Guest post by Andrew Linnie. This issue was covered earlier on Wembley Matters LINK
R55’s Minavil House project in Alperton has been the subject
of much debate and controversy for some time now. The tower, standing at 26
storeys, will bring a huge shift in the landscape of the area, and was
described by various industry publications as the tallest building in the
entire borough. This came as quite a surprise to residents both old and new, as
the 2011 Alperton Masterplan adopted by Brent Council set out a vision for the
area of buildings up to a maximum of 17 storeys. It would stand to reason that
a building a full 9 storeys above the maximum height for the area would be a
cause for debate, but Brent Council seemed uninterested in engaging with the
discussion.
The proposal shown towering over twelve storeys above
its nearest neighbour (Submitted application drawings).
At the planning committee meeting in May, I put forward the concerns
of residents in the two minute speaking time allotted to a single objector. It
is of note that the council allows three minutes to the developer to put
forward their case. Those concerns included the loss of light and sky to
surrounding dwellings, the spurious transport impact figures used, and the fact
that the building directly contravened the supporting planning document (SPD)
for the area. These issues were largely disregarded in the ensuing discussion
among councillors and the scheme was approved. None of the three councillors
for Alperton (Cllrs Allie, Chohan and Patel) attended the meeting.
At this point I wrote a petition which over 200 residents
signed, and further problems with the development were noted. In its disregard
for context the project’s density runs off the charts, featuring twice the
number of housing units per hectare of neighbouring schemes. A conversation
with an independent transport assessor involved with another development in the
ward reinforced the assertion that the transport impact figures presented at
the meeting – of just two additional passengers per train at peak times – were
wildly underestimating the impact of a development this size. The issues of
light and sky persisted, and concerns about access and the level of parking
provided remain unanswered (there are 251 homes but only 35 parking spaces,
most of which are for a Lidl on the ground floor). It also emerged that the
architectural justifications for the project’s height from R55’s own online
publication misrepresented the scale of neighbouring buildings and created an
impression of the constructed landscape rising towards the Minavil site which,
in reality, does not exist.
The architectural justification for the project, with
the actual numbers of storeys added. It shows large leaps in height between
buildings only three storeys apart, and a small step up from 14 to 26 storeys.
The image also implies a rising contour between two 11 storey buildings of
equal height (R55).
The petition was addressed to MP for Brent North Barry
Gardiner, Mayor of London Sadiq Khan, the members of the GLA including our
local assembly member Navin Shah, and the councillors for the ward of Alperton
and Brent in general.
Mr Gardiner held a meeting in the wake of the Grenfell
tragedy in which he addressed the issues of residents in high rise buildings.
Present at the meeting were many locals, representatives of housing trusts, Brent
Borough Fire Commander Mark Davis, and the Head of Planning for Brent. When
pursued by Mr Gardiner on the point of whether such proposals are assessed for
their fire risk, the Head of Planning admitted they are not. For a
disproportionately tall building with a small footprint, on a site hemmed in by
a canal, a bridge and an industrial estate, this added further grave concerns
for neighbouring homes.
Though Mr Shah’s office and Mr Gardiner were responsive to
the petition, the scheme was passed back from the Mayor of London to Brent for
approval with no intervention. Unless the Secretary of State for Planning (Alok
Sharma) decides to intervene, the building work will commence, reportedly in
November. At that point the debate will inevitably turn from one about this
particular site to one about the wider area, and what kind of regeneration the
local population want. When commitments are made to residents to lead a
regeneration area in a certain direction and then entirely forgotten at the
planning committee level, questions must be asked as to whether Brent Council
are representing the interests of local people or the interests of developers.