Region Area

Barristers

Anjoli Foster

Anjoli Foster

Position

Anjoli has been ranked third in Planning Magazine’s list of top-rated planning barrister’s under-35 and eighth in the top-rated juniors. Clients describe her as a real pleasure to instruct, and that she leads client teams with sensitivity and clear direction.

Anjoli's practice focuses on all aspects of planning and environmental law, including housing, commercial and retail, infrastructure, energy, compulsory purchase and enforcement work. She frequently appears in planning appeals and in the Planning Court. Her clients include a range of national and regional housebuilders and land promoters, central government, local planning authorities, and environmental groups.

Anjoli is consistently rated as one of the top junior planning barristers in the country. She is ranked by Planning Magazine as the 2nd ‘Top-Rated Junior Under 35’ and the 8th ‘Top Rated Junior’. She was also selected by a panel of judges as one of The Planner’s Women of Influence.

Her practice focuses on all aspects of planning law, including housing, commercial and retail development, infrastructure, energy and compulsory purchase. She frequently appears in planning appeals, local plan examinations and hearings in the High Court and Court of Appeal. Her clients include a range of national and regional housebuilders and land promoters, central government, and local planning authorities.

Some of the notable high-profile cases Anjoli has been instructed on include:

Use Class E and new permitted development rights: instructed by the government in the High Court and Court of Appeal to defend the widely-discussed legal challenge to the amendments to the General Permitted Development Order and the Use Classes Order, which introduced new permitted development rights to build upwards and the new Use Class E.

Brighton Marina: acted in the significant public inquiry into the proposed development of 1,000 residential units at the Brighton Marina, consisting of nine buildings ranging from 8 storeys to 28 storeys in height. The decision was called-in by the Secretary of State and was one of the first appeal decisions by the Secretary of State on the approach to the updated NPPF on design matters.

Newcastle Quayside: appeared in the public inquiry, and subsequently the High Court and Court of Appeal, concerning a dispute over proposals for 289 apartments in a 14 storey building on the iconic Newcastle Quayside. The contentious matters particularly included quality of design, impact on heritage assets and living conditions.

Holocaust Memorial, Westminster: represented the Government in a legal challenge to the decision-making on the “called in” planning application for the UK Holocaust Memorial in Victoria Tower Gardens.

Barnet House: a public inquiry into proposals for mixed residential and commercial development in Whetstone town centre, London, consisting of several buildings, including a 14 storey tower.

Tenterden, Kent: promoted a scheme for 145 houses, country park and sports pitches on greenfield land. Successfully represented the developer at the three-week planning inquiry, the legal challenge to the grant of permission, and the associated public rights of way inquiry.

Surge of Power (Jen Reid) statue, Bristol: represented the appellant in an appeal into the installation of a statue of a black female protestor, following the toppling of the statue of slave-trader Edward Colston. The appeal raised highly topical issues of contested heritage and diversity and inclusivity in public spaces.

Great Wolf Water Park, Bicester: acted in this substantial three-week public inquiry concerning proposals for the country’s largest water park. Due to public interest this inquiry was streamed live on YouTube, receiving over 1,000 viewers per day.

Kennington, Lambeth: promoted over 250 residential units, including a 29-storey tower, in central London, on behalf of the developer at a planning inquiry.

Mornings Mill Farm, Wealden: represented the developer in an inquiry promoting proposals for comprehensive development including 700 houses, 8,600 sqm of employment floorspace, a medical centre and a school.

In her spare time, Anjoli is an active tennis player, representing her county of Warwickshire, as well as the All England Lawn Tennis Club and Cumberland Lawn Tennis Club.

Prior to joining Landmark Chambers, Anjoli was a Law Scholar at Keble College, Oxford University. She graduated with a first-class degree and went on to obtain a distinction in the Bachelor of Civil Law also at Keble College, Oxford. She also spent a year working at the Law Commission.

Education

Qualifications

• University of Law, Birmingham – Bar Professional Training Course (Outstanding)

• Keble College, Oxford – Bachelor of Civil Law (Distinction)

• Keble College, Oxford – BA in Law (First Class)

Memberships

Appointed to the Attorney General's B Panel of Junior Counsel.

Publications

• Garner’s Environmental Law, contributor to the chapters on Air Pollution and Light Pollution

• ‘Relief from Sanctions and Procedural Default in the Public Law Context’, by Anjoli Foster and Miriam Seitler (published in Judicial Review, Volume 21, December 2016)

• Research assistant to Professor Anne Davies for the textbook ‘Employment Law’ by ACL Davies (Longman Law Series, 2015)

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