Wednesday 19 October 2022

First consultation on massive redevelopment of the Dudden Hill College of North West London site on zoom tonight and tomorrow at the college 3pm-7.30pm

 

 

The Hill Group will be holding public consultation events for the proposed College Green scheme on Thursday 20 October from 3pm to 7.30pm and Saturday 22 October from 11am to 2pm. These will take place at College of North West London Willesden Campus, Denzil Road, London NW10 2XD. They will also be holding a public consultation webinar event on Wednesday 19 October at 7pm. The link to register for the webinar is:
https://fourcommunications.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_tBBYKv8mS2KTKHQMIQs1jg 

 

 Wembley Matters has covered these plans since 2019 and the college's merger with Westminster College came rise to speculation over selling off of some property. Current plans are for CNWL to move to a new site in Wembley Park, with the Dudden Hill site and the current Wembley Park site redeveloped. The site is part of the Neasden Stations Growth Area Draft Masterplan LINK.

 

An old view of the college and College Green

 

The development is site 3 of the Neasden Growth Area Masterplan


 Artist's image (right) of the development from Masterplan


 From the Draft Masterplan - contrast with Hill Group's description for the consultation (top of page) including increase in homes from 1,100 to 1,500 and dropping of 'affordable' description.

 


Artist's impression of the development 

 

 

 

1 comment:

David Walton said...

Neasden Growth Area.

Why not learn from massive mistakes made in Brent Growth Zone pathfinders such as South Kilburn (a 'Growth Area' on site since 2010 and earlier too).

Complex issues,

Always remember plans are "fluid" and not final, the towers illustrated will become taller and taller for example- growth, growth, growth ZONED. Social rent flats will always be the zones no sunlight at all flats.

Will every zone flat illustrated here be net zero?

Growth Zone Developers love to build blocks poor quality as they can then repair and repair all the time, with any luck at far greater new costs than the original build. How are entrapped subject consumers to be protected from such liabilities?