The proposed development (image from developers and only shows one tower) and protesters
From No To Tesco Towers Campaign
More than 2,000
Harrow residents have signed a petition opposing the development of multiple
tower blocks on the Tesco site on Station Road in central Harrow.
The current Tesco store from Hindes Road (Credit: Google Streetview)
Greenmead
Place would see 559 new flats across ten blocks up to 15-storeys
high, 155 residential parking spaces, a 20% smaller Tesco store and a third
less customer parking,
The tallest block is 15 storeys, one at 14 storeys, one at 13 storeys, one
at twelve storeys, one at 11 storeys, two at seven storeys, one at six storeys
and two at five storeys.
Local residents and residents associations have joined forces to protest
the plans, launching a petition and website, nototescotowers.com.
To date, more than 1,800 residents have signed online with hundreds more
signing the paper petition.
Concerns include the scale of the
development, a lack of truly affordable housing and the impact on local
infrastructure, such as roads, public transport, schools and health services.
While housing association Notting
Hill Genesis claims 32% will
be “affordable housing”, two thirds will be shared ownership - increasingly
criticised for its unaffordability - and
only 55 flats (9.8%) will be social housing. The vast majority - 380 flats -
will be sold at market prices. [Q&A on Shared Ownership]
At a recent Harrow Council meeting, the developers admitted that
reducing the height of the towers would reduce the amount of affordable
housing, including social housing.
Cllr Marilyn Ashton, responsible for Planning and Development, referred
to residents’ anger over the proposal and urged the developers to take on board
the meeting’s feedback.
One local resident posted on Facebook:
I live near the Kodak site. The
original plans included a primary school and community centre. The reality is
that those vital facilities do not exist on the developed site and the
surrounding roads cannot cope with the increased weight of traffic.
The roads around the Tesco site were not built for such heavy usage so
traffic chaos will be inevitable. There is no justification for this site other
than profit for developers. We need affordable social housing. Not luxury flats
only a few can afford. The system is very broken.
Pamela Fitzpatrick, Director of Harrow Law Centre, a charity providing
free legal support, and a former Harrow councillor said:
Housing is one of the
biggest problems we see in Harrow. There’s enough housing in Harrow for
everyone but it’s all largely unaffordable.
Housing associations no longer do what they were set up to do - provide
low-cost, secure rented properties - so many people can’t even afford to live
in housing association homes. The proposed Tesco site development appears to
simply add to the problems and will do little to alleviate the housing crisis.
Tesco and Notting Hill Genesis are
expected to submit a formal planning application to Harrow Council in early
2023.
THE PETITION WORDING (SIGN HERE)
Residents Say No to Tesco Towers and Notting Hill Genesis Development in Harrow
This petition is to object to the proposal by Notting Hill Genesis
and Tesco to turn the store on Station Road Harrow into a high-rise
development called Greenmead Place– Notting Hill Genesis ‘Tesco Towers’ including a 15 storey building.
We ask Harrow Council to consider why the community objects:
- The proposed development is overbearing and will dominate the surrounding homes of mainly two-storey houses and low-rise flats.
- The development design totally ignores the surrounding community.
- There are no infrastructure improvements, no additional GP
surgeries, capacity at Northwick Park Hospital, improvement to public
transport links, roads, water supply or sewage disposal.
- The increased congestion and pollution from high density housing on
one of the busiest roads in Harrow, adds 155 cars to a road where two
schools are within a few metres
- 20% reduction in the Tesco store size and 33% less parking spaces
for Tesco customers yet further increasing congestion on the roads and
less jobs for residents in a smaller store.
- NHG says ‘35%’ of the new accommodation will be ‘affordable’ but
this includes shared ownership which is anything but affordable with
prices in Harrow.
This development does not benefit the community and would be detrimental to the health and wellbeing of the area.
We ask Harrow Council to not approve the application of this development.