Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) Assessment in Solihull

Biodiversity Net Gain (BNG) in Solihull

Developing or submitting a planning application in Solihull and require Biodiversity Net Gain?

BNG is now mandatory for most developments – we provide compliant, planning-ready reports aligned with Solihull Council requirements.

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Calls answered in 2 rings, emails replied to within the hour.

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Clear guidance before you commit.

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Working in partnership with clients to ensure planning approval first time

Typical 10-day turnaround

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We stay with you from first call through to submission. 

Do you need a Biodiversity Net Gain Assessment in Solihull?

In Solihull, BNG is a key requirement for most developments. Developers must show a net improvement in biodiversity relative to the site’s original condition. This involves conserving habitats along rivers and railway corridors, enhancing green wedges and urban parks, and creating additional planting or wetland areas to support wildlife, fostering sustainable growth while maintaining ecological networks.

Planning officers in Solihull often request BNG information where development may impact important ecological networks. Typical examples include:

  • River corridors, such as the River Blythe and River Cole, including associated floodplain habitats
  • Brownfield land, particularly in Shirley, Olton, and Chelmsley Wood, supporting regenerating scrub and grassland
  • Green corridors, including linear parks, green wedges, and urban parks connecting neighbourhoods
  • Rail-adjacent habitats, where embankments and disused railway corridors provide valuable habitats

Clear and correctly presented BNG evidence is essential, as planning applications may otherwise face validation issues or delays.

We cover all areas of Solihull, including the town centre, Shirley, Knowle, Dorridge, Olton, Balsall Common, and surrounding neighbourhoods.

Why planning authorities in Solihull request a BNG

Councils in Solihull expect BNG information at an early stage to ensure developments meet the required ten percent increase in biodiversity before finalising the layout. They require a verified baseline, a completed Metric showing the change in biodiversity units, and a clear plan for delivering and securing the gain. This aligns with NPPF Section 15 guidance.

Local Case Insight

A BNG assessment for a residential and commercial scheme in Shirley uncovered a narrow strip of rough grassland and regenerating scrub adjacent to a disused railway. A small wet depression and tall herb areas contributed unexpectedly high biodiversity value. By refining the site layout to retain these features and reinforcing them with new planting along the corridor, the project achieved the required net gain entirely on-site. This allowed planning approval to proceed without off-site compensation or redesigns.

How the BNG process works

We produce planning-ready BNG Assessments aligned to Solihull’s policy expectations.

Key BNG Deliverables for Birmingham Projects

For developments in Solihull, our BNG assessments provide the essential information planning officers require. Each assessment includes:

  • A verified UKHab baseline tailored to Solihull habitats
  • A clearly justified Metric showing biodiversity unit changes
  • A practical, site-specific uplift strategy
  • Planning-ready reporting suitable for validation
  • Optional long-term management and gain plan material

This approach meets Solihull Council expectations and offers a proportionate method to demonstrate BNG across various types of developments.

Step 1

Habitat baseline surveys

Year-round, with optimal survey seasons

Step 2

Metric 4.0 calculations

 Completed once habitat data is verified. 

Step 3

Uplift strategy development

Aligned with design progression and layout refinement.

Step 4

Integration with Other Surveys

Only if needed. PEA, EIA, and Protected Species surveys 

Next Steps

Contact us, and we’ll confirm exactly what your Solihull site requires. We provide a planning-ready, proportionate route forward. 

FAQ - BNG in Solihull

Does Solihull Council require BNG at validation?

Yes, most applications (except exempt categories) must submit BNG evidence.

You can review local planning guidance here:

Yes, rivers like the Blythe and Cole are priority ecological corridors, requiring careful assessment.

Yes, regenerating brownfield sites often support valuable habitats.

Can BNG be delivered fully on-site for small developments?

Often yes, through wildflower areas, wetland creation, and scrub/grassland improvements.

Disused tracks and embankments can hold moderate-to-high value habitats and require accurate classification.

Verified baseline, completed Metric, and early uplift strategy submitted at validation.

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