Refugee homes branded eyesore by nearby residents
Since leaving her home in Kyiv when the war with Russia broke out, Kateryna Gorodnycha and her son have been living with sponsors and in a hostel.
They are some of the first people to move into temporary cabins in Llantwit Major in the Vale of Glamorgan.
âI really love it. Itâs our first home in Wales,â said Ms Gorodnycha: âWeâve been living in one room. My sonâs very happy to have his own bedroom.â
However, the 90-unit project â which will house refugees and homeless families â has been branded an âeyesoreâ by some local residents who claim there was no consultation process.
Vale of Glamorgan council said there was an âurgent needâ for homes for refugees and homeless families and that there was an âengagement processâ with locals.
Permitted development rights meant the local authority did not need planning permission to construct the units, which will stand for five years.
Before fleeing Ukraine, Ms Gorodnycha, was working and living In Kyiv as a TV producer. She moved into the new emergency housing with her teenage son last week.
âBefore February 2022 I had a beautiful flat in Kyiv on the 17th floor next to the Dnipro River and I had grants to film a documentary.
âIt was a good life⊠it all just fell apart in one night.
âBut I am very grateful for this [home] and how kind people have been.â
âWe didnât know what to do when we first moved in because of all the space,â Ms Gorodnycha added.
She said she saw her son take a kettle to the bathroom for water and had to remind him that they had a kitchen sink now.
âOur first night was perfect because I have my own bedroom and couldnât hear my son snoring,â she joked.
Kateryna has lived with sponsors near Cowbridge and a hostel in Barry and said the new location of her home is âa dreamâ.
âIn Ukraine there arenât many places on the coast⊠itâs a huge event to go to the beach, but here you can just walk and see the sea and waves.â
Kate Hollinshead, from Vale of Glamorgan council, said about 300 people will live at the currently half-full site, split 50/50 between Ukrainian refugees and homelesss families.
âUkrainian refugees will be allocated first but we will also allocate to homeless families from the Vale of Glamorgan who have been living in temporary accommodation,â she said.
The units are a mix of one and two-storey one, two, three and four-bed homes for use on a short-term basis until more permanent housing is secured.
However, not everyone is pleased by the new development, notability retired RAF engineer Steve McGranaghan, who lives opposite the units.
âIâm feeling very disillusioned and broken,â he said.
âItâs affected my health and given me sleepless nights, this was a done deal behind closed doors by the council.
âItâs cost 25 million pounds which is the biggest investment the town has had at government level, and we end up with this carbuncle.â
Vale of Glamorgan council and the Welsh government have invested in the development at a cost of around ÂŁ25 million at the former Eagleswell school site.
Dave Thomas, of the 2000-member-strong Eagleswell action group on Facebook, said the development looks like his âshed with a felt roofâ.
âWhen this went to planning it was already determined, they were already built and theyâre not going to say thatâs 25 million pounds spent letâs take the units away,â he said.
âThere was no consideration to anyone living here already, it was just a means to an end.
âThey decided letâs get as many units on as we can and squeeze them in and get as many people in as we can and who cares what it costs.â
Vale of Glamorgan council said they had seen âunprecedented levels of extreme housing needâ.
A spokesperson for the site, now known as Heol Croeso said: âThe council has been involved in extensive communication and engagement activity with Llantwit Major residents regarding the Heol Croeso development.
âThe development went through the normal planning process and was approved by committee after meeting the necessary requirements.
âSteps were taken to maintain privacy and address other concerns raised as part of that process.
âThe units have permission to remain in place for a maximum of five years and plans regarding their removal will be published in the next 12 months.â