Post justification exercise by Wandsworth Council to justify cluster of towers in York Road area

Author: Cyril Richert

Wandsworth Council has run a major consultation over the July-beginning of August period, in a cynical attempt to justify their approval for tall and massive developments in the York/Lombard Road area. The so called consultation on the Proposed Supplementary Planning Document: Lombard Road/York Road Riverside Focal Point – June 2015 presented their aim to designate the latest area available between Clapham Junction and Wandsworth town centres as suitable for tall buildings, although no consideration was given on the impact of such schemes on transport and amenities.

We are not supporting the Focal point designation for the following reasons:

  • Most of the area has already been granted or recommended approval for redevelopments of very tall and massive constructions.
  • The cumulative impact is not considered.
  • Public realm improvements are already ignored in granting applications.
  • This looks like an attempt to complement all land between Clapham Junction and Wandsworth town centres and set up a blanket policy to transform the full area into a high-dense and tall buildings zone without resident consent.

We have structured our full response within the sections below:

1. Existing/proposed developments

Overall, out of 16 sites considered in the draft SPD, only 6 sites (7 if you consider 80 Gwynne Road) are currently free of redevelopment proposals. It means than in more than 60% of the sites, current vacant sites, warehouses or 1-2 storey industrial buildings have proposals to be replaced by 17, 20, 21, 28, 30, etc storey towers.

Whilst all those scheme have currently been approved or recommended in breach of the current local planning documents (buildings of 9 storeys and more are likely to be inappropriate) there cannot be any doubt on the aim to justify the existing plan to transform the Lombard/York road area into a cluster of very tall buildings (or as the developers like to put it: landmarks!).

2. Impact

The cumulative impact of the all proposed or approved applications and the overall development of the surrounding area is a material consideration. Counting all proposals and approved schemes, we could get more that 2350 unites for the area, which might convert into more than 5000 additional residents using local amenities and transport facilities.

Transport for London itself admitted, during July Crossrail 2 meeting, that Clapham Junction station was already congested and the next major improvement might be Crossrail 2 in a 15 years horizon. It was also acknowledged that the surrounding road network in the area was over-stretched. In the meantime, the Council is only planning… a pedestrian bridge across the Thames (which seems actually to be the main purpose of this SPD exercise, beside ad-hoc justification for existing schemes).

The current local policy on transport (DMT1) is stating:

Development, including changes of use, will be permitted where it does not have a negative impact on the transport system, including public transport capacity and the highway network.

During the local plan examination hearing, on the 8th and 9th of July, the government inspector suggested amending the policy with the following wording:

Development, including changes of use, will be permitted where the residual cumulative impact on the transport system, (including public transport capacity and the highway network) is not significant.

It seems beyond imagination that the Council refuses to consider that an additional population of 5000 or more within the next 5 years will not have a significant impact on transport.

3. Amenities and public realm

The SPD draft already gives elements to justify tall building. It removes, from the different sites, the inappropriateness (which was ignored anyway) for tall buildings:

Tall buildings: In accordance with Core Strategy Policy IS3d, tall buildings in this location are likely to be inappropriate. 

Instead it specifically encourages tall buildings by stating:

The skyline of new buildings on the York Road frontage should be varied and [this is a site where] a tall element could be appropriate given the desirability for a significant contribution to public space provision. The justification for a tall building in this location is that it would have the potential to allow the delivery of high quality public realm at ground level and could be positive feature in the townscape.

Beside the very subjective statement of a “positive feature in the townscape”, the consideration of public realm is already side-lined in recent decisions.

In its latest example, the Council showed no consideration about public realm as it approved p.a. 2015/0881 which explicitly specified in its amended scheme that public realm routes would be removed:

The footprint of the building increased across the ground floor to link with a podium what was previously three separate buildings and so
removing the public realm routes through the site.

4. Area

Post justification exercise by Wandsworth Council to justify cluster of towers in York Road area
For areas A, B, C (town centres) the Council is considering tall building as sensitive (but not inappropriate), which means in reality, as all previous application show, that they are welcome. Battersea Reach (area D) has already been developed with high density and tall buildings. The current proposal for Winstanley and York redevelopment (area E) includes a series of very tall buildings, including several such buildings on York Garden.

The new focal point proposal (F) looks like an attempt to complement all land between Clapham Junction Town Centre and Wandsworth town centre and set up a blanket policy to transform the full area into a high-dense and tall buildings zone.

Until the Council presents a global vision for the area, with an impact analysis, and get the consent of the residents for their clear project, any such plan of filling patchy areas should be strongly restrained.

Conclusion

We consider this consultation as a preposterous exercise of justification for an area that has already been granted numerous developments in breach of existing policies.

The arguments used in the draft consultation brochure are biased and misleading and experience shows that they will be ignored by planning decisions as “on balance benefits outweigh harm”.

Therefore we are opposed to the designation of this area as a focal point as unnecessary, and this will only open doors to further steps beyond any acceptable development.

Cynical and offensive comments made by Council officers during the consultation

As reported by attendees to the consultation meeting on Streetlife, the Council made clear that they were not considering the exercise as a consultation, but much more as a presentation of the Council’s view.

First of all, in case you wonder why becoming a “focal point” involves very tall buildings, Dave Clark answered that… “it just does… it’s two years of lectures in the principles of urban development – it would take too long to explain it to you“.

In response to Council ignoring the many objections to massive developments in the area, Dave Clark answered:

“There are always objections – it’s not the Eurovision Song Contest”

In response to question of how can we build homes that the people who were born and raised here can afford to buy, the same officer said:

“We can’t – that’s never going to happen”.

And finally, he also said that the Council was going to be giving the people of the Winstanley estate [through York/Winstanley redevelopment] back their “dignity”. Those living in the area will appreciate the statement.

It was clearly a festival!

 

Filed under: York Road area Post justification exercise by Wandsworth Council to justify cluster of towers in York Road area

Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Author: Cyril Richert

Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Ahead of the plan to run Crossrail 2 through Clapham Junction, TfL and Network Rail have organised a meeting on 22nd July with the aim to provide a forum to discuss and understand local issues and concerns arising from the Crossrail 2 project, and inform the Crossrail 2 proposals in the local area as part of their on-going commitment to community
engagement as the scheme develops.

What is Crossrail 2?

Crossrail 2 will be a brand new railway line, serving south-west to north-east London through central London. It will run on existing and widened railway lines outside of the central core and from a 37 km twin bore running tunnel.

With a very high capacity, it should provide additional rail capacity for 270,000 people to travel into central London, per 3 hour peak (up to 30 trains per hour in each direction). The platforms will be approximately 250m long to cater for long trains. For those familiar with it, it is similar to the RER A in Paris.

The project is expected to cost around £27bn. Construction could start (at the moment there is still no guarantee that the project will develop, and the team is focusing on finance sources) in the early 2020s, with the scheme open around 2030.

What does it mean for Clapham Junction?

A Crossrail 2 station at Clapham Junction will be an underground station providing an interchange to London Overground and National Rail services.

At the end of 2014, the Department for Transport published an updated document highlighting the area they identified for potential surface interest for station entrances, tunnel portals, work-sites, and vent shafts. Those areas are safeguarded, which means that planning authorities will need to consult TfL on applications within the limits identified.

Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Blue Areas: These are areas where the Crossrail 2 proposals have a greater effect at ground level, such as for stations, temporary worksites or ventilation and emergency shafts.

As you can imagine it deeply upset Wandsworth Council which was planning a cluster of tall buildings near Flacon bridge/grant road, to be used for decanting residents during their Winstanley-York Road estates redevelopment project.

However, during the discussion following the presentation, the community groups made it clear that priority for the Crossrail 2 station should be on providing public transport and not on retail or housing development.

Consideration will be given to interchange requirements for an increased number of passengers at the Clapham Junction Crossrail 2 station at an early stage of design. Bus routes and frequencies will be considered, along with connections for cyclists and pedestrians. Crossrail 2 is working with colleagues in Surface Transport to determine how buses should be accommodated into the scheme at Clapham Junction.

TfL and Network Rail are developing the Crossrail 2 scheme together and understand that the community are concerned about the congestion through the station, particularly in the pedestrian underpass.

Crossrail 2 is still at a very early stage and therefore the project team do not have specific details relating to construction practices or logistics. In all circumstances, they will seek to minimise the impact that the construction of Crossrail 2 has on local areas, including on the already congested local road network (particularly in regards to removing the excavated materials).

Timeline

  1. Now – Sep 2015: Scheme design and appraisal
  2. Oct – Dec 2015: Public consultation
  3. Autumn 2015: Anticipated Government Spending Review
  4. May 2016: Mayoral Election
  5. 2016/17: Further scheme development work including additional rounds of consultation
  6. Dec 2016: Autumn Statement
  7. 2017 – 20: Submission for Powers
  8. 2020 – 29: Construct and test
  9. 2030: Open to the public

Crossrail 2 will organise a consultation during Autumn 2015 to provide the public more detail about our preferred route along with high-level information about station locations, vent shaft locations, proposed work-sites across the route.

Filed under: Crossrail 2 Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Author: Cyril Richert

Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Ahead of the plan to run Crossrail 2 through Clapham Junction, TfL and Network Rail have organised a meeting on 22nd July with the aim to provide a forum to discuss and understand local issues and concerns arising from the Crossrail 2 project, and inform the Crossrail 2 proposals in the local area as part of their on-going commitment to community
engagement as the scheme develops.

What is Crossrail 2?

Crossrail 2 will be a brand new railway line, serving south-west to north-east London through central London. It will run on existing and widened railway lines outside of the central core and from a 37 km twin bore running tunnel.

With a very high capacity, it should provide additional rail capacity for 270,000 people to travel into central London, per 3 hour peak (up to 30 trains per hour in each direction). The platforms will be approximately 250m long to cater for long trains. For those familiar with it, it is similar to the RER A in Paris.

The project is expected to cost around £27bn. Construction could start (at the moment there is still no guarantee that the project will develop, and the team is focusing on finance sources) in the early 2020s, with the scheme open around 2030.

What does it mean for Clapham Junction?

A Crossrail 2 station at Clapham Junction will be an underground station providing an interchange to London Overground and National Rail services.

At the end of 2014, the Department for Transport published an updated document highlighting the area they identified for potential surface interest for station entrances, tunnel portals, work-sites, and vent shafts. Those areas are safeguarded, which means that planning authorities will need to consult TfL on applications within the limits identified.

Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Blue Areas: These are areas where the Crossrail 2 proposals have a greater effect at ground level, such as for stations, temporary worksites or ventilation and emergency shafts.

As you can imagine it deeply upset Wandsworth Council which was planning a cluster of tall buildings near Flacon bridge/grant road, to be used for decanting residents during their Winstanley-York Road estates redevelopment project.

However, during the discussion following the presentation, the community groups made it clear that priority for the Crossrail 2 station should be on providing public transport and not on retail or housing development.

Consideration will be given to interchange requirements for an increased number of passengers at the Clapham Junction Crossrail 2 station at an early stage of design. Bus routes and frequencies will be considered, along with connections for cyclists and pedestrians. Crossrail 2 is working with colleagues in Surface Transport to determine how buses should be accommodated into the scheme at Clapham Junction.

TfL and Network Rail are developing the Crossrail 2 scheme together and understand that the community are concerned about the congestion through the station, particularly in the pedestrian underpass.

Crossrail 2 is still at a very early stage and therefore the project team do not have specific details relating to construction practices or logistics. In all circumstances, they will seek to minimise the impact that the construction of Crossrail 2 has on local areas, including on the already congested local road network (particularly in regards to removing the excavated materials).

Timeline

  1. Now – Sep 2015: Scheme design and appraisal
  2. Oct – Dec 2015: Public consultation
  3. Autumn 2015: Anticipated Government Spending Review
  4. May 2016: Mayoral Election
  5. 2016/17: Further scheme development work including additional rounds of consultation
  6. Dec 2016: Autumn Statement
  7. 2017 – 20: Submission for Powers
  8. 2020 – 29: Construct and test
  9. 2030: Open to the public

Crossrail 2 will organise a consultation during Autumn 2015 to provide the public more detail about our preferred route along with high-level information about station locations, vent shaft locations, proposed work-sites across the route.

Filed under: Crossrail 2 Crossrail 2 community engagement meeting

Appeal and new application for 17 storey building at 98 York Road

Author: Cyril Richert

Appeal and new application for 17 storey building at 98 York Road

98 York Road – 17 storeys proposal

An appeal (p.a. 2014/7103) has been lodged at the beginning of July by the developers against Wandsworth Planning Application Committee decision to refuse their plan to redevelop 98 York Road with a podium and buildings up to 17 storeys.

While the appellant are asking for an inquiry, the procedure will be determined by the Planning Inspectorate in accordance with Section 319A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.

In addition, the developers have launched a new application (screening exercise stage only this time) for a similar scheme (in bold are exact similar terms in both applications – spot the difference):

EIA Screening Opinion application for: Demolition of existing buildings and erection of buildings up to 17-storeys (three-storey podium with 14-storey, 10-storey, 6-storey and 5 storey towers) to provide car showroom and garage/workshop (Sui Generis) on ground, second and third floors (circa 9,000sq.m. GEA) and 173 residential units above (13,400sq.m. GEA). A basement car park would provide 87 vehicle parking spaces and 184 cycle spaces. (Screening Opinion Application) 

As a reminder, previous application 2014/7103 was proposing:

Erection of a mixed-use development up to 17-storeys to provide car showroom and workshop on ground, first and second floors and 192 residential units (basement car park would provide residents with 87 vehicle and 200 cycle parking spaces + parking spaces for customers on ground floor).

Overall the main difference is a small decrease of residential units (from 192 to now 173) and increase of cycle space (from 184 to now 200).

We fail to understand the need for such a screening opinion while a very similar plan was refused by the Council and while the developers are already appealing on the rejection.

However we also note that the Council approved a scheme of several buildings up to 21 storey next door (198 York Road), which undoubtedly weaken the arguments used to justify the rejection, as they were saying :

“proposed massing and design by reason of the density of the development would constitute an unneighbourly form of development that would result in an unacceptable level of harm to the amenities of the occupants of neighbouring properties through overlooking and loss of privacy”

It seems that the main reason why the Conservative member approved one scheme and rejected the other is that developers of 98 York Road were not cynical ingenious enough to offer the relocation of a similar asset as the Royal Academy of Dance (of course some would say also that as it was presented before the May general election, Tory councillors did not want to alienate the voters…), which would have been the key element to ignore all breach of policy, objections of neighbourhood and harm to the amenities.

Filed under: Clapham Junction Appeal and new application for 17 storey building at 98 York Road

21 storeys approved in York road paves the way for more towers even before consultation for the area

Author: Cyril Richert

By 5 votes to 2 (you can guess who voted against) the scheme 2015/0881, including a 21 storey tower, was approved at the Planning application Committee meeting on the 14th July.

21 storeys approved in York road paves the way for more towers even before consultation for the area

Proposed development for 198 York Road (currently Homebase)

More than 40 objections were received, noting that none of the buildings along York Road are over 6 storeys, yet the shortest proposed building
is 9 storeys.

We also wrote an article showing that, as usual, Wandsworth planning policy (SSAD page 234) was ignored.

All issues and breach of policies have been brushed off with the benefits of the venue provided for the Royal Academy of Dance (currently located in Battersea Square). In what looks like a copy-cat of the developer’s advertising brochure, the officers’ report says : “The RAD as an occupier would undoubtedly add lustre to the area and could provide the centrepiece for a new cultural district attracting visitors and further investment to this part of the borough“.

The level of affordable accommodation proposed reaches 20% (raised from 10% in the initial proposal), well bellow the borough’s policy of 40% (but you know, the RAD…etc). All commercial uses of the scheme and the public realm routes through the site have also been removed.

In a very cynical circumstance, the Council is currently (until 9th August) also consulting Wandsworth residents on the possible designation of Lombard/York Road area as a focal point (which should consequently allow taller building).

Filed under: Winstanley&York Road 21 storeys approved in York road paves the way for more towers even before consultation for the area

The Council requires the façade of the Alchemist pub to be rebuilt

Author: Cyril Richert

The Council has refused a retrospective planning consent to demolish the façade of the former Fishmonger/Alchemist pub (planning application  2015/2762) on Tuesday 21st July. The Alchemist pub, located at 225 St John’s Hill, was nearly totally demolished last month, without planning consent (see our story HERE).

The Council requires the façade of the Alchemist pub to be rebuilt

According to the Council’s press release:

“The council responded to this unlawful demolition by launching enforcement action requiring the developer to rebuild it brick-by-brick.

A subsequent attempt to circumvent the enforcement action by obtaining retrospective permission has today (Tuesday) been rejected.

Planners ruled that the developer’s application should be refused because the loss of this important local landmark and prominent historic building in the conservation area would be against the public interest.

The developer will now be required to start work on rebuilding the pub and restoring it to its original condition. “

The Council requires the façade of the Alchemist pub to be rebuilt

In a recent email exchange [21/07/2015], Planning chairman Cllr Sarah McDermott said:

“I spoke to our officers yesterday about the Alchemist/Fishmongers Arms. They are currently seeking legal advice to ensure they have a secure base for the right action. I can assure we are all ‘on the case’.”

In the press release she added:

“In our view the demolition was a very serious breach of planning rules which can only be put right by the complete rebuilding and reconstruction of this important community asset, using the same materials and to the same architectural design.”

As a consequence, it is likely that the developer will have to submit anew application for further amendment to the rest of the building, which means that former planning consent could be re-discussed and amended.

Filed under: Clapham Junction The Council requires the façade of the Alchemist pub to be rebuilt

Our support for Crossrail 2 station on Grant road

Author: Cyril Richert

Our support for Crossrail 2 station on Grant road

On Wednesday 22nd July was organised a meeting to discuss a new community engagement panel TfL is proposing to establish in the Clapham Junction area.

As they work to refine the proposals for Crossrail 2, which includes a new station at Clapham Junction, they want to engage with representatives of the community panel, to provide more information about proposals for Crossrail 2,  to better understand local issues and what this means for our community.

Later this year a wider public consultation on the scheme will be organised.

Transport for London and Network Rail are working together to plan Crossrail 2, and the current Crossrail 2 route proposes a station at Clapham Junction. A Crossrail 2 station at Clapham Junction would create a new interchange to London Overground and National Rail services and create additional capacity and relieve crowding at Waterloo.

However their plan for safeguarding part of Grant Road and Bramlands area is deeply upsetting Wandsworth Council‘s plans to use that are for high rise towers in order to decant the population for their redevelopment projects of Winstanley and York Road estates.

We have submitted the following statement in support of Crossrail 2 ambition:

We support a redevelopment of Clapham Junction station
1. We are fully supporting your aim to redevelop some areas of Clapham Junction station to welcome Crossrail 2 (as shown in the map published to protect the proposed route ).
2. We have long advocated for a master plan to redevelop Clapham Junction station and we believe that you address here the needs for a proper and ambitious plan for a station redevelopment.

Wandsworth Council is not giving enough consideration to transport issues
3. Wandsworth Council has submitted a response to the consultation in February 2015 and expressed strong concerns that Crossrail 2 safeguarding is jeopardizing their master plan for the improvement of the Winstanley and York Road Estates and immediate surrounding area.
4. They wrote in their representation that “The Masterplan has involved extensive consultation with the local community and an iterative process has led to a preferred option […] The Council has now carried out the necessary scheme testing, with local residents [and] the view was expressed that Bramlands would be used to drive and change values across the whole site.” We would like you to know that this is misleading as at NO TIME has the local area being consulted on the developments of Grant Road/Bramlands specifically, and the public has never been offered any option but a fait-accompli. The view that Bramland could be used for dense and tall buildings is the sole view of Wandsworth Council with no consultation on the matter. Actually an initial consultation demanded for “fewer towers” in the whole area.
5. In addition, the current area formed along York road, from Lombard road to the Winstanley/York area and up to Wandsworth roundabout, is under intense pressure for redevelopment. While the local policies are all suggesting that building taller than 4 or 8 storeys in the location are “likely to be inappropriate” , a number of redevelopment proposals have already emerged to replace mostly industrial or retail sites with high density residential developments. For the purpose of giving examples we can cite (non-exhaustive list):
• Several buildings up to 21 storeys recommended for approval at 198 York Road (replacing a retail warehouse building by 254 residential units),
• several buildings up to 17 storeys recommended for approval at 98 York Road (replacing a car retail by 192 residential units),
• several buildings up to 30 storeys for screening opinion at York Road (replacing a warehouse building and car park by approximatively 200 residential units),
• a 14 storey building approved at 12 – 14 Lombard Road (replacing two-storey commercial building by 33 residential flats),
• a 28 storey building approved at 56 – 66 Gwynne Road (erecting 135 residential units on a currently disused site),
• Winstanley/York redevelopment plans (potentially demolishing 700 homes and replacing them with around 2,000 units – increase of 1400 residential units – across the regeneration scheme)
6. We have joined our voice to the concerns expressed by the Battersea Society and called for a halt to any further planning permissions until there has been serious consideration, with TfL, of the implications of the increased demand on road and public transport in the area.
7. We are concerned that Wandsworth Council is currently pushing for major developments in an area where public transport capacity is already inadequate at peak periods and increasingly at other times.
8. They are not giving proper consideration for their own Policy DMT1 where it says that “Development […] will be permitted where it does not have a negative impact on the transport system”. In addition, the NPPF suggests that developments shouldn’t have a significant impact on transport system.

We support the plan to locate a Crossrail 2 station at the safeguarded site (Grant Road)
9. We welcome the plans for a Crossrail 2 station at Clapham Junction as it is currently safeguarded. The proposed location at Grant Road will create a properly integrated interchange to London Overground and National Rail services and give the proper recognition for Clapham Junction station as a major transport hub in south London.
10. Plans should not be derailed by the Council’s consideration to only maximise residential development potential and their identification of Grant Road/Bramlands as ideal site for decanting the current population during the construction project.
11. Alternative sites by the Council (the land to the rear of Clapham Junction Station and the Asda/Lidl site) would not provide the same integration possibilities and seem to be suggested without the interest of Clapham Junction transport expansion at heart, despite Wandsworth Council’s claim.

We wish to be included to any discussion and consultation regarding the possibilities of station redevelopment and the impact of Crossrail 2 and would like to be included in the community panel.

Filed under: The station, Winstanley&York Road Our support for Crossrail 2 station on Grant road

Soon a new 4 storey building to compliment crossing at Plough Rd/St Johns Hill

Author: Cyril Richert

Soon a new 4 storey building to compliment crossing at Plough Rd/St Johns Hill

Application 2013/5712 (70-74 St John’s Hill) was granted in April 2015 for erection of four-storey plus basement building to provide Class A1 shops at ground floor with 8 flats above including a first floor roof garden.

It should replace an openspace/pocket park and match in shape the three other existing buildings at the crossing of St john’s Hill and Plough Road.

Original application dated 2009 (granted in approval 2010/0537 dated 15
November 2010), but the work has been delayed for two main reasons:

  • The negotiation with Wandsworth Valuation Surveyors to purchase the part of the pavement Planners wish to see incorporated in the development to realign Plough Road to its original line and
    St John’s Hill as far as later road widening permits.
  • Having agree this in principle and progressed to a stopping up order, there was the discovery that a Virgin Media cabinet is situated in the part of land to be sold to the development. Negotiations are in progress which have not yet been resolved and until resolved the development cannot progress.

Hopefully we should see some progress made towards the second part of 2015.

Filed under: Clapham Junction Soon a new 4 storey building to compliment crossing at Plough Rd/St Johns Hill

Local Plan examination: affordable, tall buildings and focal point

Author: Cyril Richert

Local Plan examination: affordable, tall buildings and focal point

Local Plan examination – Hearing session 8th July 2015

Is the policy effective? That was one of the main question that we discussed during the local plan examination hearing held by a government inspector, on the 8th and 9th of July 2015.

I will briefly report a few notes on some topics below.

Affordable housing (day 1)

Although the Council is expected to exceed its targets on total new housing (things have moved significantly recently with development taking place in a number of sites and others ahead of progress), the Council acknowledge that there is a short-fall on affordable housing. They said:

“The Council is unable to meet needs in the borough”

The Council argue that they can only deliver what is viable. It is of course completely biased as the viability is defined by the developers’ scheme itself, and therefore is seeking to demonstrate that affordable housing will not make it viable. This was perfectly demonstration in an article published by the Guardian at the end of June.

According to the current policy, all schemes should propose 40% of affordable units (and 15% in Nine Elms). Although most of the developments do not even get close to those numbers, the Council argued that  if we do not have figures on affordable housing, then the land value is likely to increase. However later they said that if we put a higher figure that currently then the price of the land will not drop and it will deter developments. It must be one way or another: either the percentage contributes to the land value, or it does not!

Therefore CJAG said that either we need to need to stick to the figure, or it needs to be replaced with what the Council really means: “The percentage of affordable housing is subject to viability.”

Local Plan examination: affordable, tall buildings and focal point

Local Plan examination – Hearing session 9th July 2015

Tall buildings (day 2)

In paragraphs 2.9 and 2.10 of their statement ahead of the examination, the Council said that representators questioned the Council’s application of the policy, rather than the wording of the policy.

2.9 A number of representors, including the Battersea Society, Clapham Junction Action Group, Historic England (formerly English Heritage) and the Wandsworth Society have commented on the application and effectiveness of the policy. The comments focus on the Council’s application of the policy and the policy’s effectiveness, rather than the wording of the policy which has not been the subject of this review.

However it seems to me that we are clear on that point. We are not saying that the application is different from the policy. We are saying that the policy fails to provide the correct information.

The Site Specific Allocation Document (SSAD) is full of wording such as “In accordance with Core Strategy Policy IS3d, tall buildings in this location are likely to be inappropriate”.

However, planning officers confirmed at the planning forum last month that the meaning of the policy was “tall buildings will be assessed against the 15 criteria of Policy DMS4”. It is confirmed in their statement:

2.10 In the Council’s view, some of the comments made reflect a misunderstanding of the policy. DMPD Policy DMS4 describes the locations where tall buildings may be appropriate or are likely to be inappropriate. It does not define any areas of the Borough where tall buildings will always be inappropriate. It then goes on to set out the criteria which will be used by the Council, and which applicants must address, in order to demonstrate compliance with the policy.

Therefore we suggested two possibilities to make the policy clearer and more effective:

  1. the Council should replace the statement “tall buildings in this location are likely to be inappropriate” in all the document by “tall buildings will be assessed against the 15 criteria of Policy DMS4
  2. or the Council should remove the word “likely” and write that building above a certain height are inappropriate, full stop (to make it “firmer”, as the Inspector said).

Focal Point (day 2)

The Council is suggesting to designate the area along York Road as a focal point. A focal point seek to promote activity and mixed-used development (and taller buildings could be considered favourably, as a knocked down effect).

The Council is currently consulting on the specific Lombard Road focal point designation (up to 9th August).

We note that the area is nearly covering all the sites between Wandsworth Town Centre and Clapham Junction Town Centre (as it comprises part of Winstanley/York road estates). Therefore we fail to understand to notion of “point” as in “focal point” when the area covers several square kilometres and is covering nearly the full area between 2 town centres, already promoting activity and seen more favourable to tall buildings. It looks to be a blanket policy to designate the whole part of Wandsworth borough as free land for major developments.

In addition, we note that major schemes have the tendency to be designated as “landmarks” (“It would provide a high quality landmark feature” in the officer’s report to justify 28 storey at Lombard road; “The distinctive form of the block has the potential to introduce a local landmark” in the officer’s report to justify 21 storeys at 198 York road; etc), in order to justify their size and the breach of current  policy. Therefore we wonder how Wandsworth can promote a cluster of landmarks (!) in the York Road are!

Transport

The Council is proposing to change policy DMT1 to say:

“Development, including changes of use, will be permitted where the residual cumulative impact on the transport system, (including public transport capacity and the highway network) is not severe.”

However the inspector pointed out that the NPPF is unclear and suggested that alternative wording could be :

“where cumulative impact wouldn’t be significant.”

The inspector should publish his report on the soundness of the plan, and his recommendations, within the next few months.

Filed under: Planning strategy Local Plan examination: affordable, tall buildings and focal point

Up to 25 storey buildings to replace Homebase near Wandsworth roundabout

Author: Cyril Richert

Up to 25 storey buildings to replace Homebase near Wandsworth roundaboutSeveral building, including a 25 storey tower, are proposed at the current site of Homebase, Swanden Way, near Wandsworth bridge roundabout.

Application 2015/3304 describes the proposal as a scoping exercise (i.e. not a formal planning permission application at the moment):

“Demolition of the existing buildings and redevelopment of the site to provide a mixed use scheme including 450 residential units , retail units, offices and associated community facilities, cycle and car parking (within buildings ranging from 10 to 25 storeys) and public realm improvements.”

As usual now in Wandsworth, you won’t be surprise to hear that the Site Specific Allocation Document (part of Wandsworth Borough Local Plan, reflecting the borough statutory policies and guidelines for planning development) has got a section dedicated to the site (p132) saying:

Tall buildings: In accordance with Core Strategy Policy IS3d, tall buildings in this location are likely to be inappropriate. In accordance with DMPD Policy DMS4, the height at which a development in this location will be considered to be tall is 9 storeys.

Ah ah ah! As for recent applications in Lombard Road or York Road, developers are now ignoring completely that policy and submit 14, 17, 21,25, 28 or 30 storeys without batting an eye.

The Proposal as received more than 40 objections so far and no support. Beside the massing and the size of the development, the most frequent critic is on the pressure created on Wandsworth Town Railway Station that has already major difficulties to respond to the pressure of commuters at peak hours.

As the planning officers are currently recommending for approval any major scheme in the area, our only hope of recovering some sense of reality will probably rely on the Councillors members of the Planning Application Committee if such scheme comes before them.

Filed under: Wandsworth Town Up to 25 storey buildings to replace Homebase near Wandsworth roundabout