The application to turn the into housing is coming in front
of the Planning Committee of Hackney Council on Wednesday (11th) evening. The planning department is recommending approval. Please do take this last opportunity to raise objections before
this is decided by emailing Hackney Planning
Below are details of some of the objections that have
already been raised that you might want ot draw on.
Alternatively (or as well as) you can sign the petition
that will be presented to the council.
1. Insufficient detail in drawings and plans
The listed building application includes insufficient detail
to fully understand the current building condition or to assess the potential
impact of the proposals.
The drawings and plans are sketchy and do not accurately
describe the building. For example, and perhaps most startling, the front
elevation shows a rounded, not a pointed gothic arch. There is a clear need for
a full measured survey to be prepared to a proper listed building application
standard.
The application should be refused, withdrawn or found
invalid in order to correct deficiencies in the drawings and plans.
2. Application boundary
The ‘red line’ application boundary excludes the eastern
half of the site and therefore covers only half the listed building curtilage.
This also omits the mature plane trees from the application, which have
therefore not been taken account of.
Granting consent will result in an inappropriate subdivision
of the planning unit into two, which will no longer accord with the listed
building’s curtilage and unnecessarily complicating planning and listed
building control.
The application should be refused, withdrawn or found
invalid in order to correct these deficiencies in the application.
3. Balance of loss of fabric conservation or reinstatement
Proposed plans are a broad-brush set of intentions backed up
by general statements of intent. There are no firm details of the extent of
sacrifice vs. restoration and preservation of the renaming fabric, or detailed
method statements on repairs and restoration. This is probably because parts of
the building are now unsafe to access or boarded up (see below).
This creates a ‘suck it and see’ approach, where planning
and listed building consent may be granted, but only afterwards (and only if
and when the scheme proceeds) will the extent of reinstatement of lost or
decayed fabric be determined.
A significant part of the decay is a result of neglect over
many years by the current building owners. It is not reasonable for the current
state of the building to become the baseline for what can be saved or restored
and how much degraded fabric sacrificed. This is contrary to the National
Planning Policy Framework, which states that no owner should be permitted to
gain such advantage.
Judging the appropriate balance should normally be considered
in light of a viability statement. No such statement is submitted; so that it
is not at all clear if even this harmful scheme, and this unwelcome proposed
use, will be implemented.
The application should be refused, withdrawn or found
invalid in order to correct these deficiencies in the application.
4. Change of use
Permission for change of use to residential should be
refused for the following reasons:
Loss of the proposed social and community use. This change
of use is contrary to policy. Such space is precious and rare, in high demand
(where it is affordable), and unlikely to be re-provided elsewhere in the area.
Lea Bridge is an area deficient in social and community space. Many local
groups and schools are actively seeking additional space.
Failure to re-provide affordable workspace. The Paradise
Park permission was amended to reduce the amount of B1 affordable workspace in
order to permit the museum use. The use the building should automatically
revert B1 affordable space, should the Trusts’ proposals fall by the wayside.
Policy seeks to protect employment uses and the Paradise Park development
re-provided relatively little space in the first place.
Harm to the character of the building. The original use is
most often the best use and this is most closely reflected in Trust’s proposals.
Squeezing two residential units into this small volume results in a diminution
in the character of the property – particularly the subdivision of the main
schoolroom.
This application for change of use should be judged against
policy, either on the basis of loss of social and community use and/ or loss of
affordable workspace. In either case, policy seeks to resist such loss, and the
application should therefore be refused.
5. Museum proposals and the Trust
The Trust and the proposed museum use has been allowed
insufficient time to assemble proposals. The 12-month period offered by the
developer has expired. In hindsight, this was clearly too short and therefore
unreasonable.
A further minimum period of at least 12 months should be
offered to the Trust, in effect re-setting the clock.
The developer clearly believes the current situation is a
‘tabula rasa’, and an opportunity to bring forward fresh new proposals,
unencumbered by previous permissions and undertakings to the Trust and to the
Planning Authority.
If the developer chooses to follow this assertive route (and
they in turn may be frustrated at lack of progress on the part of others) ,
they should be asked to revert to the previous permission to provide affordable
workspace as part and parcel of the consented Paradise Park Scheme.
It should be remembered that the consented scheme (in a
protected employment area and a conservation area and the site of a historic
dock) contained many compromises in terms of heritage and land use issues that
were only accepted on balance and in the light of the other attributes of the
scheme, including either affordable workspace or a museum.
6. Repairs notice
The structural survey is limited by the fact that access to
parts of the building is now unsafe. This is clear evidence that the state of
the building has deteriorated significantly and that this process may be
accelerating. It is clearalalso that a repairs notice should now be urgently
considered, in order to arrest the decay and allow safe access for an accurate
assessment of the building’s condition to be carried out. This should be
a pre-requisite for consideration of the current listed building consent
application; so that the repairs notice can be considered a positive step
towards determining the best scheme for the site, whichever scheme that proves
to bee.
7. Local Planning Authority handling of the application
It is deeply puzzling that the Local planning Authority
(LPA) has allowed this building to pass into this critical state of decay, and
chosen to avoid the repairs notice route until this late stage. This raises
question of appropriate prioritization, capacity or competence on the part of
the LPA. The previous listed building consent was allowed to expire on 25thAugust
2012. The date of the principal deed of the legal agreement was signed 15thMarch
2007; and amended on, or about, March 2010; and the terms in that agreement
have been allowed to expire without further action by Hackney.
Correspondence on the Planning Register, dated23 June 2009,
from Giles Underhill of Landgate to LBH Planning states: ‘We also suggest an
amendment to clause 4.3.2.1 as we have given our assurance to Councillor
Rathbone that we will give him 12 months to secure the necessary funding for
the proposed ‘Museum on the River’.
Is well meant, but misguided political interference staying
the Authority’s hand? English Heritage should take a very careful look at this
case. If the situation does not appear to be in order they should consider
recovering and determining the application themselves.
Whatever the reasons for the current situation, and in order
to correct the position, a repairs notice should be prepared and issued in
draft form to all parties concerned, without waiting for this application to be
determined. As noted above, basic repairs and bracing is needed urgently, if
only to allow safe access for a proper survey to be undertaken and accurate
drawings and plan prepared.
8. Harm to the listed building
The proposed mezzanine will result in harm to the listed
building and should not be permitted.
Introduction of a mezzanine floor across most of school hall
represents a substantial, unjustified and permanent loss of a principal
characteristic of the building that points most directly to its former use as a
school house/ mission room.
The mezzanine interferes with and blocks views of the
characteristic roof trusses.
The mezzanine triggers the need for roof lights on prominent
roof slopes visible in street and riverside views. Disruption of the external
appearance is unjustified in the same way conservation area policies often
oppose roof lights on front roof slopes
A more modest mezzanine would still interfere with main
window to the north and the chimney breast to the south and disrupt views of
the roof. It should be opposed in principle.
The detailing of the front window/ door is clumsy and even
fails to reflect the characteristic gothic arched opening mentioned in the
listing details.
9. Heritage Appraisal
The applicant’s heritage appraisal is insufficiently
rigorous and fails to appreciate the architectural and historic significance of
the School/mission hall, which is attributed to the eminent Architect Arthur
Ashpitel, architect of St Barnabus, Homerton, whose father constructed Paradise
Dock (Arthur Ashpital’s obituary is attached and clearly refers to his
involvement with the Schoolhouse at Lea Bridge).
The Schoolhouse itself, detached from a church, is extremely
rare. Such schoolhouses have an important place in Hackneys social and economic
history.
10. Deficiencies in the option appraisal with the Design and
Access Statement
The applicant’s Design and Access Statement (DAS) fails to
examine alternatives, including the proposed museum. Given the scheme proposes
harm to the building, as a minimum, the DAS should consider alternatives to
decking over the hall and securing the most appropriate use for the hall. It
does not.
If this is the best possible scheme that is, practical,
viable and deliverable, then the applicant should demonstrate this by
evaluating the other options.
The application should be refused, withdrawn or found
invalid because the alternatives have not been properly appraised.
Refusal will allow a proper assessment of the potential
futures for the building to be carried out and give all parties the time to
devise alternative proposals that can be judged on their merits.
At least four alternatives should be examined:
1. The Trusts proposals for a community museum use, possibly
with a riverside extension.2. A hybrid with a community museum use in the main hall (vested in the Trust), and a cross funding development of the school masters house to the rear for one or more residential units.
3. Reversion to affordable workspace fitted out to shell and core standard for the entire building.
4. The proposed two residential unit scheme.
In our view, the order in which the options are set out above is also the order of priority the LPA should attach to the options.
11. Matters of detail not addressed by the application
There are a number or related, detailed matters that should
be borne in mind:-
- Reinstatement of the boundary wall and railings and the Yorkstone paving to the front should be secured. (The Yorkstone was funded by Vision Homes through S.106 monies but recently stolen, then temporarily replaced with a macadam surface).
- Immediate efforts should be made to secure fallen or perilously loose stonework (octagonal chimney’s etc.). This should be stored safely inside the building.
- The building has been repeatedly left open and unsecured (both boundary gates and doors into the building). Flammable materials have been deposited both outside the doors and inside the building. Proper management and safeguarding should be insisted upon – a further reason to follow the repairs notice route.
- A hoarding has lined the site for many years, bearing advertising and flags for the development, to the advantage of the developer, and maintained long after works on the main scheme have been completed. The hoarding should be replaced or made good, including for those parts of the site mysteriously excluded from the application boundary.
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