I started out feeling sorry for Beth Kay from the Brent Council
Regeneration Team today as she was once again the council's 'messenger'
under fire from many quarters at the latest Willesden Green redevelopment 'consultation'. .This
sympathy was reduced somewhat when I heard the presentation and some of
her answers to questions.. The Q&A would have gone much better if
there had been a neutral chair to keep order and make sure that full
answers were provided.
The main feature was the
exhibition showing a possible scheme incorporating the 1894 Library. More pictures (above) - more on the Keep Willesden Green blog
HERE
However Beth gave mixed messages about this. At one stage she had been
talkling about dialogue with the community being frustrated by the issue of the the
Victorian library and said, "Now the Old Library has been saved we can
have conversations about what we want in the new library". However later
she said that the retention of the Old Library compromised the scheme,
presented challenges and made her nervous in planning terms.
In
presenting the results of the top consultation concerns (Loss of Old
Library 45%, Loss of Wiilesden Bookshop 22%, Inadequate parking 18%,
Renovation rather than redevelopment 17%, Dislike of design 16%,
Insufficient consultation 16%, New building too small 14%, Loss of
public space at front of building 14%) she referred to three petitions.
However for the 'Retaining Bookshop' petition and the 'Pause, Listen
and Reflect' here presentation only gave the figures for the e-petition,
rather than the much larger (sometimes 10 times larger) paper
petitions. For the 'Oppose Demolition of the Old Library' petition the
presentation gave both the e-petition and paper petition figures.
I
protested that this seriously misrepresented the number of people
supporting the first two petitions and she undertook to amend the
presentation.
Another conflict arose over the Willesden
Bookshop. Beth claimed once again that the bookshop's rent had been
subsidised (despite the owner Steve's denial on this blog) and that all
bookshops were in crisis. She further claimed that the Bookshop itself
had admitted it was not viable. However she said that (yet another)
consultant had been appointed to look into the viability of a combined
cafe/bookshop.
When it was pointed out that the
Willesden Bookshop had now closed despite her presentation stating that
the Council was trying to continue non-core services in the interim, she
said that the Council was trying to find them premises on the High
Road.
Challenged by another member of the audience on
the total amount of money that had been spent on consultants she was
unable to provide an answer but implied that Galliford Try was footing
the bill.
Questioned about why the planning
application had been pulled Beth said this was due to the widespread
opposition to the demolition of the Old Library. She did not mention
that GLA planners had raised concerns that the proposals did not meet
London Heritage policies in meetings with Brent Council officers. With a
straight face she stated, "By withdrawing the planning application we
have shown it is not a 'done deal' ".
During discussion
about why refurbishment of the 1989 hadn't been considered, and when
the audience laughed when someone asked 'Who built it if it's no good?"
and was answered, to laughter "Brent Council!", Beth claimed that the
Chalkhill Estate had been rebuilt and that was the same age as the
current library. In fact the old Chalkhill Estate was built in several
phases between 1966-70, 20 years earlier than the library.
I
did not receive a satisfactory answer to a question about possible
conflict over Brent Council's role as instigator of the project, joint
partner with the developer, conductor of post partnership public
consultation, and decision maker on the planning application. I pointed
out that our objections were not just limited to the retention of the
Old Library but also concerned the loss of open space, the fact that the
housing was unaffordable, loss of bookshop and the provision of council
offices, none of which were to be consulted on. Keep Willesden Green had wanted the Council to start again from scratch and involve local people from the start. Beth angrily stated that
the provision of council offices was a matter for the council and nothing to do the public, only the Council knew what they needed.
In the
light of the above I asked that Keep Willesden Green be given the space
to make their case to the public in the interests of openness and
democracy. To rumbles of disagreement she said that she did not think
KWG was representative but added that it had been added to the list of
special interest groups to be consulted in September. She responded
more positively to a suggestion that there should be an ongoing group
to work on the proposals, possibly as part of the Willesden Town Team,
or as a separate group.