Plans to build a dwelling on land adjacent to the Old Pump House on Marsh Road, Tenby, have been knocked back by members of the Pembrokeshire Coast National Park Authority's development management committee. Applicants C. P. Craig and Son submitted outline proposals for the erection of a dwelling next to the old pumping station, where a development to convert the building into five dwellings was recently granted, after being amended from a plan comprising of six dwellings. However, National Park planning officers felt that this current application differed from the previous one as that was a conversion scheme for a building of traditional construction, while the new plan to build an extra dwelling on the site would be considered a new development. Development management committee vice- chairman, Clr. Michael Williams, agreed with the planning officer's recommendation to refuse the outline application. "I think that there are already major worries with building around that area with it being a flood plain, and the amount of problems with the water that we have seen on the Marsh Road in the past couple of weeks has been considerable. "It is also quite a dangerous corner and I have concerns over the access to the site from the road. I think those are two overwhelming reasons to say no to this application," commented Clr. Williams. Members voted unanimously for refusal of the application.