Guest post by Philip Grant in a personal capacity
From Brent Council’s adopted Local Plan Historic Environment Strategy.
Last week Martin published a guest post with the text of an open email I
had sent to Brent’s Director of Property and Assets (Morland Gardens – (Happy?) Anniversary
Brent! Why the delay?). I promised to
let readers know what the Council said in reply, and here is the full text of
the email I received on 18 November, with the names of Council Officers replaced
by their job titles.
‘Dear Mr Grant,
RE: New Service Request: 1 Morland Gardens, NW10 -
What are Council Officers' recommendations and when will they be
published?
Thank you for your open letter dated 10 November
2025, and note that [the Director of Property and Assets] has asked me to
respond on the queries raised:
1. Please let me know the date by which Council
Officers intend to make their detailed recommendations to Cabinet for the
redevelopment of 1 Morland Gardens.
As you state in your open letter dated 10 November
2025, Cabinet approved the facility mix at Morland Gardens for affordable homes
and youth facilities in June 2025. Please note that establishing the youth
provisions/requirements is a crucial enabler to bringing forward a vision for
the site that aligns with the Cabinet approved facility mix. The Council has
therefore been liaising with a range of youth service providers to better
understand what/how they would seek to use the building/site to meet the needs
of young people living in Stonebridge and across the borough.
In relation to affordable
housing, the Council is currently unable to deliver 100% social rent tenure due
to the economic climate we are now operating in with regards to increased borrowing costs, construction inflation, and
compliance with new/enhanced building safety standards. The Greater London
Authority (GLA) has recently issued its new Social and
Affordable Homes Programme (SAHP) 2026 – 2036 and the Council will be
reviewing this funding prospectus to see if it can provide the Council a viable
route to bring forward affordable housing schemes on sites such as Morland
Gardens. The SAHP funding window opens in February 2026 and closes in April
2026, so the Council will be able to confirm after this date if a grant bid for
Morland Gardens has been included.
With the work currently being undertaken, the
Council cannot confirm a date by which officers intend to make detailed
recommendations to Cabinet for the redevelopment of 1 Morland Gardens until we
are able to lock in the proposed youth service provisions for the site and the
affordable homes funding opportunities through the SAHP.
2. Please also let me know (as some decision on
this point must surely have been reached after two years of review) whether
those recommendations will include retaining the heritage Victorian villa
building, Altamira, as requested in the Willesden Local History Society
petition which was presented to September's Full Council meeting, and supported
then by councillors from across all three political parties.
As per the response to the petition from the
Willesden Local History Society, no decision has been made on the retention or
not of the Altamira building. Any decision will be based on the outcome of the
above (youth provision identification, housing scheme requirements) for Cabinet
to make a considered decision.
Thank you once again for your open letter, should
you have any further queries, please do not hesitate to contact me.
Regards
Head of Capital Delivery’
The response says why Brent is not currently building many new homes, and these
words in the answer to point 1 are of more general interest: ‘In relation to
affordable housing, the Council is currently unable to deliver 100% social rent
tenure due to the economic climate we are now operating in ….’ The reference to
‘social rent tenure’ is another example of the misrepresentation of “social
housing” terms frequently coming from the Council’s Officers and members.
The only new genuine Social Rent level homes which Brent Council
provides go to existing tenants who are moved to new homes because the Council wants
to demolish their existing home. If you want to understand the different types
of affordable housing, please read my November 2022 guest post Brent’s Affordable Council Housing –
figuring out Cllr. Butt’s reply.
Illustration from Brent’s March 2025 Council Tax leaflet.
While I’m on the subject of the Council’s misleading information about
affordable housing, you may remember my guest post from last April: How many affordable homes did Brent Council
deliver in 2024/25? - Was it 530, or 434, or just 26? It was in a leaflet sent to every Council Taxpayer in the borough,
including a letter to residents from the Council Leader saying how well they
had done. And the answer to the question of how many affordable homes
Brent Council had actually delivered itself in 2024/25 was 26, not the 530
they wanted us to believe!
You will also notice from the response above that the proposed
affordable housing at Morland Gardens may well depend on Brent getting
financial help from the GLA’s Social and Affordable Homes Programme 2026-2036.
But I can’t help wondering - what happened to the £107m of funding which Brent
trumpeted that it had been promised from the GLA’s Affordable Homes
Programme 2021-2026?
From the GLA’s affordable homes website.
How much of that promised £107m was spent by Brent Council, and how many
new affordable homes were built with that money? Wasn’t it meant to be helping
to fund the regeneration of St Raphael’s Estate (see this June 2021 post: Cllr Butt addresses St Raphael's residents
on the delays in fill-in/rebuild development of the estate. Is it the full
story?)? How many new homes have been
built so far as part of the long-promised St Raphael’s regeneration? (I don’t
know – perhaps someone can give the answer in a comment below, please.)
Brent’s original 2020 Morland Gardens scheme was meant to use £6.5m in
funding from the GLA’s Affordable Homes Programme 2016-2021 (extended to
2023, because of Covid). That money was lost, but it could have been used
instead for a Council redevelopment at Twybridge Way, which received planning
consent before Morland Gardens in 2020, and would have provided 67 affordable
homes. That project could not go ahead because of the flawed Cabinet decision
to move Brent Start to a “temporary home” in the former Stonebridge School
Annexe on that site. You can read the details in my October 2021 guest post: 1 Morland Gardens and Twybridge Way –
Brent’s response challenged.
It was hard not to get distracted by some of the contents of the
Council’s response above, but I must get back to the main point of this guest
post. Should I just accept what the Council Officer was saying, or should I
reply? I chose the second option, and this is what I wrote:
‘Dear [Head of Capital Delivery},
Thank you for your email, in response to my open
email of 10 November to [the Director of Property and Assets]. As the text of
my open email was made public, both online and in the "Brent & Kilburn
Times" (see below), I will seek to make the text of your reply, on behalf
of Brent Council, publicly available.
The information given at point 1 is helpful in
understanding the continuing delay, although this will mean another winter when
the empty property can suffer further weather damage. That is not good
stewardship of a valuable heritage building!
I am disappointed with the response to point 2,
because it suggests that the only factors which will be taken into account in
deciding whether Officers should recommend either retaining or demolishing the
heritage building will be what is required for the proposed youth provision and
housing scheme. That approach ignores the requirements of Brent Council's
heritage planning policy BHC1, and its adopted Historic Environment Strategy,
which both signal the importance of sustaining and enhancing the significance of
heritage assets in proposed developments affecting them.
I have referred to the section on "Valuing
Brent's Heritage" before, but these words from it need repeating:
'Once a heritage asset is demolished it cannot be
replaced. Its historic value is lost forever to the community and future
generations and it cannot be used for regeneration and place-making purposes.'
The historic value of "Altamira" is huge.
This was the landmark building at the entrance to an 1870s estate named
Stonebridge Park. It was in at the birth of that district of our borough, and
with its distinctive belvedere tower, it was one of the few original Victorian
villas left standing when most of the street called Stonebridge Park was
demolished to make way for the 1970s Stonebridge Park Brent Council
estate.
Many of those 1970s buildings were demolished after
less than 30 years, but "Altamira" is now 150 years old, and still in
good structural condition, as well as being a beautiful example of Italianate
architecture. It will be part of the Morland Gardens regeneration site, and it can
be used for place-making purposes, helping to share the story of Stonebridge
Park with young people, and the wider community, now and for future
generations. That is why it should be retained, and why you and other Council
Officers involved should decide to recommend its retention as part of your
detailed submission to Cabinet.
Please keep me updated on progress with your
review, and let me know if you need support from me (and the wider local
history community) for an SAHP funding bid which includes retaining the
heritage building. Best wishes,’
Philip Grant.