Do you need to secure long-term habitat compliance in Manchester after Biodiversity Net Gain approval?
We produce council-ready HMMPs that secure habitat delivery and 30-year monitoring, keeping your development compliant well beyond construction.
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Where Biodiversity Net Gain applies, an HMMP sets out how habitats will be maintained and monitored for the full 30 year period following development. In Manchester, an HMMP is required when planning permission includes a biodiversity condition that relies on long term habitat creation or enhancement. The document provides the evidence planning officers need to confirm that the uplift can be delivered and sustained throughout the required timeframe.
Planning teams in Manchester often request HMMP evidence where development is expected to create or enhance habitat features that require long term management.
This is common on:
If this long term management detail is not submitted correctly, the biodiversity condition cannot be discharged and development may be delayed.
We provide Habitat Management and Monitoring Plans across Manchester, including the city centre, Hulme, Ancoats, Chorlton, Didsbury, Withington, Ardwick, Rusholme, Gorton and all surrounding neighbourhoods within the Manchester local authority area.
Planning authorities across Manchester require HMMPs to secure the 30 year delivery of habitats created through Biodiversity Net Gain, in line with the Environment Act 2021. The HMMP sets out the legally enforceable approach to habitat management, monitoring and reporting over the required period. Without an approved HMMP in place, long term biodiversity commitments cannot be formally secured or discharged.
We produce Habitat Management & Monitoring Plans aligned to Manchester’s policy expectations.
Your HMMP is prepared to meet statutory planning requirements in Manchester and typically includes:
This approach ensures long term ecological compliance is clearly defined, auditable and enforceable.
Assessment of BNG conditions, site layout and approved biodiversity proposals.
Habitat prescriptions, maintenance actions and monitoring schedules are set out.
Alignment with build-out, handover or responsible body arrangements.
LPA queries or amendments are managed through to approval.
Ready to secure long term biodiversity compliance in Manchester? Contact us today. We’ll confirm whether an HMMP is required and ensure your biodiversity obligations remain secure for the full 30-year term.
Manchester City Council assesses HMMPs against the submitted Biodiversity Metric calculations and the approved planning drawings. The council expects clear habitat specifications, measurable target conditions and a structured monitoring schedule. Plans are reviewed to ensure biodiversity units are realistically deliverable within dense urban layouts, particularly where green roofs or engineered SuDS features form part of the gain.
Yes, where brownfield regeneration relies on habitat creation to achieve the statutory Biodiversity Net Gain requirement, a detailed HMMP will be secured by planning condition. Even heavily engineered sites must demonstrate how habitats will establish and be maintained for 30 years.
Monitoring reports must demonstrate whether habitats are progressing toward their agreed condition targets. Manchester expects structured reporting that clearly measures habitat performance against the Biodiversity Metric assumptions submitted at planning stage. Generic site inspection notes are not sufficient.
For large or multi phase schemes, Manchester may accept phased monitoring and management schedules, provided each phase clearly sets out habitat delivery, condition targets and reporting intervals. The phasing approach must still secure the full 30 year management obligation.
Where green roofs, podium planting or elevated landscapes contribute to biodiversity units, they must be included within the HMMP with defined ecological objectives. Manchester expects evidence that substrate depth, planting mix and management regimes will achieve measurable biodiversity outcomes rather than simply aesthetic landscaping.
Failure to deliver habitats in accordance with the approved HMMP can expose developers or landowners to enforcement action, particularly where delivery is secured by planning condition or Section 106 agreement. Monitoring reports must demonstrate compliance with approved targets.
Yes. The HMMP should include clear contingency measures if habitats fail to establish or do not meet their condition targets. Adaptive management is expected to be proactive, not reactive, and should be built into the monitoring framework from the outset.
Manchester City Council publishes planning guidance and validation information at https://www.manchester.gov.uk/planning. Developers should review biodiversity related validation expectations before submitting discharge of condition applications.
Where off site units are used to achieve Biodiversity Net Gain, the HMMP must clearly define management responsibilities, monitoring frequency and legal securing mechanisms for the off site land. The document must align with the approved Biodiversity Gain Plan.
ProHort prepares technically robust HMMPs structured around Manchester City Council’s scrutiny level. We ensure habitat targets are measurable, management responsibilities are clearly defined and monitoring schedules are realistic for urban regeneration schemes, reducing risk at condition discharge and throughout the 30 year management period.