InPost parcel lockers installed outside Emsworth Co-op without permission
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Planning chiefs are being asked to rule on whether parcel
lockers can stay outside an Emsworth supermarket after they
were installed without permission.
According to its sustainability document, InPost is a parcel
locker delivery service working with councils and
businesses, and has installed over 5,000 lockers in the UK
from corner shops and petrol stations to railway stations
and shopping centres.
The firm has applied to Havant Borough Council for
retrospective planning permission for a 5.5-metre-long
locker which is already in use outside the Co-operative
supermarket at 2 High Street, Emsworth.
The InPost lockers outside the Co-Op in Emsworth have
been installed without planning permission | Northmill
Associates/LDRS
The shop, at the High Street junction of King’s Terrace and
West Street, is also home to the Post Office along with the
lockers, which have built-in CCTV for security.
InPost said it provides an affordable and eco-friendly
service so people can collect, send and return parcels at a
time which suits them, eliminating the need for door-to-door
journeys and repeat deliveries.
It added that it served over 2 million individual customers
in the UK in 2022, with 46 per cent of these customers using
the service more than once and claimed it helps local
economies by driving customers to the high street to shop.
At present, InPost said 22 per cent of the total population
of the UK live within a seven-minute walk of one of its
lockers.
The council will make a decision on application APP/25/00147 by
May 8.
The News March 25th
Page updated:
Wednesday March 26, 2025