Showing posts with label planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label planning. Show all posts

Saturday 30 January 2021

Barnet Council turn down another planning application for Woodfield Nursery at the Welsh Harp

 

The site (outlined in red) in context

The plans

Street elevation

The latest planning application for the redevelopment of the Woodfield Nursery site in Cool Oak Lane, near the Welsh Harp, fronted by Taylor Wimpey has been turned down by Barnet Council.  LINK There have been other applications for this site which at present is occupied by greenhouses and polytunnels in poor condition and some brickbuilt offices, alongside a landscaping business.  It is close to the Brent border and not far from the huge controversial private development, formerly West Hendon social housing,  on the other bank across Cool Oak Bridge.

Some years ago there were applications by the owner of this site and the then Greenhouse Garden Centre in Birchen Grove for housing estates at both locations.  Brent Council turned down the application. LINK  It is now Birchen Grove Garden Centre under new management - I do not have details of the freehold ownership.

Barnet Council found that the proposed development would have a detrimental impact on Metropolitan Open Land and rejected the developer's claim that the greenhouses and polytunnels were permanent structures allowing development. The planners ruled that it did not meet the exemptions test for such developments.

In addition officers said that the proposal did not secure the affordable housing, delivery of employment skills and enterprise, or carbon off-setting required. It was a long way from public transport which would increase car ownership.

There were 139 comments on the Barnet planning portal of which 137 were against, one in support and one a general comment. Preservation of the Metropolitan Open Land and the Site of Special Scientific Interest, the importance of a 'green lung' in an over-crowded city, and defence of nature were all prominent. Among the objectors were Hendon Rifle Club, Silver Jubilee Residents Association, the RSPB and Brent Parks Forum. Brent Council also made a submission but it was not available on the portal.

It is unlikely that this is the end of the story!



Sunday 13 December 2020

Chatsworth Road Horse Chestnut: Neighbour appeals to Brent Council planning chief

 

 

A local resident and neighbour of the Chatsworth Road garden, where the owner has been given planning permission for a gym to be erected at the bottom of his garden, has written to Brent Council’s  Strategic Director for Regeneration, Alan Lunt, appealing the decision. 

 

(Edited version):

 

Dear Mr Lunt

  

I am writing to you regarding an approved planning application for a home gym in the garden of [a house in] Chatsworth Road. This has been approved by a planning officer.

 

I was more than surprised to read that the application was approved considering there were 11 objections? Clearly, the concerns and reasoning behind those 11 objections have been ignored. It seems that this  decision has been decided alone by the officer and she gave her guarantee to save the established tree in question.  

 

The roots of the horse chestnut tree cover an area much wider than the garden in Chatsworth Road, where owners of adjacent gardens have helped maintain the tree and its stunning surroundings for the last 30+ years and in doing so have helped maintained this inner-city natural oasis we have inherited to date. 

 

My daughters are very saddened to hear the news that the application was granted considering they wrote a personal letter to the owner, asking him  to reconsider his desire for the gym and offering alternative solutions. At school. they were taught that preserving nature in a city which is highly polluted is more than important and they have been encouraged to plant trees, look after nature and in turn this will protect wildlife. Green space  in London needs to be protected more than ever before. My children have actually educated me in realising that fighting for preserving nature is more important than destroying it. My 11 year old daughter's question to me, (when I told her the news ) was, "Surely drilling concrete piles directly downwards  and hoping to miss the roots of the tree, would be impossible?" She knows what piles are as we have had many conversations about how buildings are constructed. Living in London and seeing the changes in construction of  buildings over the last 10 years around the area is vast. 

 

 My question to the officer would be, "How is it possible to guarantee the horse chestnut tree’s survival, where one has zero clue where exactly those roots lay underground?  In construction there are always errors made no matter how precise a building contractor claims to be. Once a root is damaged, it’s only a matter of time before it will be starved of water and become susceptible to disease in the porous clay we have in this area.” 

 

The residents of Mapesbury Borders have the same values for protecting nature and the environment for years to come and for the future generations. When we chose to live in this area of natural beauty, we chose to do so based on the pre-existing beauty it gave. For inner London, this is a paradise area of incredible trees, plants, wildlife and for the children who live here, it’s more than important for their future and well-being. For that to be cut short with this futile decision when climate change is at the top of all politicians’ agenda, I am astonished. 

 

How can we challenge this decision? How can we ask others at Brent council to help review this matter? What would be the consequences of the officer’s single-handed decision, should the tree die? Who would be accountable? 

 

My children have not had a reply to the letter they wrote to the owner. Perhaps the issue of looking after nature is unimportant to the owner, even though he bought a property with one of the most beautiful gardens in Brent, the need for a home gym outweighs saving it. After all, Nuffield Gym is a ten minute walk away, I would say that’s more than convenient distance to his home to keep fit? 

 

We would like to appeal the decision that has been made, review the application and discuss the irretrievable damage this project will cause to our tree. So many of the residents in this area enjoy the horse chestnut tree, it’s really stunning. We only want to save it.

 

I really look forward to your support in this matter and hope you can help us with this application to appeal this decision. 

 



Tuesday 27 October 2020

Brent zoom meeting on government's planning 'reforms' 5pm tonight - details

Cllr Kelcher, Chair of Brent Planning Committee, has written to local groups and resident associations about a meeting scheduled for 5pm this evening regarding a campaign against the proposed new planning proposals.  Wembley Matters called for a cross-party campaign about this in August:

Cross party campaign needed to oppose Jenrick's assault on the community's already limited say on new developments


From Cllr Kelcher

I have huge concerns about the government’s radical plans to reform the local planning system through their new planning white paper Planning for the future.
 
These plans could:
1) Reduce local input and the opportunities for local people to have their say in planning decisions with a massive reduction in the powers of Planning Committees.
2) Create, what the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) has called, “a new generation of slums” with an increase to permitted development rights. 
3) Reduce the amount of affordable housing we can build in Brent as developments of up to 40 or 50 units will no longer be compelled to provide some affordable units.
4) Introduce automatic permission for people in houses to add two storeys to their property without planning permission, completely changing the character of our local neighbourhoods.

Therefore, as Brent’s Chair of Planning, I have joined with the Vice Chair of Planning, and Cabinet Member for Regeneration, to organise an information and engagement session for local residents associations and interested groups.
 
We will be discussing the plan, and how we can work together as one borough to stand up against the reforms that will be most harmful to Brent.

 1700-1800, 27/10/2020 

 https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84058770390?pwd=S0tROVppZzVyY0hzcG53ODF4bGswUT09  

 Meeting ID: 840 5877 0390 Passcode: 091709



Wednesday 30 September 2020

1 Morland Gardens – How Brent Council’s Officers got it wrong!

Guest blog, by Philip Grant in a personal capacity:-


Five weeks ago, I wrote about how Brent Council won its planning “victory” over 1 Morland Gardens, its redevelopment scheme for the Brent Start college in a locally listed Victorian villa in Stonebridge. I used that article as the basis for raising serious concerns over the conduct of Council officers with Brent’s Chief Executive, Carolyn Downs, and those concerns are still being investigated.

 

After the Planning Committee meeting on 12 August, and before I wrote that blog article, I submitted three Freedom of Information requests. It appeared to me that things had gone wrong with this scheme from the start, and I was looking for evidence of what had gone wrong, when and why. In the past two weeks I have received responses to those requests, and I will share the main points from them with you here, in the order in which the events happened.

 

As soon as Planning Committee had approved Brent’s application, by 5 votes to 2, the Council and its architects publicised in the construction and architectural press that the £43million scheme was going ahead (even though the application’s official status is still ‘awaiting decision’, and it has not yet gone back to the GLA for the Mayor’s Stage 2 consideration). One of the facts included in their press release was that Curl la Tourelle Head Architecture had been appointed for the scheme in September 2018, after winning a competition. One of my FoI’s was to discover more about that competition.

 


The cover of the winning entry by Curl la Tourelle Head Architecture.

 

The “competition” was actually an “invitation to quote” for the design of the Morland Gardens project, which Brent Property Services sent out to three firms in the summer of 2018. Among the details for the entries were:

 

'Part of the building is locally listed and will need to be factored into any design moving forward. The full site is in Brent council’s ownership as found in the site plan. It must be noted that some of the site is designated as public footpath which may require appropriation.'  And;

 

‘The scheme is defined as being able to achieve anywhere between 50-70 residential units. It is expected that the development potential will be maximised.’

 


Site perspective drawing of CLTH’s proposals, from cover of their entry.

 

The first of my growing list of blogs on 1 Morland Gardens, back in February, asked ‘Housing or Heritage? Or both?’. As you may have spotted from the illustrations above, the original answer to that question by the winning architects was “both”! Their planning assessment said:

 

‘Piecemeal development has built up around an Italianate Villa and does not make best use of the land available. There is a clear potential to redevelop the site as a co-ordinated whole, to provide better facilities for the existing uses, new workspace, as well as new housing.

 

The locally listed villa is of architectural merit and there is potential to retain the villa as the focus of new development at the heart of the new project.’

 


CLTH’s two development options.

 

The original Curl la Tourelle Head proposals ‘recognise(d) the existing strengths of the site by retaining the locally listed villa, enhancing its setting at the heart of a new shared collegiate courtyard.’ They put forward two options. The first, which stayed within the 1 Morland Gardens site, would provide 66 new homes, and keep the existing open space between it and Brentfield Road, with improvements to the 1994 Harlesden City Challenge community garden there. 

 

The second option took in the public footpath and open space, retaining a smaller garden area, but providing 89 new homes, as well as retaining the villa. This scheme would have been carried out in phases, allowing the college to be retained on site, rather than decanted to temporary accommodation. Both schemes would have provided homes in blocks a maximum of seven storeys high. 

 

It was clear that these were outline schemes, where detailed designs would have to be developed through discussions with the client, but on the face of it they provided everything that had been asked for. One of the case studies that CLTH had put forward, to illustrate their competence for taking on the project, was a recent scheme they had carried out in Islington, which involved adding a modern extension to a listed Victorian residential building. Here they would design modern buildings around another Victorian heritage building. Why didn’t Brent allow them to do that? The response to my next FoI throws some light on this point.

 

In my 20 August article, and based on information provided in the planning application documents, I wrote: ‘Brent’s Property team and their architects had their first pre-application meeting with Brent’s planning team on 8 March 2019.’ My FoI asked for the documentation around that meeting. On 28 January 2019, the architects had submitted a detailed “amended report” on their designs, and this said:

 

'The proposal puts forward a new purpose built Adult Education centre, with associated café and affordable workspace arranged around a new courtyard. Residential development sits above the education facility, and has the potential to house around 90 new build homes. The locally listed villa on the site is not retained, as the development cannot be achieved around this building.'

 


CLTH’s January 2019 retained villa option page.

 

This new document was to be used in a meeting that the Property team had arranged with ‘Cabinet members’ in early February. They had also asked CLTH to provide supporting evidence, in the form of outline designs, for a ‘retained villa option’. This exercise produced the result that up to 89 housing units could be provided if the locally listed villa was demolished, while only up to 49 units would be possible if it were retained. It appears that the project team at Brent’s Property Service were keen to convince relevant Cabinet members (Regeneration, Education?) from the start that the Victorian villa had to go.

 

Given Brent Council’s heritage assets planning policy, and its public statements that it valued the borough’s heritage buildings, and would protect them, why did the Property team think this would be acceptable? The answer to that was tucked away at Para. 7.2, on page 37 of the amended report. This summarises the ‘planning comments’ from a meeting they had held with an unnamed Brent Planning Officer on 18 December 2018 (nearly three months before the first official pre-application meeting!). Those comments included:

 

Locally listed building – it would be good to retain, but this is likely to be difficult without significantly affecting development quantum and therefore viability. We’re not likely to refuse a scheme due to loss of this building, but there is some planning risk associated with its loss.’

 

Despite Brent’s adopted policy on heritage assets, here was a member of Brent’s Planning Service actively encouraging his Property Service colleagues to break that policy!

 

  

The start of the minutes of the Planning Pre-Application meeting on 8 March 2019.

 

The first official meeting between Brent Property Service, as applicant, and its architects, with Brent’s Planning Service to discuss the 1 Morland Gardens scheme was on 8 March 2019. In my FoI request I had asked for a copy of the minutes of that meeting, and these had been made by Tibbalds, the planning agent appointed by to handle Brent’s application. As you can see above, the identities of the meeting participants have been redacted in the copy supplied to me. 

 

The main contributions from the Brent planning side were made by one officer, whose identity I can probably guess from the initials used in the minutes. However, as I’ve made clear that the serious concerns I raised are not a complaint against any individual officer(s), I will not disclose that identity here. This is what the minutes record under “locally listed building”, with the initials replaced by job titles:

 

i.               Planning Agent: Previous discussions with the council confirmed that not retaining the villa was acceptable in planning terms and would result in more comprehensive development.

ii.             Planning Officer: Heritage officer would prefer to keep it and highlighted risk that a spot listing could be applied.

iii.           Planning Officer: The building has lost a lot of its heritage value on account of internal changes.

iv.            Planning Officer: Heritage officer would like to arrange a site visit.

v.              Action: Architect to arrange site visit.

 

I would have expected, at this “first” pre-application meeting, that at least one of the three planning officers present would have mentioned Brent’s heritage assets planning policy DMP7, its requirement that applicants must demonstrate a clear understanding of the historic and architectural significance of the heritage building, and seek to retain it as part of their proposals. Instead, they appear to have gone along with the view that not retaining it was “acceptable”, and apart from saying that ‘the Heritage Officer would prefer to keep it’, the spokesperson for Brent’s planners actually talks down its value.

 

Brent’s planning officers have clearly treated the Council’s adopted heritage assets planning policy as if it did not matter. The locally listed building was "sacrificed" by Brent's planning team, even before the Heritage officer has been able to take a proper look at it, and on a very superficial view held by one of them, without any clear knowledge or understanding of the building's historical and architectural value!

 

The Heritage Officer was present at the Planning team’s Major Cases Forum meeting on 18 April 2019, when the pre-application for the 1 Morland Gardens scheme was discussed. The record of that meeting observed, under “Principle of Development” that: ‘Loss of locally listed building required to enable efficient re-development of site – argument has been put forward that an alternative scheme retaining the building would only provide 39 units; however could other options be explored?’ (Note the “villa retained option” has “lost” another 10 homes!)

 

At the meeting, the Heritage Officer put forward some ideas on how he thought that the scheme could be redesigned to retain the Victorian villa, which he still felt should not be demolished. After follow-up emails, the architects did submit some 'design packages on an updated retention scheme for the Villa and options for moving the Villa's tower,' on 14 May, but the link to those documents was redacted in the copy I received. It seems likely that these were the were the “revised retention scheme” designs shown as an Appendix to the Design & Access Statement which formed part of the planning application.

 

Those last “retained villa” designs were so impractical, compared to the original ideas that won the architects this contract. I doubt that they were ever intended to be of any use, other than so that the applicant could say that they had tried to find a solution which would allow the locally listed villa to be retained, when their client, Brent's Property Service, had already decided, no later than January 2019, that they would demolish the building in order to achieve the maximum number of homes as part of the redevelopment scheme.

 

My third FoI request was for emails etc. within Brent Council over the Heritage Officer’s response to the Heritage Impact Assessment of June 2020, and his final comments on the “significance” of the locally listed villa, and the preparation of the Planning Officer’s Report(s) to, and presentation of their case at, the Planning Committee on 12 August. Exactly twenty working days after my request, I received the Council’s response from the Head of Planning. He formally refused my request under Regulation 14 of the Environmental Information Regulations, 2004 (the EIRs), on the grounds that ‘internal communications’ are exempt under Reg. 12(4)(e) of the EIRs.

 

When he first acknowledged my request, I had said that I was puzzled as to why he would treat my FoI request as if it were under the EIRs, but had said ‘as long as the information is provided, as it should be under a normal FoI request, I will not make an issue of that point.’ It is now an issue, as I have expressed dissatisfaction with his refusal, and asked for an internal review by a senior Council Officer not connected with Brent’s Planning Service!

 

There is no equivalent exemption for ‘internal communications’ in the Freedom of Information Act, so I can see now why it suited Brent to deal with my request as if it were under the EIRs. But I was not asking for “environmental information” – it was not requesting copies of bat surveys(!), or anything else within that definition. The exemptions in Reg. 12 are subject to a public interest test, under which ‘a public authority shall apply a presumption in favour of disclosure.' 

 

According to the Head of Planning, emails etc. ‘provide the authority with the necessary space to discuss matters and provide advice in private.’ He believes this outweighs the public benefit of ‘openness and transparency of the consideration of the planning application.’ I believe that, if Brent’s planning officers have nothing to hide, it would be in the Council’s interest, as well as in the public interest, to supply the evidence that shows it. 

 

And if they have got something to hide, the serious concerns I have raised may well be justified.

 


Philip Grant.

Tuesday 8 September 2020

VIDEO: How government changes to planning laws will impact on your right to have a say





Poor Matt Kelcher, just off to Chair the Brent Planning Committee and government legislation looks likely to drastically reduce the Committee's role.

Although produced by a countryside charity this is an excellent summary of what the changes will mean to residents' right to have a say as well as undermining the role of local councillors.

You may think, as I do, that the Quintain development in Wembley Park is a mess - just imagine what these changes will do there and to many other places in Brent.  It is not for n othing that the changes have been called a developers' free for all.

Make sure you respond to the consultation, even if you doubt it will make much difference!

LINK TO CONSULTATION

Friday 21 August 2020

Lorber backs Philip Grant on Altamira's heritage value



Former Brent Council leader and Liberal Democrat candidate for Brent North has written to Carolyn Downs, Brent Council CEO, in support of Philip Grant's position on the heritage value of 1 Morland Gardens ('Altamira'):

In 1955 the then Wembley Borough Council demolished the Barham Mansion within the grounds of Barham Park which had been the home to first the Copland sisters, and later General Crawford-Copland, and ultimately the Barham family, including Titus Barham.

The Coplands and Titus Barham were major benefactors to various projects and activities within the Wembley area including Wembley Hospital, St John's Church, etc etc.

The old Mansion had been used during the war and due to lack of money was neglected and in poor state of repair. Its loss is felt to this day.

Brent Council has clear policies about preserving its ever diminishing heritage assets. The old Willesden Library building was preserved on two occasions despite it being in the way of new developments.

The Villa at 1 Morland Gardens is clearly unique and will represent a massive loss of heritage buildings in Brent. The decision is both odd and also clearly in breach of the Council's own policy developed only a few years ago. What is the point of a heritage policy at all when it is ignored in a case like this.

As you know I have been critical of the planning process in Brent. Planning officers with little connection or history with Brent have far too much power and influence and Councillors are bullied into making decisions with threats of possible appeals. Officers move on no doubt claiming on their CV the achievements of getting decisions through - however damaging those decisions may be to our local area.

In this case the failure to properly follow the Council's heritage policy means that the decision should be suspended and reviewed. We simply cannot allow the destruction of the Brent's heritage in this way. 

I recall walking the desolation of this area in Stonebridge in the early 1970s when all the terraced houses had been demolished and replaced by the unsuitable Bison Wallframe buildings. The Villa survived that onslaught only to face demolition now when we claim that we have learned of the failed policies of 'slum' clearance.

We should not make the same mistake and we should not allow for another important of Brent's heritage building assets to be lost.

I trust that you will instigate an investigation and review before it is too late.

Thursday 20 August 2020

1 Morland Gardens – How Brent Council won its planning “victory”.


Guest post by Philip Grant

Last week. Martin gave a detailed report on the Planning Committee meeting,  which approved Brent’s plans for 1 Morland Gardens by 5 votes to 2. After six months of working with Willesden Local History Society members to oppose the Council’s application, I am understandably disappointed with the decision, but my comments here are not “sour grapes”. 

It may be too late to stop the 1 Morland Gardens proposals from going ahead. But this case has highlighted much wider concerns about the way in which planning matters are dealt with in Brent. If Brent’s planning officers have done what I allege in this article, what culture has been allowed to develop in Brent’s Planning Service which made them think it was acceptable? 

I will explain how I believe Brent “won” this planning battle. I may be wrong, and anyone from the Council is welcome to reply if they think I am. If you are interested in how your local authority uses, or abuses, its power, please read on, and make your own judgement.

As the applicant was the London Borough of Brent, it would be reasonable to expect the Council, to comply with its own rules and policies. It has a Planning Code of Practice, which requires ‘that officers and members consider and decide planning matters in a fair impartial and transparent manner’, and ‘that planning decisions are taken on proper planning grounds’.


               Cllr. Roxanne Mashari's Foreword to Brent's 2016 Development Management Policies
Brent Council’s planning policies are set out in its Development Management Policies, adopted in November 2016. In her foreword to this the then Lead Member for Regeneration said it ‘contains detailed planning policies which will guide the future development of the borough,’ and that: ‘This plan aims to help make this happen, by giving clear guidance; such as what can be built, where, how, for what use, where restrictions apply and why.’ 

One of the planning policies adopted by the Council in 2016 is its Heritage Assets policy DMP7, with paragraphs ‘giving clear guidance’ on how that should be applied. At the start of my three minute submission to Planning Committee last week, I set out the key message of Brent’s policy DMP7, that ‘proposals for…heritage assets should…retain buildings, …where their loss would cause harm.’ I also said that the 1 Morland Gardens proposals went wrong over that policy from the start.

The first test in policy DMP7 that proposals need to pass is that they ‘demonstrate a clear understanding of the architectural or historic significance’ of the heritage building. When Brent’s Property team and their architects had their first pre-application meeting with Brent’s planning team on 8 March 2019, they already had their development strategy and ‘strategic brief’ for the project. A summary of that meeting records that: ‘Discussion surrounding building height highlighted that a tall building could be justified in order to include education space, affordable workspace,’ as well as the residential side of the development.


 Extract from the application's January 2020 Planning Statement.

Another key point from the 8 March 2019 pre-application meeting was: ‘Further engagement with Heritage Officer required to discuss loss of locally listed villa.’ The Historic Building Assessment they had commissioned for 1 Morland Gardens was not delivered until April 2019. Brent, as applicant, had not properly considered, let alone understood, the architectural and historic significance of the building before discussing its ‘loss’. This was an early opportunity for planning officers to say ‘you are going down a path that breaches Brent’s planning policies – think again’, but they did not. 


Section 5.1 of the application’s Planning Statement also says: ‘On balance, the design team concluded that the minimal significance of the historic core is outweighed by the need for new education facilities and housing in the Borough.’ There is no way in which the applicant could have demonstrated a clear understanding of the significance of this heritage asset, as required by policy DMP7, if the team behind the project thought it had ‘minimal significance’. Its discussions with Brent’s Heritage Officer should have told them that. 


My own detailed objection comments of 5 March 2020, and the initial comments by Brent’s Principal Heritage Officer in April, both showed that the locally listed building at 1 Morland Gardens had high significance, and that its loss would cause substantial harm to that significance. It should have been clear to planning officers then, if not before, that the application did not comply with Brent’s policy DMP7. Again, they decided to proceed as if that didn’t matter.


It was not just policy DMP7 that should have been flagged-up for Planning Committee to consider. After some revised plans and documents were submitted in June 2020, I put in a detailed objection comment on 17 July, that the proposals failed one of the tests in Brent’s policy DMP1. Planning officers failed to disclose, or discuss, that in their Report to the Committee. When I pointed this out, they did mention it in their Supplementary Information, but in a way which I described as side-stepping the issue on accessibility, when I spoke at the meeting.


Extract from the Planning Officers' Supplementary Report, 12 August 2020.

Despite inviting questions, I was not asked any by committee members on this. The Report did not mention that my objection involved a failure to comply with policy DMP1. It did say, as a response to the accessibility point: ‘the council’s highways officer has confirmed that the revised servicing and accessibility arrangements from [for?] Morland Gardens would be acceptable in highways terms.’ “Highways terms” was not the point at issue in the objection! The failure by planning officers to deal with that objection properly meant that this fault in the application’s proposals was concealed from Planning Committee members.


The key “battleground” at the Planning Committee meeting was whether it mattered that the proposals were ‘contrary to Policy DMP7 of the Local Plan, and London Plan policy 7.8’, and that ‘the application does not accord with the development plan’. Those quotes are from the Report to Committee, so that it was not in dispute that the application could be refused on ‘proper planning grounds’ (which is what decisions are meant to be made on).


At the end of my presentation to the Committee, I had said:

‘If you approve this application, contrary to Brent’s planning policies, you’ll not only condemn this valuable building, but set a precedent that undermines Brent’s entire historic environment strategy, and puts every heritage asset in the borough “at risk”.’


At least two officers were asked to comment on that by committee members. Their response was that each application was looked at on a ‘case by case basis’, so just because they were being recommended to approve this application which went against Brent’s Heritage Assets policy, it did not mean that any others would be allowed. Frankly, that was disingenuous!


Key paragraph from Brent's Historic Environment Place-making Strategy of May 2019.

Both Roger Macklen and Stella Rodrigues, addressing the committee as objectors, had quoted from the above paragraph. Every word of it cries out that valuable heritage assets, like 1 Morland Gardens, should not be demolished. How could plans, by Brent Council itself, that involved the demolition of the building, not undermine that strategy?


The same is true of the precedent that granting this planning permission sets. It was an application by Brent Council to demolish a significant locally listed heritage asset, despite 366 people petitioning the Council against this, over fifty objectors and the local Ward councillors saying what the building contributed to the character of Stonebridge. What is to stop any private developer from applying to demolish, say, a group of locally listed cottages elsewhere in the borough, with proposals to build a large block of “quality homes”, 50% of them “affordable”, and using the same “public benefit” arguments? After all, Brent, you gave yourself planning permission on those grounds, so if you don’t give it to us as well, we appeal and you lose!


The planning officers’ reason for recommending approval was “public benefits”:


‘there would very significant public benefits, most notably the social, economic and environmental public benefits delivered by the proposed scheme, which include the provision of a much improved adult education facility and the creation of 65 affordable dwellings, including larger family homes, for which there is an acute need in the borough. Those social and economic benefits are in the view of Officers sufficient significantly to outweigh the harm caused by the loss of the heritage asset.’

In my original objection comments of 5 March 2020, I had made the point that the Council’s own guidance on policy DMP7, after setting out the many good reasons why ‘Policy DMP7 … specifically seeks to protect Brent’s heritage’, says at para. 4.29:

‘The Council will resist significant harm to or loss of heritage assets. It will assess proposals which would directly or indirectly impact on heritage assets in the light of their significance and the degree of harm or loss which would be caused. Where the harm would be less than substantial, it will be weighed against any public benefits of the proposal ….’

I have added the bold text and underlining to emphasise what I believe is the statement in the policy which should have decided this application, against accepting the planning officers’ recommendation. 

Although this point had been made clearly in my objection comments, it was not referred to or discussed in the Officer Report to Planning Committee. I made it in my presentation at the meeting, and again in answer to a question from the Chair. So why was it ignored, by the majority of the committee members? I believe that they were misled by planning officers.

Their recommendation was based on the argument that the committee should make a ‘balanced judgement’, and that in doing so, the public benefits (in the officers’ opinion) outweighed the harm. The Case Officer presenting the application, said that it was ‘not fully compliant’ with Brent’s planning policy. He said that it was not uncommon for ‘things’ (applications) to come before the committee that were not policy compliant. 

From my own experience of following various applications, it is fairly common for various partial breaches of policy (e.g. insufficient percentage of affordable housing, several storeys taller than local guidance) to be ‘considered acceptable’ by planning officers. I can’t remember one where the total breach of an entire policy has been recommended as being acceptable!

Brent’s Heritage Officer had clearly said that ‘The demolition of the building … must be seen as substantial harm to the significance of the heritage asset,’ and that fact was acknowledged by the planning officers. Brent’s policy guidance says that it is ‘where the harm would be less than substantial’, that the harm is weighed against the public benefits. What blinded some of the committee to those facts?

The Development Management Manager (“DMM”) told them that they had to make a balanced judgement because the national policy does not prevent the loss of non-designated heritage assets, such as locally listed buildings. He made it appear that the National Planning Policy Framework (”NPPF”) somehow took precedence over Brent’s own policy DMP7, and that NPPF was a ‘material consideration’ that they must take into account in making their decision.


Para.197, National Planning Policy Framework, February 2019.

Although the DMM emphasised that para.197 of NPPF said that ‘a balanced judgement will be required’, he did not complete the reference, ‘having regard to the scale of any harm or loss and the significance of the heritage asset.’ NPPF does not over-ride local planning policies, but those policies are supposed to be drawn up so that they do not conflict with the national planning guidance. And Brent’s policy DMP7 is in accordance with all of the heritage assets guidance in NPPF. It does have regard to the scale of any harm or loss, by saying that the public benefits of a proposal come into the balance ‘where the harm would be less than substantial.’

The guidance that planning officers should have given to planning committee on policy DMP7 was that because of the substantial harm that would be caused, to a heritage asset of at least medium, but probably high significance, the undoubted ‘public benefits’ of the proposals should not enter into their consideration of the application. Committee members were told the opposite of that.

And the irony is that the ‘public benefits’ were only allowed to appear in a planning application in the first place because Brent’s planning team did not point out to their Council colleagues, at the pre-application stage in the Spring of 2019, that their proposals did not demonstrate a clear understanding of the architectural and historic significance of this heritage asset, the Victorian villa at 1 Morland Gardens!



R.I.P. “Altamira”, elegant survivor of the original 1876 Stonebridge Park? Or will Brent Council come to its senses, and not go ahead with its flawed proposals for 1 Morland Gardens? If they do proceed to demolish this beautiful building, it will be a tainted “victory”.

Philip Grant