Showing posts with label shared ownership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shared ownership. Show all posts

Tuesday 12 September 2023

Exhibitions this week on Ujima House plans

 

Wates are putting on an exhibition aiming to improve the Ujima House outline planning consent at St John's the Evangelist Community Centre at 1 Crawford Avenuen, Wembley, on Thursday from 4pm to 8pm and Saturday 10am to 1pm.

For background see Philip Grant's guest post HERE

The '100% affordable housing' (which Brent's Cabinet agreed in August 2021 would be all London Affordable Rent) has now been amended to 32 flats at London Affordable Rent, and 22 "Intermediate" flats (either shared ownership or Intermediate rent, suitable for people / households with an annual income of around £60k).Brent Council has recently itself admitted that shared ownership is not affordable for most Brent residents.

After exhibition see ujimahouse.co.uk

Monday 17 July 2023

Key questions on Brent Council's disposal of shared-ownership homes at Cabinet this morning

 Cllr Anton Georgiou has just asked this question re Item 13 on today's Cabinet Agenda

I am here to request clarifications on the report which focuses mainly on the proposed disposal of 23 shared ownership homes in my ward of Alperton but has wider implications for other schemes in the borough.  

I note the report has an Appendix which is not publicly available, that I have seen a redacted version of, however have been advised by Officers to not make reference to the information I have seen regarding the bids for these properties.

I also note that at the Full Council meeting on Monday 10th July, I asked the Lead Member about this report and the response did not seem in line with the content of the document in front of us.

Where this report states that its purpose is to “seek authority to dispose of 23 shared ownership homes on the open market”, the Lead Member implied, with the Leader of the Council’s intervention, that these homes would in fact be repurposed by the Council.

So, my first question is:

-          What did the Lead Member mean by repurposing the 23 homes, is that the same as disposing of them? Perhaps Cllr Knight would like the opportunity to correct the record at this stage?

For historical context, I would like to understand how the Council initially defined these homes.

-          Were these 23 units referred to in this report counted in the 1,000 promised “New Council Homes” programme 2019/24?

 

-          If yes, why did the Council define these Shared Ownership units as Council Homes, something I have received assurances previously does not happen in Brent.

We all know that Shared Ownership is not an affordable housing model let alone helping to reduce the boroughs housing waiting list, which ought to be the Council’s number one housing priority.

This Council is often vocal about its record on Council House building, however, as I have argued we need to understand the full facts on what is actually being delivered and whether it is truly delivering Council Homes for Council tenants at the levels stated in Brent Council press releases and on Brent Council communications.

Assuming the decision is agreed to ‘dispose’ of these 23 homes:

-          Could you confirm that the units disposed of will be disposed to a Housing Association fully, to be rented at the London Living Rent level, which is what I assume is being referred to when a “new model” is mentioned in the report?

 

-          If that is not the case, could you please enlighten us as to what the “new model” the report refers to actually is?

I understand that the Council bought these properties under a 999-year lease.

-          Are the Council’s plans to sell the full 999-year lease, or is your plan to only grant a 125-year lease to the successful buyer?

 

-          This has implications for the legality of the sale, as mentioned in the report. You will be aware that local authorities cannot dispose of HRA assets without permission of the Secretary of State unless they are disposed at equal to market value. Are you confident this will be the case?

The financial implications for this sale are in the public’s interest.

-          How much money will Brent Council be losing or making out of this sell-off?

The delay in deciding what to do with these homes is concerning to me.

-          Can you explain why 22 of these units have remained empty since October 2022 and why this decision was not made earlier? We are now more than halfway through 2023, in light of the housing crisis in our borough and city, it is alarming that there has been such a delay in making this decision.

 

-          What was the cost of debt financing during this period for the Housing Revenue Account?

I would appreciate if Cabinet and Officers could address these questions at earliest convenience, as I believe it is important that when decisions like this are made by the Council, the full facts are known to residents and all stakeholders involved.

It is important to state that this may not be the only time a decision like this will need to be taken by the Council.

Earlier in the General Purposes Committee I made reference to the Shared Ownership units at Watling Gardens. It seems to me that there is considerable uncertainty and confusion around the Council’s plans on the delivery of affordable homes in the borough. In light of this report and potential upcoming decisions that will need to be taken regarding other schemes in the borough, I urge the Cabinet to review its housing plans.

I also recommend that an independent Scrutiny Task Group is set up urgently to provide the accountability and scrutiny needed in this important area, to be Chaired by Member not from the Majority Group on Brent Council.

 

Leader of the Council, Cllr Muhammed Butt, was clearly annoyed by the questions and said they should have been emailed in advance and in a testy exchange said that Cllr Georgiou should be grateful that he had been given the courtesy of an opportunity to speak to Cabinet. Georgiou replied that this was his right as a member of the council.

 

There was no direct response to the questions when the item was discussed. Lead Member Cllr Promise Knight  said that people in Brent still needed shared ownership homes and she was one of those people. Any surplus from the disposal would go back to providing homes via the HRA (Housing Revenue Account).  The model chosen would support reduced service charges.

Cllr Tatler commended the work carried out on this proposal and it was important that this decision still met the needs of local people.

Cllr Muhammed Butt reiterated that any surplus from the sale would go back to the HRA account and there was no loss to the council. The council would continue to provode homes at the right sort of tenure and was working with the GLA and Homes for England. The council was willing to have conversation with 'people out there' to provide homes.

Tuesday 11 July 2023

At last! The penny drops for Brent Council (at least a little) on Shared Ownership as a form of affordable housing

Wembley Matters has criticised Brent Council's definition of Shared Ownership as a form of affordable housing as put forward by officers at Planning Committee and in the Council's publicity. Contributors have quoted the Brent Poverty Commission's statement that the only form of housing affordable for Brent residents is social housing.

Credit must co to Cllr Anton Georgiou for raising the issue of the viability of shared owneship in the Council Chamber LINK.  Rather than listening to the case made, Brent Council Leader made one of his characteristic spluttering attacks on Nimbies.

A report going to Cabinet on Monday LINK contains an account of the difficulties in the shared ownership model and has repercussions for their approach, notably in Watling Gardens, of  changing tenure so that shared ownership cross-subsidises actual affordable housing.

The context is Brent Council's 2020  purchase of 92 homes in Block A and B of the Grand Union development in 2020 along with 23 shared ownership homes in Block D. The Council purchased the 23 homes to get access to the 92.

They now intend to transfer the shared ownership homes to a provider who is not named.

The report states regarding the Council managing such shared ownsership:


..the knowledge, experience and the capacity of the Council to effectively sell and manage processes such as staircasing is minimal.

 

But:

 

The Council did however consider selling homes and retaining them within the Housing Revenue Account (HRA). However, the market and demand for Shared Ownership, particularly in the latter quarter of 2022 was and has remained turbulent. This is both in terms of too many shared ownership homes available in the market and appetite and demand for these homes reducing.

 

Registered Providers who work closely with Brent have shared concerns about a saturation of shared ownership in the market. Many Registered Provider include shared ownership as a form of cross subsidy for social housing for rent, this has been under further pressure following last year’s economic and supply challenges to make schemes viable. The Council also put forward a paper to Cabinet in November 2022 proposing cross-subsidy as a means for reducing the financial viability gap within the New Council Homes programme, though

politically shared ownership was not considered a favourable tenure and was only considered as a potential means of protecting the much needed social housing.

 

They suggest that there is a role for shared ownership:

 

The impact of the mini-budget back in September 2022, rising inflation and growing cost of living crisis has led to uncertainty in the market. From a practical  perspective, shared ownership offers residents who still want to buy and benefit of stability that homeownership provides and a route to do so whilst mortgage rates are high as residents can purchase a smaller percentage to keep costs down.

 

But then admit the drawbacks:

 

 

The affordability of shared ownership has however also come into question within the housing sector. Research into the ongoing cost of living crisis and housing shows shared owners are more likely to be vulnerable to financial hardship that other home owners. This is a result of both mortgage offers and the rent payments on properties being linked to inflation. Shared owners pay a mortgage on the proportion owned, which now can be as little as 10% of a property depending on when the property was build, and then pay rent which is starts at 3% of the value of the property still owned by the Landlord. Generally

25-35% is the standard amount of equity first purchased. Contractually shared ownership rents rise by the Retail Price Index (RPI) plus 0.5% each year which would have seen rises of 15.7% as of December 2022 (it should however be noted Not for Profit Registered Providers capped the rent increase at 7%).

 

Generally mortgage offers for Shared Ownership homes have higher interest rates that regular mortgages too, meaning inflation has an even greater impactwhen mortgage payments and rent is combined. 

 

They go on to give figures on the actual costs of a shared ownershio home with a value of £400,000.  Note the cost of the mortgage would be much more now as interest rates have risen sharply:

 

 

A worked example of a £400K home from Nottinghill Genesis shows a breakdown of costs where a 25% share has been purchased:

  •  25% share = £100,000
  • Estimated mortgage = £532 (NB this is not based on current mortgage rates) 
  • Rent = £688
  • Service charge = £200
  • Total = £1,420
  • Guidance household income required = £51,160

 

It should be noted, the average salary for a working household in Brent for 2021 was £36K

 

Quite a gap, so what to do with those 23 shared ownership homes purchased back in 2020?:

 

 

In December 2022, the Council commissioned marketing company Site Sales to sell the homes as a package on the market to Registered Providers. Registered Providers invited to bid include: Clarion, Guinness, Heylo, HSPG,Keep Homes, Legal and General, MTVH, Network, Newlon, Notting Hill Genesis, OHGO, Octavia, Origin, Peabody, PA Housing, Sage, St Arthur Homes.

 

Most of the providers who responded stated the package of homes was too small to meet their organisations acquisition criteria. Expressions of interest were received from a range of Registered Providers. Offers in full received by the Council are set out in Appendix 1 (classified as exempt).

 

Each offer was assessed against the two key criteria for the Council when considering affordable housing opportunities, the financial requirements of the Council and meeting housing demand. This includes comparing the offer against the cost incurred to the Council for the initial purchase. Using this criteria it was deemed out of the three offers received only one was considered viable, details are contained in Appendix 1.

 

 

From a housing demand perspective, Offer 3 is most reflective of the current demand, specifically affordability within Brent and offers a unique opportunity to pilot the model in Brent. It also presents the opportunity to influence the shared ownership market at a local level and use this model and an exemplar of best practice. The recommendation of this report is to approve Offer 3, this is due to concerns about the existing shared ownership model and its ability to meet Brent Residents Housing Need.

 

We cannot see the actual costs involved as Appendix 1 is exempted from public view. 


At Full Council meeting on Monday 10th July Cllr Promise Knight answering a question from Cllr Georgiou said, 'We know the the political appetite for shared ownership is waning. We've listend - you brought this up six months ago - and this is a demonstration of us listening.'

 

 

 

 

 

 


Friday 13 January 2023

Brent’s Wembley Housing Zone contract award – still too many secrets!

 


Guest post by Philip Grant in a personal capacity

 

In a guest post last month (‘Tis the Season to be Sneaky!) I suggested that Brent Council might be trying to use its “urgency procedures” to get the decision to award a major contract for its Wembley Housing Zone (“WHZ”) development slipped through over the Christmas / New Year period, in the hope of avoiding it being called-in for scrutiny.

 

Although the decision was scheduled to be made on 19 December, it wasn’t officially made, by Brent’s Chief Executive, until 10 January, and published on the Council’s website the following afternoon. Normally, 28 days clear notice of a Key Decision has to be given, but the Urgent Key Decision Form sent to a Scrutiny Committee Chair on 12 December said that was not possible. Yet the decision was made 29 days after “urgency” was claimed!

 

Part of the Evaluation Process section from the Officer Key Decision Report.

 

In fact, notice of a Key Decision for this contract could have been given at least several months before 12 December. The Officer Report (undated), on which the decision to award the contract was based, says that the tender process started on 30 April 2022, when the Council advertised for initial expressions of interest from contractors. Eight had provided the necessary responses by the closing date of 31 May. The four short-listed contractors were invited, on 3 July, to submit tenders, and three had submitted valid tenders by the closing date of 18 October.

 

The Recommendation from the Officer Key Decision Report.

 

After all of the evaluation of the tenders by Council Officers, the recommendation which Brent’s Chief Executive accepted was to award the “developer partner” contract to Wates Construction Ltd, for a price of £121,862,500. That is a lot of money! In fact, the report shows that it could be even more than that, perhaps as much as £133m (and that is after an estimated £4m already having been spent on architects’ fees).

 

Extract from the Financial section of the Officer Key Decision Report.

 

It appears that the £126.5m will be the cost of building 304 homes on two sites which Brent Council already owns. That is a building cost of around £416,000 per unit. As para. 4.2 in the Report extract above states, part of this will be funded through capital receipts from the sale of private homes. When Cabinet agreed this scheme in August 2021, it included allowing the development partner to have half the homes (152, and all on the more favourable Cecil Avenue site, which will be completed first) to sell privately, for profit. How much will Wates be paying Brent for those homes as part of the contract deal? We don’t know – it’s a secret!

 

Part of the funding will also come from the ‘capital receipts from … intermediate homes’. In plain English that means the sale of percentages in shared ownership flats within the 152 homes that the Council will own. In August 2021, Cabinet agreed that 61 of the 98 homes which Brent would retain on the Cecil Avenue site should be “intermediate”, with only 37 of them for London Affordable Rent. Following the November 2022 Cabinet meeting, will the figure of shared ownership be increased?  We don’t know – it’s a secret!

 

Wembley Housing Zone extract from the “Affordable Housing” report to Cabinet, 14 November 2022.

 

Martin published a guest blog I had written about that Affordable Housing report to the November 2022 Cabinet meeting, and another which I wrote following the Council Leader’s response to questions which Cllr. Anton Georgiou had asked at that meeting. I showed that there is already a surplus in shared ownership homes on offer in Brent, which is likely to continue and increase, and that shared ownership is not really affordable to most people in housing need in Brent. So why is the Council planning to make many of the WHZ homes shared ownership, which won’t help the people its affordable homes policy is meant to house?

 

Outline of the contract from the Officer Key Decision Report.

 

The contract, as shown by the extract above, is in several parts. This is because although both WHZ sites were given planning permission in February 2021, Ujima House only has outline permission. Because of the long delay in getting to the contract award stage (which has greatly increased the cost of the project), the “developer partner” has to prepare, submit and get approval for the actual Ujima House plans. That’s why there is a completion date of 31 December 2026 (nearly 4 years away!), with a possible extension, for those homes to be delivered.

 

The former office block at Ujima House still has some “meanwhile” occupants, including the thriving Stonebridge Boxing Club, a vital resource for the local community. They have still to find an alternative home. Despite the long lead time before any work at Ujima House can begin (apart from its possible demolition, leaving an empty site, like that of the former Copland School buildings, where work on the Cecil Avenue homes could start straight away), Brent Council wants to ‘seek to assist them in finding suitable alternative premises’ (evict them a.s.a.p.). 

 

Extract from the Equality Implications section of the Officer Key Decision Report.

 

The Report’s determination ‘to ensure a start on site by the end of March 2023’ must mean that the extra £5m funding the Council has obtained from the GLA comes from its 2016-2021 (but extended to 2023) Affordable Housing Programme. There is probably some “spare” money in that pot because Brent will fail to start some of its other New Council Homes projects before the 31 March deadline! The £5m looks like the grant for 50 London Affordable Rent homes, at £100k per home. The Cabinet’s August 2021 decision (possibly since watered down) was for all 54 homes at Ujima House to be for LAR, but only 37 at the Cecil Avenue site, so at least some of the latest GLA agreement must relate to Ujima House.

 

One final point. The documents published with the decision notice include the Council’s Tender Evaluation Grid, where Wates appear as contractor “C” (the identities of “A” and “B” are secret). Although “C” scored highest overall, because their Financial score was much better than the other two (meaning their price was lowest), they were only second in the Quality section. Their Quality score was 68.6 out of 100 (contractor “B” was best with 72.0). Brent has had problems over poor quality housing developments in recent memory.

 

The Quality section of the WHZ contract Tender Evaluation Grid.

 

Non-Cabinet councillors have five working days to call-in the Key Decision for scrutiny, if they consider there are reasonable grounds to do so. As it was published on 11 January, at least five members would need to call-in the decision by 5pm on Wednesday 18 January for the award of the contract to be put on hold, so that (probably) Community and Wellbeing Scrutiny Committee could consider it. It will be interesting to see whether that happens!

 


Philip Grant.

 


Friday 16 December 2022

LETTER: Kilburn Square - Decision Time Approaches!


  'Save Kilburn Square' demonstration

 

 

A Letter from the Chair of Kilburn Village Residents’ Association

 

Dear Editor

 

Wembley Matters has faithfully reported on the laborious journey of the controversial Kilburn Square housing expansion project through the “pre-engagement” process for the last two (!) years. This plea from a KS resident was the most recent: (LINK) But decision time is almost here. 

 

In late October, Brent finally filed its Planning Application; 140 documents and counting if anyone is stuck for some light reading. Go to pa.brent.gov.uk and search for reference 22/3669. The Planning Statement is a good overview – but check out the Affordability statement too. 

 

That says 99 of the 139 units will be at London Affordable Rent. But since the PA was filed, the report to the November 14 Cabinet has made clear that the scheme as filed is not financially viable; and many of the new flats will have to be changed to Shared Ownership, or even outright Sale. How will the Planning Committee deal with that…?

 

Viability aside, the local community – KS residents and neighbours alike - has the same complaint it has had since February, when Brent announced it was freezing the scale and shape; it fails to address two of the three main objections we had to the rejected original scheme (180 units): loss of green space and mature trees, and excessive density of residents.

 

Comments on the Planning Portal are building steadily. All are Objections – with one exception: the submission from our MP Tulip Siddiq. That is officially classed as neutral; but we know that in reality she is urging Brent to listen to, and take account of, our concerns. A supportive Comment has also been submitted by the CPRE, reinforcing our concerns about the loss of mature trees and green space (which the Application has the gall to claim is “under-utilised” and therefore ideal for hosting a 37-unit new Block). CPRE is extremely concerned at the problem of Council Infills on green space across London: https://www.cprelondon.org.uk/news/londons-housing-estates-infill-and-green-space/

 

Read the comments for yourself; search Kilburn Square on WM and browse the sad history of this protracted saga; visit https://save-our-square and email us at savekilburnsquare@gmail.com to join our campaign. And then feel free to post a comment for yourself.

 

Registering and posting on the portal is ideal since we all get to be inspired by what you’ve said. Or the simpler route is to email planning.comments@brent.gov.uk (including 22/3669 and “Objection” in the subject line); and bcc us at that gmail address if you can

 

To whet your appetite, I’ve copied three rather different Objections already posted

 

1.This from a Victoria Road resident:

 

I have been a resident of Brent for 40+ years and have lived in the same house in Victoria Road, which will be directly opposite the new block C of the Kilburn Square development.

 

Direct impact – light and privacy

 

I am worried about the impact on light and privacy as they have admitted that this overshadowing will fall below accepted daylight standards. 

 

More broadly I am disappointed that the Council’s process of engaging with Brent residents not actually living on the Square but as directly affected neighbours has been poor and tokenistic and I do not feel there has been an enlightened approach to co-creation and coordination with the views of the whole local community. I want to stress that I am not objecting to the entire scheme; my concerns are about the scale and densification of the current proposal with the imposition of a huge block (C) removing green space and mature trees and impacting on our outlook through the canyoning effect of a multi-level block right up against the Victoria Road boundary.

 

Loss of green space

 

Brent West has been rated E (an area most deprived of green space). Those of us living next to Kilburn Square and in close proximity to the Kilburn High Road are both most deprived of green space and most exposed to the traffic pollution hotspot of one of the main transport arteries into and out of London. Trees and green space are essential for health, wellbeing and for helping to reduce the impacts of pollution and carbon. Kilburn Square is not a public park, but its lawns are not ‘underutilised brownfield’ as claimed by the application. It provides a vital environmental and visual asset for the wider neighbourhood. 

 

Kilburn Square is a much-needed green lung for estate and local residents; the latter will not benefit from the promised landscaping; instead of open green space and trees we are faced by a fortress-like apartment block. The green space also plays a part in flood risk mitigation as it can absorb excess water when it runs off concrete and overwhelms sewers. This is an increasing risk as we are already getting street flooding, especially in Brondesbury Road and backed-up drains and this will only increase as extreme weather events become more frequent. Brent’s Climate Strategy seeks to increase green space – this proposal is in direct contravention by concreting it over. 

 

Viability of landscaping proposals

 

The landscaping proposal is impressive but new trees take years to mature; there is no guarantee that any new vegetation will be properly maintained, and I am worried about the safety of our street plane trees with the amount of soil and root disturbance so close to them caused by months of heavy construction.

 

There have been concerns expressed about the financial viability of the scheme with rising costs; it would be likely – if completely unacceptable for both residents and neighbours - for the ambitious and sustainable landscaping plans which slightly mitigate the loss of green space to be the first things to be cut when budgets are stretched.

 

Pressure on local services and parking

 

I also object to the densification of this scheme as I have seen no reference to the overall impact on the provision of local GP, health, leisure services, schools and other youth and community facilities.

 

We have been given reassurance that no additional parking will be provided for new estate residents and that research has shown that on-street parking is adequate and available. I do not know when such a survey was carried out, but I can say confidently that that is not my experience living near the High Road at various time during both weekdays and at weekends and that no research has been done on the impact of visitor and delivery parking on surrounding streets.

 

Quality of life

 

I have been very happy living in Victoria Road for 40+ years and consider the Kilburn Square estate as near neighbours. It is a well-run, well managed estate – greatly improved in terms of safety, amenity value, visual impact, and overall garden maintenance since the early 1980s. It has a great sense of place, and its open outlook has kept it from ever feeling like a closed (or gated) community. I welcome some new build but don’t want to feel that a big increase in overcrowding radically changes the atmosphere and sense of security that I currently feel living as a single person directly opposite the Square.

 

A reduced scheme

 

Brent Cabinet has publicly admitted the scheme in the Application (with 40 Extra Care Flats and 99 homes at London Affordable Rent), is NOT financially viable and many flats will have to be moved to Shared Ownership or outright sale; this would move the tenure mix further away from the reach of the neediest families on the waiting list - undermining Brent’s justification for overriding proper concern for the mental and physical wellbeing of existing residents by considering a smaller scheme.

I would urge the planning committee to think about the bigger picture rather than seeking to maximise all available space for new build – the existing footprint of redundant buildings and the plan for the tower already provide a substantial number of new homes. I feel that a compromise that removes Block C and E would be acceptable and would avoid concreting over all our precious and valued green space, undermining the benefits it brings us all.

 

 

2.This from the Committee of the Kilburn Forum:

 

I am submitting these objections on behalf of the Kilburn Neighbourhood Plan Forum Committee.

While the committee recognises the urgent need for affordable housing in Brent to accommodate residents who are in temporary accommodation or homeless and appreciates Brent has a target to meet 1000 new homes by 2025, this plan to infill 139 new homes on a settled housing estate is over-development.

The plan is in breach of the Brent Local Plan which proposes some additional housing (100 units in two phases) over the next 10 years. The Local Plan sets out a vision for Kilburn Square to be developed as the Kilburn Town Centre, linking the square with the market and shopping precinct. The sheer volume of housing in the plan makes this vision impractical as understandably the residents expect the enhanced housing estate to be fenced and secured from outsiders moving around, experiencing a wider 'square'. 

The additional housing blocks inevitably reduce the amount of green space that is vital to the current residents. The corner of Algernon and Victoria roads is especially cherished by families and much of this is lost to new blocks. It appears that the reduced shared outdoor space is compensated for by the provision of balconies for individual flats. While this may comply with regulations for outdoor space allowances per person/flat and important for renters, it does not compensate for quality of life or achieve a reduction of carbon emissions.

Although the plan is detailing elaborate landscaping and some of this is to be welcomed, the site is not suited to the concentration of housing proposed, especially because it is located on one of the most polluted high roads in the borough. 

The Pollutants assessment currently show the location is below Air Quality objectives and although the plan suggests that construction emissions will add to the pollution, it is also assumed that construction management solutions will mitigate the high risk over the development period. The reality of dense development on this housing estate conflicts with Brent's policies on clean air and biodiversity.

The plan proposes the demolition of two facilities which provide community and health services. While it is recognised that the services' needs have changed and the NHS facility has moved elsewhere, the community facilities must be re-provided. The Former Clinic was granted 'a change of use' for an Arts charity, albeit as a temporary measure as the building is being demolished. However, the need for community facilities for social interaction, youth, education, arts, and other community activities remains, even more so with the increased number of housing units.

We are given to understand that all the housing units will be at London Affordable Rent, and this is set out in the planning brief. Providing 139 including the 40 extra care homes for residents in urgent need of housing is the justification given for the excessive infill proposed. This cannot then not be converted to some homes being partially sold for shared ownership or private flats for outright sale as this contradicts the whole basis of the proposal.

The Neighbourhood Forum is very aware and concerned that residents are dissatisfied with the quality of consultation. Although the plan has been amended to reduce even more housing on the site, there has been little opportunity for co-design and improvements we would expect from a more co-ordinated and consultative approach. 

The Forum had one consultation session with the planners and architects some time ago but there has been a lack of communication with the wider neighbourhood and stakeholders, including those on the Camden side of the High Road. We make this point because of the strategic importance of Kilburn Square to the many and varied Kilburn High Road stakeholders.

Finally we should point out that the refurbishment of the Tower block is outstanding and, although it may not be a planning application matter, the residents in this block must be treated equally with others coming into the estate, in terms of the quality of their flats. We recognise that current residents have put effort into creating a harmonious and safe environment and that it is essential to maintain balance, fairness, and goodwill to sustain social cohesion.

We ask for a full revision of the plan to address these points.

 

 

3.This from Kilburn Village RA: 

 

Who we are

Kilburn Village RA is the long-established Residents’ Association covering the quadrant in Kilburn Ward NW6 bounded by Kilburn High Road, Victoria Road, Donaldson Road and Brondesbury Villas. Our territory comprises the Kilburn Square Co-op Estate and six surrounding roads.

 

We work closely with our neighbouring Residents’ Associations and the Kilburn Neighbourhood Plan Forum. We will be submitting a comprehensive consolidated response to this Planning Application, but this document outlines our overall conclusions

 

Introduction and Summary 

The tension between the acute need for new, especially affordable, housing and the wellbeing of potential host communities is currently the subject of intense national debate. And it’s at the heart of our response on behalf of our local community, residents, and neighbours, to this Application.

 

1.    The estate urgently needs the existing tower refurbished, and could benefit from some improved landscaping; but it’s a mature, stable well-balanced estate and any extra building will be disruptive and affect its “Sense of Place”

 

2.    But recognising the acute social housing shortage, most residents and neighbours would accept Blocks A and B, replacing daytime-use buildings, whose scale (80-100 homes) aligns with what Brent Cabinet envisaged in a March 2020 Network Homes agreement

 

3.    Promoting the ill-conceived, over-ambitious Mini Master Plan (180 homes) seriously increased the duration and cost of pre-engagement, and alienated the local community; after a near-unanimous rejection in Summer 2021, Brent Council agreed to reduce the scale

 

4.    But the scheme now adopted (only 21% smaller) has addressed only one of the three key concerns Brent acknowledged: it has cut down the proposed tower, but would still increase resident density unacceptably (by 60% vs 2019), and breach various policies, notably Amenity Space and Brent’s Climate Strategy, with Block C removing green space and trees

 

5.    The expected partial move to Shared Ownership will move the tenure mix further away from the reach of the neediest families on the waiting list, and undermine Brent’s justification for overriding proper concern for the mental and physical wellbeing of existing residents

 

6.    The superficially thorough pre-engagement process has in reality been tokenistic and ineffective - in particular since the re-set, with the residents’ Independent Advisor’s role reduced and neighbours’ views not welcomed

 

7.    We therefore oppose the scheme as filed; if it is approved and implemented, it will be without the support of the local community – residents and neighbours – which the Council has always insisted it will secure; but the Approval should include a Condition precluding “Value Engineering” of the design and materials specified in the Application