifically, the project aimed:
¾ to create on the site GIAT areas where the habitat would be allowed (UAA, UAC)
¾ to adapt the Zoning IU as its rules do not fit the organization of industrial buildings preserved. By becoming UIB, the regulation would allow the erection of new buildings or expanding old limit in the public domain in an urban spatially coherent.
¾ plans to establish new alignment on the site.
¾ to remove easements planning now obsolete:
> General Council abandons placeholders 11, 12 and 13
> the operation 112 has no rationale (riprap and shoreline development of Adour by Grand Tarbes).
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