PENLLERGAER: Giant distribution warehouse approved next to M4 – but will Junction 47 grind to a halt?

A giant distribution warehouse has been approved for Penllergaer Business Park — but the decision has been overshadowed by deep concerns about the impact on one of Swansea’s most congested junctions.

Swansea Council’s planning committee gave the go-ahead on March 31, 2026, for the demolition of the existing vacant building on the site off Heol y Ddraig and its replacement with a modern storage and distribution centre covering more than 12,000 square metres.

The facility, which will operate as a so-called “last mile” distribution hub — the final stage in the delivery chain from warehouse to front door — will sit on an 11-hectare plot bordered to the north by the A48 and the M4 motorway, and to the south by the ancient woodland and historic parkland of Penllergare Valley Woods.

The applicant, Stoford Properties Ltd, says the development will create approximately 180 full-time equivalent jobs directly, with a further 70 or so indirect roles, and is expected to contribute around £5.5 million a year to the local economy.

The scheme is a major operation. At full capacity, the site will accommodate 899 van storage bays, 72 loading bays capable of processing up to 216 vans an hour, 221 staff car parking spaces and a multi-storey van storage structure rising to over eight metres. Overnight, hundreds of delivery vehicles will be stored on site, loaded up and dispatched across Swansea and beyond each morning.

But it is the impact on the roads surrounding the site that dominated the planning process — and which will continue to concern residents long after the decision.

Penllergaer Roundabout at Junction 47 of the M4 (Image: Google Maps)

The applicant’s own traffic assessment concluded that the development would generate up to 454 two-way vehicle movements during the morning and evening peak periods. Around half of those are expected to use Junction 47 of the M4, the major roundabout that connects the A48, the A483 and the motorway — a junction that already operates beyond its design capacity and has been the subject of repeated attempts to ease congestion.

Swansea Bay News has previously reported on efforts to tackle the notorious pinchpoint, including a traffic light upgrade at the junction and resurfacing works on the roundabout itself. In February last year, the Welsh Government indicated it would look again at M4 junction improvements in the area, though no firm commitment has followed.

The ward member for Penllergaer, Councillor Tony Fitzgerald, put his objection on the record in the planning report, arguing the scheme was more of an industrial operation than a business park use and was simply not suitable for this location.

“Junction 47 is currently running at over its design capacity,” he wrote. “Adding up to 454 two-way vehicle movements during the morning and evening peak periods would mean an extra 227 vehicles using junction 47.”

Penllergaer Community Council went further, formally requesting that the application be refused, describing what it called “the abysmal failure” of the council’s own Local Development Plan to deliver the transport infrastructure needed to support development in the area. The Community Council pointed to the applicant’s own traffic assessment, which acknowledged that no committed highway schemes were planned for the study area between 2025 and 2037.

The council’s own highway officers initially recommended refusal on highway safety grounds. However, following extensive negotiations and revisions to the proposed mitigation scheme, the Local Highway Authority eventually withdrew its objection — subject to a series of stringent conditions and a substantial legal agreement.

Those conditions include a requirement that the distribution centre cannot open until junction mitigation works at M4 Junction 47 have been fully completed. The applicant will be required to contribute £790,000 towards those works, with an additional £131,000 earmarked for bus stop improvements, pedestrian crossing upgrades, a speed limit reduction on the A48 from 50mph to 40mph, and traffic regulation orders in the surrounding area — a total highway contribution package of £921,000.

Artist’s impression of the new distribution centre in Penllergaer
(Image: SMR Architects)

The broader concern for many in the area is cumulative. Penllergaer and the land between it and Gowerton is already at the centre of one of Swansea’s most significant development pressures. A 600-home scheme that could create a continuous ribbon of housing from Penllergaer to Gowerton has already been unveiled, part of a wider pattern of residential growth in Swansea’s northwest that has already put pressure on local roads. As we have previously reported, Swansea’s Local Development Plan promised more than 7,000 new homes across its lifetime, with delivery now significantly behind.

Against that backdrop, residents in nearby Mansion Gardens and the wider Parc Penllergaer estate will be watching closely to see whether the promised road works materialise before the warehouse opens its doors.

Beyond the traffic debate, the planning process also grappled with the site’s sensitive surroundings. The southern boundary of the development abuts Penllergare Valley Woods — a Grade II Registered Historic Park and Garden containing scheduled ancient monuments, listed structures and ancient woodland. Heritage bodies Cadw and Heneb both confirmed they had no objection, with noise assessments indicating the development was unlikely to cause harm to the historic landscape.

The ecology picture was more complex. Surveys identified areas of wet woodland and swamp habitat on site deemed to be of local conservation significance, and the council’s ecologists concluded that the development would result in a net loss of biodiversity on site. To compensate, the developer will be required to fund £390,593 worth of off-site habitat improvement works at three nearby Sites of Interest for Nature Conservation, including Mynydd Garngoch — secured through a legal agreement running over 25 years.

The site also sits partly within a Coal Authority Development High Risk Area, with evidence of past coal mining in the northern section. No above-ground construction can begin until intrusive ground investigations have been completed and any necessary stabilisation works carried out.

Solar panels covering around a third of the warehouse roof are proposed, generating an estimated 72,000 kilowatt hours a year, and the site will include electric vehicle charging infrastructure and 36 cycle parking spaces.

Welsh Water has confirmed the site’s foul drainage will connect to Gowerton Wastewater Treatment Works, which is currently failing to meet compliance thresholds. An upgrade is due to be completed in January 2027, and the council has imposed a condition preventing the building from being occupied before that date unless Welsh Water confirms the work is done.

The planning approval is conditional on the developer completing a Section 106 legal agreement within six months. If that agreement is not signed in time, officers have been given delegated powers to refuse the application outright.

For the communities of Penllergaer and Llangyfelach, the decision means one thing above all else: the promised Junction 47 works must now be delivered before a single van rolls out of the new depot. Whether that promise is kept will be the real test of whether this approval works for local people.

Related stories from Swansea Bay News

Welsh Government says it will look again at Swansea M4 junction improvements
The Welsh Government signalled a review of junction improvements in the area — but no firm commitment has followed.

Penllergaer M4 junction to see new traffic light upgrade
Previous attempts to ease congestion at the already-overloaded Junction 47 roundabout.

Work to start this week on resurfacing busy Swansea M4 junction roundabout
Resurfacing works on one of Swansea’s most congested junctions — the same roundabout now facing hundreds more daily vehicle movements.

Continuous ribbon of housing could stretch from Penllergaer to Gowerton as new 600-home scheme unveiled
The warehouse approval adds to mounting development pressure in an area already bracing for thousands of new homes.

7,000 homes promised, just 300 built: Swansea’s housing blueprint falters
The wider picture of development and infrastructure delivery in Swansea — and whether promises are being kept.

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Amazon says £2.4bn investment has boosted Wales — with Swansea at the centre

Swansea’s role in the global giant

In Swansea, Amazon operates two major sites: an Idea’s Centre, one of just four in the UK, where teams work on projects for Prime Video, Alexa and the online shopping platform; and a Distribution Centre, part of the company’s vast logistics network. Together, they show how the city is plugged into both the creative and operational sides of Amazon’s global business.

Jobs, apprenticeships and training

Since 2010, Amazon says it has created more than 2,000 full and part‑time jobs across Wales. The report also highlights that 90 apprentices from Wales have graduated through its apprenticeship programme, while more than 430 people have taken part in career development and skills training initiatives.

David Marcok, from Amazon in Swansea, said the company is keen to show its impact beyond the balance sheet: “In 2025 so far, our team has collaborated with organisations including Save the Children and Wales Air Ambulance through volunteer engagement, product contributions and direct financial assistance.”

Community partnership with Faith in Families

One of the most visible local partnerships has been with Faith in Families, the Swansea charity behind the Cwtch Mawr Multibank. The hub redistributes surplus essentials — from school uniforms and hygiene products to bedding and baby kits — to families across Swansea Bay struggling with the cost‑of‑living crisis.

Amazon’s Swansea team has supported the initiative by donating thousands of backpacks filled with school supplies, packing baby kits worth more than £10,000, and helping Faith in Families expand into a larger warehouse in Llansamlet to meet rising demand. The charity says this support has been vital in reaching families who would otherwise go without.

Cwtch Mawr Multibank in Swansea(Image: Alistair Heap / PA Wire)

National expansion plans

The report comes as Amazon announces a £40 billion UK investment between 2025 and 2027, including four new fulfilment centres and upgrades to more than 100 existing sites. Thousands of new jobs are promised, with most outside London and the South East.

Amazon already employs more than 75,000 people in the UK, making it one of the country’s largest private sector employers.

Tax contributions — and the debate they spark

Amazon’s report states its total UK tax contribution in 2024 was £5.8 billion, including £1 billion in taxes it directly paid and £4.7 billion collected on behalf of government.

The company stresses it ranks among the UK’s top taxpayers. But critics argue that much of the total comes from taxes collected from customers and employees, rather than corporation tax on profits. Campaigners have long questioned whether multinationals like Amazon contribute fairly compared to smaller businesses, pointing to allowances and incentives that reduce taxable profits in the short term.

Amazon says such allowances are government policy designed to encourage investment and innovation. The debate highlights a wider tension: while Amazon’s spending creates jobs and infrastructure, questions remain about whether the tax system lets global giants contribute proportionately to the public purse.

The Amazon logo displayed on the exterior of the Swansea Distribution Centre, a key hub in the company’s UK logistics network.

Skills and community impact

Beyond jobs and tax, Amazon points to its role in skills development. Its apprenticeship levy transfers have supported more than 1,500 apprenticeships outside the company, while its Career Choice programme has helped over 23,000 UK employees retrain in high‑demand fields. In Wales, more than 430 people have benefited from career development initiatives since 2010.

Locally, the partnership with Faith in Families shows how Amazon’s presence in Swansea is also tied to community resilience — helping families under pressure while anchoring the city in the company’s wider UK operations.

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