The application proposes a self-store building and four employment units with 45 parking bays on land west of Killingwoldgraves Lane, between Beverley and Bishop Burton.
The development forms part of the wider Beverley Gateway scheme, which already includes approved plans for a Starbucks drive-thru and a petrol station.
The new proposals aim to provide local employment opportunities and storage amenities, enhancing the site’s role as a commercial hub in East Yorkshire.
As another storage facility is approved nearby, is Beverley facing an oversupply of self-storage space?
After a £5.8M loss, can Starbucks' UK expansion plan, including the Beverley site, truly succeed?
Can Bishop Burton College's training programs genuinely fill the jobs created by this type of commercial development?
Does this car-centric development on town outskirts align with modern principles of sustainable 'place-making'?
With self-storage relying on automation, will the 'employment opportunities' be more than a few low-wage jobs?