Tuesday, 10 February 2026

Here we go again! Controversial plans for 7 Randall Avenue back at planning Committee tomorrow

 

The site in the garden behind 7 Randall Avenue


 The detailed plan

 

My some counts there have been 8 applications for building on the back garden of 7 Randall Avenue including refusals and appeals.The plans involve the demolition of a garage and 3 sheds on the site and the buidling of a 3 storey plus basement house,  It returns again to the Brent Planning Committee on Wednesday with officers arguing that changes made to the appealed application now makes it acceptable. 

 The 49 objectors registered on the planning portal so far would not agree. The officers claim that this is 23 individuals with soome posting multiple objections.

 Their case rests on changes made to the application, including bringing back a proposal for a basement:


 

In sometimes tortuous language the officers' report sets out their case:

  

[The last application was refused] by reason of its scale, bulk and design would result in a visually dominant, excessive development that is incongruous to the surrounding suburban locality.
 
This is contrary to policies DMP1 and BD1 of the Brent Local Plan.
 
[The Appeal Decision]  noted that even know (sic) the proposed dwelling under the appeal scheme would be in a similarly central location within the site to that as per the outline consent, that the overall scale and massing would be noticeably greater that the dwelling previously permitted, resulting in a prominent form of development in an area with an open character.
 
Both the Outline Consent (22/0175) which has now expired as well as the dismissed appeal scheme (23/1875) had a similar layout to the proposed scheme, in that access was from Randall Avenue and the siting of the buildings were broadly central within the site.
 
Although it is clear that the proposal would not be identical to the main typology within the adjacent Homestead Conservation Area (HCA) or the common two-storey, semi-detached form found elsewhere in the immediate vicinity, the overall roofscape, bulk, scale and form of the proposed building is not considered to be out-of-place to the detriment of the established character, when it would be viewed from surrounding vantage points.
 
Furthermore, the roof forms of closest building to the application site forming its immediate context have sufficient variations for the proposed roof not to appear out of place or overly prominent. For the same reasons and given the limited views from public vantages and separation distance, the proposal would not result in harm to the setting of the HCA and the proposal would preserve the character and appearance of the HCA .
 
In summary, although the footprint would be larger than the outline consent and the dismissed appeal, the increase is not considered significant, particularly given the citing (sic) and separation to boundaries. This taken with the revised roof form (similar to the outline scheme) and the reduction in height compared to both the outline and dismissed appeal is such that the proposed development is not considered to result in adverse harm to the character and appearance of the site or surrounding area.
 
Conclusion
 
The proposal is considered to accord with the development plan and adopted Supplementary Planning Documents, having regard to all material planning considerations, and the application should be approved subject to conditions.
 
Weight has been given to the planning history, including the dismissed appeal scheme as a material planning consideration.
 
It is considered that this scheme has overcome the previous reasons for the dismissed appeal. 

The proposal would deliver one family sized home and would contribute modestly towards Brent’s housing targets.

 

A late supplementary report has been submitted dealing with a challenge to the applicant's claim that this is a self-build project and therefore exempt from some conditions.  LINK

Saturday, 7 February 2026

Bias by Brent Planning Officers over Hazel Road application listed for Committee next week – TWO open emails to Brent’s Director of Law.

 Guest post by Philip Grant in a personal capacity

 



Hazel Road and the Mission Hall now, and what is proposed.

 

Readers may remember a guest post from last September “EXPOSED! – Improper bias by Brent’s Planners over the Hazel Road application.” It may appear to have gone quiet since then, but things have been happening behind the scenes. Now matters are coming to a head!

 

Kensal Green Residents’ Association, whose FoI request had uncovered the evidence used in my previous article, sent a pdf document copy of my exposé as part of a complaint to Brent Council. The reply they received, from Brent’s Head of Planning, first summarised the issues raised, then responded in general terms to the summary (without referring to any of the detailed evidence of wrongdoing by the Case Officer) and concluded that there had been no bias! (That is typical of the way Brent has dealt with various complaints I have made over the years.)

 

In between various other, more pleasurable, heritage activities, I had put together a very detailed, evidence-based objection comment about the bias by Planning Officers, which I finally submitted to Brent’s planning website for application 25/0041 on 26 January. Brent’s Planning Code of Practice requires Officers and Members to consider and decide applications ‘in a fair impartial and transparent manner.’ Because I felt that there had been a clear breach of the Code, and a failure by the Council’s Head of Planning to address the concerns raised, I sent this open email to Brent’s Director of Law on 2 February:

 

Bias and perceived pre-determination by Brent Planning Officers in dealing with application 25/0041

 

This is an open email

Dear Ms Henry,

 

I am attaching a pdf document copy of an objection comment which I submitted on 26 January in respect of the planning application ref. 25/0041 (26 & 28 Hazel Road, London NW10). It contains detailed evidence of irregularities by Brent Council Planning Officers, which I would bring to your attention in both of your roles.

 

1. As Monitoring Officer:

There has been a breach of Brent's Planning Code of Practice by the Case Officer dealing with application 25/0041 (I will not name the Officer in this open email, but you can easily identify him internally), and potentially by other Planning Officers who have dealt with this application.

 

Paragraph 1.2 of the Code makes clear that Officers, as well as Members, must ‘consider and decide planning matters in a fair impartial and transparent manner.’

 

In cases such as this, where there had been pre-application advice and discussions, involving the Case Officer and other Officers, paragraph 8.4 of the Code states: 'It is vital that such discussions are conducted in accordance with this Code so there can be no suggestion of actual pre-determination or bias, or any perception of pre-determination or bias, or any other procedural impropriety.'

 

As I have shown in the attached document, there is a very strong perception of pre-determination in favour of the applicant in this case, and very clear evidence of bias by the Case Officer, so that his consideration of the application, in particular (but not exclusively) over the heritage aspects of it with which I was involved as an objector, was neither fair nor impartial.

 

You will need to consider the attached document in full, but the key points on the heritage side are:

 

·      the Case Officer had already sent the applicant's agent a copy of the Alternative Heritage Statement ("AHS") which I had submitted in February 2025, and invited the submission of a revised heritage statement ("RHS") on behalf of the applicant (which I do not object to);

 

·      after reviewing the RHS, submitted in April, and finding that it did not undermine the case made in my AHS, which showed that the application failed to comply with Brent's Local Plan heritage policy BHC1, the Case Officer not only asked the agent to prepare another revised heritage statement ("RHS2"), but spelt out in an email of 2 May 2025 what that statement should say. This instruction was clearly designed to enable the Case Officer to claim that policy BHC1 had been complied with (as if the application did not comply, Planning Officers could not recommend its approval to Planning Committee);

 

·      the RHS2 was sent to the Case Officer on 27 May 2025, and because a more senior Officer decided that this should trigger a new public consultation period, the Case Officer issued letters and notices about the consultation on 10 June;

 

·      however, the RHS2 document, which the consultation was meant to be about (with a closing date of 10 July) was not published on the Council's planning webpage for application 25/0041 until 9 July 2025. This did not seem to have been accidental, as I had emailed the Case Officer on 10 June saying that the revised heritage statement on the website was the April RHS (I was not aware until late July that there had been an RHS2!).

 

Although I believe that the Case Officer has breached the Planning Code of Practice, I would only ask that, if my complaint is upheld, he should be given a formal reprimand, not anything more serious. This is because, from past experience, I believe that problems over how adopted planning policy and practice are dealt with at Brent Council are not just down to this single Officer.

 

If you agree, on reviewing all of the evidence provided in the attached document, that the Planning Code of Practice has been broken in this case, I would ask that a written warning be given to Brent's Head of Planning, to be passed on to all of the Officers in his Department, that any future case of failure to consider and decide an application fairly and impartially will be treated as a misconduct offence, with serious consequences.

 

2. As Director of Law:

 

My wider concern, and hopefully yours as well, is that when the evidence which I have included in the comments document attached was presented to Brent's Head of Planning last October, in a complaint made by Kensal Green Residents' Association, his response was summarised in the words: 'I do not consider that the local planning authority has acted in a biased manner.' The details about this are set out at section 4 of the attached document.

 

I realise that a Head of Department is likely to try to protect his Officers, and the reputation of his Department, but in order to do so he has either failed to look at the detailed evidence provided, or has decided to ignore it, and try to deflect attention away from it in his response (an email of 24 October 2025 to Kensal Green Residents' Association, which they forward a copy of to me).

 

That approach undermines the credibility of any Report to Brent's Planning Committee put forward in respect of this application, if that Report is prepared or presented by Officers who have been involved in any way with the clear bias and perceived pre-determination which I have uncovered and commented on.

 

If such a Report, which would almost certainly recommend approval of the application, were to be made, and the Planning Committee were to accept the Officers' recommendation, then there would be strong grounds for an appeal against the decision to the High Court by objectors. Would you, as Director of Law, wish to take that risk?

 

The alternative that I can see, if the application is to be considered by Brent's Planning Committee, is that Brent Council should engage an independent planning consultant, perhaps nominated by a body such as the Royal Town Planning Institute, to review all of the planning application documents and comments on the application, and prepare a report and recommendation which is not influenced by the "procedural improprieties" which I have drawn attention to.

 

I look forward to receiving your response to this email, before any further action is taken by Brent Council (as local planning authority) over application 25/0041. Thank you. Best wishes,

 

Philip Grant.’

 

I had not received any acknowledgement to that email when I wrote a second time, after learning that application 25/0041 had been listed for a decision at the Planning Committee meeting next Wednesday, 11 February. Having read the Officers’ Report, on which Committee members are expected to base their decision (which is usually to approve the application, as recommended by Brent’s Planning Officers), it continued the bias previously complained about. This is what I wrote on 5 February:

 

Bias by Brent Planning Officers in their Report to Planning Committee on application 25/0041

This is an open email

 

Dear Ms Henry,

 

Further to my email to you on Monday 2 February, about bias and perceived pre-determination by Planning Officers in this case, I have been advised that application 25/0041 has been listed for determination at the Planning Committee meeting on Wednesday 11 February.

 

Having read the Officers' Report, it is clear that the bias By Planning Officers in favour of the application, and against those objecting to it, has continued in that Report. As a result, it is unlikely that there could be a fair and impartial consideration of the application, and I would strongly urge that application 25/0041 (26 & 28 Hazel Road, London NW10) be adjourned from next week's Planning Committee meeting, and only returned to the agenda when a Report and recommendation has been commissioned and prepared by an independent planning consultant, as suggested at the end of my 2 February email.

 

Because of my request for an adjournment, I am copying this email to the Chair and Vice Chair of Planning Committee, and to the Governance Officer for that meeting, for their information. I am also copying it to the Chief Executive, who may well be concerned by its contents as Brent's Head of Paid Service.

 

I realise that this email involves serious allegations, so I will seek to justify them, by reference to the Officers' Report to Planning Committee.

 

The Report's "summary of concerns raised" does include a mention of the detailed comment document which I included with my 2 February email, which it describes as: 'Planning officers being bias and pre-determining application.' However, the "Officer Comment" on this concern does not deal with the detailed evidence which I had provided, showing that there had been clear bias by the Case Officer. Instead, it suggests that any such bias would be immaterial:

 

'All planning applications are required to be determined in accordance with planning policies set out within the development plan, unless material considerations indicate otherwise. The assessment of the planning application would also consider any comments received from the public or internal/external consultees, when forming a recommendation on a proposal.'

 

I agree entirely that planning applications should be determined in accordance with Brent's adopted Local Plan policies, but those policies have not been set out in the Report 'in a fair impartial and transparent manner’, which is a vital requirement for both Officers and Members in considering and deciding planning applications.

 

In addition to showing that application 25/0041 did not comply with Brent's heritage policy BHC1, my Alternative Heritage Statement ("AHS") comment of February 2025 listed three other Local Plan policies that the application breached. This is the relevant extract from para. 4.5 of the pdf document version my AHS that was emailed to Planning Officers:

 

  

That objection, highlighting the application's failure to comply with three identified Local Plan policies, is not included in the Report's "summary of concerns raised". That is a serious omission when applications need to be determined in accordance with planning policy, and another example of the bias by Planning Officers in favour of the application which they want to see approved.

 

The Report's list of "Key policies of the Brent Local Plan 2019-2041" does not even include policy BP6 South East, which is the specific development management policy covering the Kensal Green area of the borough. When dealing with the other two policies in the body of the Report, Planning Officers have been very selective with the parts they refer to. This is a screen shot from the Report:

 


 

Para. 40 of the Report fails to include the requirement in policy DMP1 that 'complements the locality' includes the requirement to 'conserve and where possible enhance the significance of heritage assets.' Para. 48, at the end of that section of the Report, actually claims: 'The proposed contemporary design is therefore considered as high quality and would comply with policy DMP1.' But the character of the locality which policy DMP1 states the proposed development needs to complement is a street of two-storey Victorian terraced homes. A square modern four-storey office block (in place of a Victorian heritage building) would detract from the locality, rather than complement it.

 

Para. 41 of the Report does admit that policy BD1 states: 'innovative contemporary design will be supported where it respects and complements historic character,' then goes on to seek to negate that requirement by adding: 'but is also fit for the future.' It is not disputed that the proposed building has an 'innovative contemporary design', but it does not respect the historic Victorian character of Hazel Road. That requirement of Brent Local Plan policies DMP1, BP6 South East and BD1 should mean that application 25/0041 IS NOT recommended for approval, but Planning Officers have failed to represent those policy points fairly in their Report.

 

The section of the Report dealing with the heritage aspects of the application "copies and pastes" extensively from the Further Heritage Comments document prepared by Brent's Principal Heritage Officer ("PHO"), which was published in November 2025. However, the PHO was quite new to Brent, and had not known or had misunderstood several important points from the borough's Historic Environment Place-making Strategy ("HEPMS"), a 2019 supporting document for the Local Plan.

 

One misunderstanding was his view that because 28 Hazel Road had not been added to the Local List after a 2016 project, it did not merit being on that list, and so should have a heritage significance score of no more than 5 (and his assessment gave it that score, out of 12). I wrote to him on 25 November, explaining with supporting evidence how he had misunderstood the HEPMS, and showing him that as 28 Hazel Road was included on the list at Schedule 3 of the Strategy document, it was considered to qualify for addition to the Local List, with a score of at least 6 out of 12, even though none of the 100+ properties on that list have been formally added yet.

 

The PHO replied to me on 27 November with this email:

 

As can be seen, the PHO thanked me for bringing the misunderstanding to his attention, and said that would share the information 'with the relevant planning case officer.' However, the Report does not take into account that information, and still includes the original, and false, claim: 'It must be emphasised that, following LB Brent’s 2016 round of the local list review process, that the site building was not locally listed, as it was not considered to have reached the necessary threshold for local listing.'

 

The Report also continues to claim that the former Victorian mission hall has a heritage significance score of 5 out of 12, despite the fact that if it had a score that low the HEPMS would not have treated it as a non-designated heritage asset! This is yet another example of the bias shown by Planning Officers against genuine grounds for objection by myself and many other Brent residents in their consideration of this planning application.

 

The application should not be allowed to proceed to a decision at next week's Planning Committee meeting, and I look forward to hearing that it has been withdrawn from the agenda, pending an independent Report which can be relied on to be fair and impartial, rather than the current Report by Brent Planning Officers which cannot. Thank you. Best wishes,

 

Philip Grant.’

 

Is it worth all this effort, trying to oppose the Brent Council “machine”? I believe it is, and that ordinary citizens, like us, sometimes have to make a stand on important issues. If what I have uncovered is happening on this application, how much trust can residents have that Brent's Planning Officers will deal with any application fairly and impartially?


Philip Grant

 

 

Friday, 6 February 2026

Shock on St Raph's as community shut out of their Community Centre without notice

 

Amazing things go on inside this nondescript building

 

St Raph's Voice has sent Wembley Matters this description of recent events at their community centre that have caused disquiet in the community,

 

Children with nowhere to go after school. Vulnerable adults suddenly cut off from support. Mothers left without a safe, familiar space to meet, share advice, or ask for help. All of this has happened earlier this week on the St Raphael’s estate, where the resident association community centre locks were changed without notice.

 

Overnight, this vital hub was closed in a place with a lack of community spaces and provisions. Homework clubs stopped in an area with low educational attainment levels. Support sessions for vulnerable people ended abruptly. Essential community activity ceased with no notice. In an estate with very limited communal facilities, residents have been left with nothing to replace it.

 

The Chair of the Resident Association, Hinda Sharif was kicked out mid-community session by a contractor sent by the council with no communication or explanation. The justification given was fire safety.

 

Residents understand the importance of safety and would never argue against urgent action where there is genuine risk. However, at the time the locks were changed, no fire safety checks had been carried out to ascertain risk, and no evidence or documentation of completed inspections was shared with residents or the Resident Association. No findings were presented and no timeline for inspections or reopening have been communicated.

 

Despite repeated requests for information and clarity on when the doors might reopen, Labour-led Brent Council has not been forthcoming. This lack of transparency has compounded distress in a community already dealing with the sudden loss of essential support.

 

The St Raphael’s community room is not just a venue. It is a lifeline for children who rely on educational support and homework clubs, for vulnerable adults experiencing isolation, and for mothers navigating financial and emotional pressures. The Resident Association provides community-led support that is local, trusted, and accessible - exactly the kind of grassroots infrastructure councils often claim to value.

 

St Raphael’s is also an estate with a proud history of resilience and achievement. It is the former home of George the Poet, Raheem Sterling, and content creator Chunkz, clear examples of what can emerge when communities are supported rather than sidelined. Closing one of the few remaining shared spaces on the estate without notice sends a stark message about how today’s residents are valued, and what investment in future potential really looks like in practice.

 

Brent frequently speaks about community power, participation, and wealth-building. Yet this action exposes a troubling gap between rhetoric and reality. Community power cannot exist where communities are locked out of the spaces that allow them to organise, support one another, and thrive.

 

No suitable alternative space has been offered while the room remains closed. There seems to have been no suggestions of other spaces or due concern for where activities can continue in the meantime. And there appears to have been little consideration of the impact on those most affected.

 

“This is not how you treat communities who rely on this support service,” says Asif Zamir, resident of St.Raphael’s Estate and former Chair of the Resident Association. “It shows a disdain and complete lack of regard or respect. On the one hand they say it’s for resident safety, and on the other they are causing considerable harm.”

 

How decisions are made matters. When Brent Council acts without communication, without evidence, and without accountability, they reveal what they truly think of the communities affected. The failure to respond transparently when asked for information only reinforces that message.

 

Residents are not asking for special treatment. They are asking for honesty, respect, and basic fairness. If safety is the concern, then evidence should be shared, timelines made clear, and interim solutions provided so that children, vulnerable adults, and families are not left without support.

 

If community power is more than a slogan, then it must start with listening - not locking the doors as if the communities affected are irrelevant.

 

I understand that an apology has been made by the council regarding the poor communications involved in this action. However, keys to the new locks have not been handed over and no remedial works have taken place since Monday. 

Proposal to change timing of Brent Council Budget Setting Meeting

 The Budget and Council Tax Setting Meeting is the most important Full Meeting of Brent Council in the municipal calendar. This year's meeting on Monday February 23rd falls during Ramadan  so a proposal has been made to accommodate members who wish to attend Itfar.

Instead of the usual 6pm start it has been proposed that the meeting starts as 3.30pm with a 15 minute break for Itfar at 5.30pm to 5.45pm.

The proposal is in line with Brent Council's respect for the borough's religious communities but also affects councillors and the public who will be working at this earlier time or who have after school childcare commitments.

Wednesday, 4 February 2026

Quintain submit meanwhile sports application for large area of their Wembley Park estate

 

NE04, 05 and 06 in context

 

 The application boundary

 

The proposed 'meanwhile' uses

 

Next week's Brent Planning Committee will consider an application from Quintain for meanwhile use of a large site in their Wembley Park estate.  Existing permission dating from 2015 for development of sites NE04, 5 and 6 is now not expected to be delivered until 2028/29. The application is for sports facilities and public realm to be on place for 3 years.

The large area next to Union Park North on Engineers Way is currently surrounded by hoarding.

Quintain's agent explains:

To make use of this vacant and underutilised space in the interim, two meanwhile uses are proposed for outdoor sports (5 aside football) and an indoor leisure, events and entertainment venue both of which will complement and operate alongside the existing meanwhile events and entertainment venue (Bubble Planet). To ensure the successful operation of these meanwhile uses, and their integration, a comprehensive approach has been taken to the layout of the application site which will allow Quintain to maintain and manage areas of shared infrastructure, whilst the operators themselves will be responsible for the direct management of their respective meanwhile uses. Further information on the layout and operation of the application site is provided in the Design and Access Statement submitted with the application.

 

Proposals

The application site takes in land made up of former hardstanding from the site’s previous use as Yellow Car Park (and then later as a site compound for contractors). The application seeks permission for the interim use of this land for two meanwhile uses, each of which is to be located on a defined plot, which will have an allocated back of house area. Supporting these uses will be an internal one way access road which will make use of two existing site accesses on Fulton Road which will be configured to be entrance and exit only. The new access road will include provision for 6 no. drop off spaces and will also allow access to an internal car park that is to provide 6 No. parking spaces for accessible parking only. A shared area of public realm will sit between the plots providing space for pedestrian access, visitor cycle parking, seating and space to allow for transition of visitors in terms of arrival, rendezvous and departure. An external hoarding line will be maintained on the site’s boundary with Union Park North, and to Tippatone Walk. There is a small section of existing timber fence defining the edge of the Site as it abuts Fulton Road, this is to be replaced with palisade fencing to match that already existing in this area (and which is to be repaired).

 

Monday, 2 February 2026

NHS reduces Central Middlesex Urgent Treatment Centre without notice

 

 
The above notice shared on Facebook is the first most of the public will have learned that the NHS NWLondon University Healthcare had implemented their plan to reduce the hours of Central Middlesex Urgent Treatment Centre by 21 hours a week. The notice reverts to the old name of 'Urgent Care' and calls it a Department - whether that is actually a change of name or just another example of their  carelessness is unclear.
 
The website for the UTC (they still called it that) just accessed, has the old opening hours with a footnote that they have been confirmed today! LINK
 

Today, a day after its implementation yesterday, the LNWH NHS website carried a news story about the earlier closing time:
 
 

The Urgent treatment centre at Central Middlesex Hospital has new opening hours. It is now open from 8am to 9pm, with the last patient registered at 8pm.

A recent review of our urgent care services found that the centre saw an average of only four patients per hour between 9pm and midnight. We found that many of these patients could have received appropriate treatment or advice from their GP or a high street pharmacist.

Also, radiology services (X-ray, ultrasound, etc) at Central Middlesex Hospital are not available after 8pm. This is because low patient numbers and a limited workforce make allocating staff to radiology services after 8pm an inefficient use of resources. However, this did mean that some of the patients who attended the Urgent Treatment Centre after 9pm had to attend another centre or to return for care the following day.

We gave local people an opportunity to share their views on the new opening hours through online and in-person public events and an online questionnaire. These did not result in any substantial or widespread objections. 

Therefore, to optimise the service the opening times have now changed from 8am to midnight, to 8am to 9pm. The centre remains open seven days a week and there is no change to our process if someone visits the site while seriously unwell. Our 24/7 critical outreach team will still look after them until they can be transferred to an appropriate setting.

Our Urgent treatment centres provide medical care when it is not critical or life threatening for people of all ages. It's important to get the right care in the right place. If you're feeling unwell and not sure where to go call NHS 111 or visit 111.nhs.uk when you need medical help fast. Our website also has information and advice if you're not sure where to go.

I highlight the above quote as it contains no verifiable information, no link to results, and no figures. It is of the same ilk as the non-consultation on the Northwick Park Hydrotherapy Pool. It of course pretends not to have heard about the 570 signature petition presented to Brent Council Scrutiny Committee calling for an urgent meeting of the Committee to investigate the Trust's plans. A call adroitly and complacently kicked into the long grass by Committee Chair Cllr Ketan Sheth as being on his 'radar'. If radar worked like that many ships would have been sunk and aircraft blown up by the enemy.
 
Meanwhile, many would be patients will be turning up at the UTC to find its doors closed.
 
It really seems that without democratic oversight the local NHS treats the people of Brent  with contempt - aided by Brent Scrutiny Committee. 
 
Standby for more slicing away of services at Central Middlesex Hospital. Is it earmarked for future housing development? 

Time for residents and visitors, and especially young people, to be seen and heard over hotel plans for Wembley Park public space

 Proposed hotel development from the stadium steps side of Engineers Way

I had heard that Quintain had advertised their plans to build a new hotel in the Samovar Space/Market Square at the site so I popped down on a very chilly afternoon to see for myself.

I searched around Market Square and found nothing, then spied this,  in the distance on the edge of  the Samovar Space:


 
Close up it was a rather tatty notice with a QR code to Quintain's presentation:
 
 
 
And that was it - there were no other notices or indications of the plans that Quintain expect to submit to Brent Council planners in February or March. No wonder Wembley Park residents are protesting and launched a petition which so far has over 200 signatures. (SEE THE PETITION HERE).
 
I talked to the few people who had braved the cold (although more young people would be there after school) and despite sitting close to the notice while supervising their children had no idea about what was planned and were quite shocked to find out.
 
The Samovar Space is past its best as Quintain took down the Shell Performance Stage and other bits and pieces and the play area has not been repainted, but the potential for a space in the centre of Wembley Park can still be seen.  Only a much smaller area will be left if the hotel is built. All photographs were taken about 3pm this afternoon.
 
 








When the Samovar Space was installed great play was made of the involvement of young people inits design when their voices are often not heard in major developments.
 

Julian Tollast, Head of Masterplanning and Design, Quintain, welcoming an Award for the Samovar Project, said: 

It is a sad fact that young people are often overlooked when it comes to the built environment. With this in mind, we are extremely proud of the work we have done, and are continuing to do, via Seen & Heard to make Wembley Park and the wider area a more welcoming place for all. To succeed at these awards and represent not only the Borough of Brent but London as well was an honour for all involved.

In this case it  seems it is not just young people who are not being 'Seen and Heard' but Wembley Park residents and  visitors.

What a contrast to the optimism of just over 2 years ago as demonstrated by this video:

     

• Date of planning submission February/March 2026.

• Planning determination will take around 3 - 4 months and if approved construction will not commence until end of 2026 at the earliest.

• Construction likely to take 2 - 3 years.

• If you wish to make any comments or have any questions on these proposals, please  send them to :

Development@wembleypark.com

https://www.quintain.co.uk/site-services/nw04

 

 IF YOU AGREE WITH THE OBJECTORS SIGN THE PETITION HERE