I urge you to get your objection in to another Town Centre tower block this time 16 storeys opposite and higher than the Travelodge.
OBJECTION LETTER
Brett
McAllister
Development
Management
The
Magistrates
1
Farnan Avenue
London
E17 4NX
7th January 2019
Dear Mr. McAllister,
Application
No: 183989
Juniper House,
221 Hoe Street, Walthamstow, London E17 9PH
No real effort was made to engage the community
hence only 30 people attended. Seeing as the Council is the developer this
shows a total disregard to residents.
1.
Construction Issues
a. Before this application is
presented to the Planning Committee we want to see a full report on how it is
proposed to manage the construction traffic from the North Circular to the Town
Centre for the C&R Town Centre Development, Central House and Juniper House
all of which are expected to start in 2020 and go on for at least 5 years.
Continuous disruption to the Town Centre can only act as a disincentive to
people to visit the shops and the market thereby undermining the economy of
Walthamstow.
b. We are extremely concerned
at the damage the construction traffic will do to First Avenue and the Town
Centre generally. This site is very tight due to the surrounding houses and the
boundary with the railway line. We believe this is far too large a development
for a small and congested site.
c. Juniper House has very
limited access only via First Avenue. This area was held up by the council as a
great Mini Holland success. The quieter roads created will now be the main
routes for the construction traffic meaning the Mini Holland expenditure was a
waste of public money.
d. The corner of St Mary’s Road
and Hoe Street is a major pedestrian thoroughfare and with Central House and
Juniper House developments this corner will be very congested.
e. Other sites – If the C&R Town Centre development goes ahead, which is due to
start in 2020, and go on for at least 5 years the Hoe Street area will be heavily
congested with construction traffic. Currently this part of the Town Centre has
been a building site for at least 2 years waiting for the gyratory system to be
completed and Walthamstow Gateway. No sooner will they be completed and Central
House will start in 2020. Juniper House will start in 2020 and go on well into
2022. There are plans to rebuild Walthamstow Central Station which will also
become a building site for many years. All this means residents of this area
will have experienced building site conditions for 10 years or more. This is
unacceptable and makes Central Walthamstow a very unattractive place.
2.
Design
According to LBWF Urban
Design Supplementary Planning Document paragraph 5.7.3 states:
In some places within the borough, such as some Victorian or Edwardian
terraced streets, the character is very distinct with strong building ‘rhythms’
and a prevalence of unifying features, materials and detailing. New development
should therefore take these into account in the design response, by seeking to
reflect the prevailing scale,
proportion and detailing of buildings, albeit not necessarily by way of a
pastiche response to context.
How can a 16 storey modern
glass and brick tower block come any way to meeting this requirement? Another tower
block so close to Hoe Street is going to change the whole nature of the area
and overwhelm the existing 2 storey Victorian Terraces in First Avenue and the
surrounding streets. Orford Road is the road that leads to the historic
Walthamstow Village visited by hundreds of tourists! This cannot be allowed to
happen and is contrary to council policies.
3.
Comments from the Planning
Report –
A high quality and
sustainable mixed-use redevelopment of an under-utilised site in Walthamstow
town centre; the site of
Juniper House was not underutilised – it was used by a modern day well designed
office block.
“91 residential units, (of which 59% benefit
from two bedrooms or more) contributing towards the increased annual housing
target of LBWF at both the town centre and wider borough scales;” the Draft
London plan says Waltham Forest’s target for housing will be 1,794 homes per
year but the Town Centre alone is providing that.
“Flexible commercial floor
space providing a valuable contribution to the vitality and vibrancy of this
part of Walthamstow”; - the workspace will be pokey, hard to access and service so may well
not be used.
“Improvements to the public realm and
enhanced pedestrian permeability throughout the site”; only residents of
the flats and users of the nursery will access the restricted site
“A high quality environment
for future residents and occupiers including a variety of communal amenity
spaces to complement the residential offer” it will be like a gated community isolated
from the rest of the Town Centre.
4.
Fire Precautions
a. Grenfell - After the Grenfell disaster it is vital a proper analysis is made of
how the emergency services will access this very restricted site. Until the
Grenfell Inquiry is completed we don’t believe any tower blocks should be built
until it is fully understood why the regulations allowed the Grenfell disaster.
A fire at this very congested point would have a massive impact on local
residents and the whole Town Centre and the risk is too great so this
development should not be approved.
b. Fire Safety - It is up to the planners to make sure the design of this building
meets the necessary fire precautions such as a fire lift and sprinkler systems
etc. Plans need to be in place to show how evacuation of the building can be
achieved and how the emergency vehicles can access it and get the necessary
water supplies to fight a fire.,
5.
Transport
a. Victoria Line Congestion - Between Tottenham Hale Station and Walthamstow
Central there are over 5,000 apartments being constructed or in the planning
process. This planning application highlights 1,433 new flats (homes for at
least 3,000 more people) being constructed in central Walthamstow alone. The
Victoria Line is already at capacity with trains every minute. This development
of 91 flats is going to create a lot of tube journeys and will just help to
congest the line even further. There is no more capacity in central Walthamstow
for buildings that create additional tube journeys. People moved to Walthamstow
because it was cheap and it was easy to get into central London. Now the tube
is getting dangerously overcrowded before many of the new properties are
completed and TfL have no plans for increasing the capacity of the line. The
council must stand up to the GLA and demand a stop to these developments as the
transport infrastructure cannot cope with the forth coming demand.
b. Road Network - Hoe Street is often jammed with traffic as it is a major route
through the Borough. This development cannot be accessed from Hoe Street
without blocking the road and the buses. The only access to it is through quiet
residential streets which have been made quieter by Mini Holland. This scheme
cannot be built without destroying the environment of the local residents and
having a significant impact on the people living on the route of the
construction vehicles from the North Circular up Chingford Road into Hoe
Street. Thousands of residents along the route will have their lives disrupted
by all the construction traffic trying to head to the Town Centre for the various
developments that are being proposed. As noted earlier this is going to go on for
over 10 years.
6.
Servicing the Site
Construction Traffic - Very severe restrictions will need to be put on
the construction traffic to ensure the Town Centre does not jam up and the
lives of the residents in the surrounding roads is not made a misery. All
construction staff will have to arrive at the site on public transport which
will just congest the buses and tube more. The Planning Committee will need to
see a fully worked up transport plan to show how the construction traffic will
be managed and which streets disrupted.
7.
Nursery – the 35 place nursery tucked
away in the service yard of the 16 storey block adjacent to a busy railway is
hardly an ideal location. If this is approved once again the planning process
will be failing the next generation.
8. Social Housing – we are told there is a desperate need for Social Housing and to reduce
costs the land owned by the council should be used for Social Housing. This is
another good example where public land is being sacrificed for profit (same as
Blackhorse Point). If this site is to be developed it should be for Social
Housing and not to fund a hole in the Council’s accounts.
We urge you to reject this plan as it is out of keeping
with the existing low rise Victorian terraces, is too congested a site and
access is only through existing quiet residential streets. This is a bad scheme
for the Town Centre and for the adjacent residents.
Yours
sincerely,
Adrian
Stannard
Civic Society Planning
Watch
Thumbs up Adrian. As a resident of First Avenue, I also submitted a 14 page objection letter but have no idea how this will be presented to the planning committee tomorrow or even if it will be considered at all. Do you have much experience in the process?
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