Thursday, 5 June 2025

Development of Willesden Green police houses and police station at Planning Committee next week

 

The present police houses and police station (concealed by tree)

 

The proposal
 

A revised planning application for the ex-police houses and police station in Willesden High Road will be heard at Brent Planning Committee next week (Wednesday June 11th 6pm).

An appeal by the developer was turned down by the Planning Inspectorate on various grounds but the developer now claims that these have been addressed in the new application. In their report to the Planning Committee, Brent planning officers concur but 60 objectors to the proposal strongly disagree.

 

 

The proposal is for  demolition of the police house and some outbuildings and replacement with a 4 storey building that wraps around the police station. There would be 25 flats and a commercial space in the retained police station.  The landmark sycamore tree would stay but have its crown reduced.

The garden area has come in for criticism as it contains something called a Mound but with no specifics on size and height. 

 

Perhaps it is an aspect that the developer will happily remove to assuage the objectors - not a hill that they would want to die on!

After revision of the Viability Assessment four social homes are proposed out of the 25 planned but that provision could be replaced by a contribution of £1.1m to be used for social housing elsewhere.

Trees have a high profile at present as the council has launched its new Strategy for consultation. This application serves as an example of how trees on a development site are currently treated by Brent planning officers:


A total of 7 trees (T6 to T12) and one group of trees (G13) are proposed to be removed from the site to accommodate the development. These have all been categorised as C trees (Trees of low quality with an estimated remaining life expectancy of at least 10 years, or young trees with a stem diameter below 150mm) and not of sufficient quality to present a constraint to development 

 

The submitted report notes that G13 are low quality shrub like planting located within the current front garden. Brent’s Principal Tree Officer was satisfied with their removal subject to their replacement as part of the landscaping scheme. The scheme proposes 9 new trees within the site, 7 of which are located within the communal garden and 2 within the frontage on High Road.

 

To facilitate the development works are proposed to two of the retained trees, T1 Sycamore and T3 Birch. T3 Birch would also require minor access facilitation pruning to allow erection of protective fencing and site hoarding. This is not considered to be a major issue.. It is proposed to further construct walls and patio areas within the RPA of T1 which is the Sycamore Tree located to the frontage on High Road, Willesden. It is proposed to Crown Reduce the Sycamore tree (T1).

 

The bulk and density of the new building and its impact on the character of the area are two of the main concerns of objectors. Cllr Maurice (Kenton ward) and Cllr Long (Willesden Green ward) have objected to the scheme.

One objector uses refreshingly straight forward language that contrasts with the dry language of the officers' report:

 

I Strongly object to this nonsense.

A mound? A bloody Mound?! This is Willesden, not the Peak District. What a cynical, disingenuous ruse by the developers to pretend it is for amenity and play space. They are too cheap to get rid of their demolition debris properly and respectfully and so propose to bury it. It would effectively be a slag heap - a waste tip - an invasion of privacy and amenity and an insult to intelligence. This cannot be a serious suggestion - the developers haven't even bothered with size or scale (a molehill would not require permission, so how big a mountain do they want?). Please do not allow this precedent to be set. To paraphrase the Basques, 'If you tolerate this, then your garden will be next.'

The ignominy does not stop there:

The developers are proposing to inflict on the immediate neighbours (and new residents) 5m2 balconies directly overlooking gardens and bay windows into bedrooms and living rooms (where is the privacy, also, for the balcony users and pedestrians?) There is no precedent for this in any of the surrounding streets.

Why propose siting a loading bay on a quiet residential road, when one already exists on the High Road around the corner (a far more suitable space)?

Why pretend (again!) that the view from the window of the nearest house is just of a brick wall? The Inspectorate specifically stated that, despite being told that by the developers, she went into the room and saw for herself it was not true. Why are they perpetuating that same untruth and continuing to suggest blocking the same precious light?

Why are the developers plans and documents so shoddily put together that they take an age and numerous attempts to navigate?

Brent Planning Committee. No, please. Just no.

The planning officers' report uses the familiar argument that the benefits of the scheme outweigh any negatives including the scheme not meeting natural light and amenity space guidelines and recommend that the Planning Committee approve the application:

The proposal is considered to accord with the development plan, having regard to all material planning considerations, and that the application should be approved subject to conditions and a Section106 Agreement to secure the planning obligations.

 The assessment has given significant weight to the appeal decision as a material consideration, and it is considered that this scheme has overcome the previous reasons for the dismissed appeal.

 The proposal would deliver 25 new homes towards Brent’s housing targets, of which 28% would be family sized which would contribute to an identified need in the borough.

 Whilst the proposal would result in less than substantial harm to the Willesden Green Conservation Area, such harm is significantly outweighed by the benefits of the scheme. Furthermore, the retention of part of the non-designated heritage asset, along with the delivery of an appropriate commercial town centre use (which has the potential to be employment generating) in a sustainable location is considered to outweigh the absence of securing an employment use as outlined in the site allocation and the and the limited conflict with policy would be outweighed by the planning benefits.

LINK TO AGENDA ITEM 

 

 

 


 


 

11 comments:

  1. Does nothing to enhance the high street

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  2. Another greedy developer wanting to cram in cheap rabbit hutches with no regard for the local community or the local conservation area

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    Replies
    1. At least they are not 26 storey tower blocks that will completely overshadow existing properties!

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  3. Good point, but growth is thinking another Willesden Green.

    Brent C21, its often the case particularly in its brownfied zones that new buildings do not face onto and enhance existing public green spaces and squares. These green spaces and squares are being degraded instead to be brownfied. An opaque policy of brownfield making Brent.

    Victorian Local Centre street shops converting to flats in car-free massive population growth zones......

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  4. So Cllr Long objects to this but didn't object to other much higher rise developments elsewhere in Brent?

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  5. While this is more in keeping with the surrounding area than the previous plans in terms of heigh, I preferred the original plan. Developers have to make a profit otherwise they will never deliver anything or what they do provide will be of an inferior quality in terms of design (this is why the affordable elements of new builds are not to the same standard as the less affordable elements). If their plans keep getting rejected, they typically come back with less ambitious plans (in terms of design and innovation).

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  6. More NIMBYs here i see.. no doubt 100% of them all homeowners living very comfortably in their own homes probably with no mortgage to pay denying young people and people struggling with private rents and the homeless

    There are 30,000 families on the Brent Housing list ...stop being so selfish!!!

    We need to build build and build!!!! No objections

    A N HOMEOWNER NW10

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    Replies
    1. Why exactly are there 30,000 people on the Brent housing waiting list??? Why aren't these people moving to somewhere where rents and property prices are lower as every other generation had to???

      Why aren't Brent Council insisting that wealthy people living in council houses move out and buy their own homes???

      Why aren't Brent Council moving single people out of 3 or 4 bedroom council houses???

      Why aren't Brent Council checking on their tenants who are illegally sub-letting their subsidised council homes???

      Delete
  7. Unfortunately only 4 of the 25 flats are affordable (and we need a more precise definition for that). According to the officers' report even that may not be provided and a sum paid to the council instead.

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  8. Schools are closing in Brent as not enough pupils so don't believe there is such a huge housing waiting list.

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