New regime at Brent: new hope people’s voices being heard

September 14th, 2006

NEW COUNCILLORS

As you’ll know, the May local elections unseated the three pro-tower incumbent councillors in Queen’s Park and two of the three in Kilburn, replacing them with LibDem councillors who campaigned as being anti-tower.

This was great news as not only did it give us sympathetic local councillors for the first time but it also changed the balance of power in Brent Council generally so that rabidly pro-tower Council Leader Ann John was replaced by Paul Lorber, leader of the LibDems.

Many thanks go to everyone who leafleted for STT during the election. The result was very close and it’s likely that without STT’s campaign we’d have ended up with a very different outcome.

NEW BRIEF

The new councillors met STT soon after taking over and listened to our longstanding request that the planning policy for the site be changed to include a height cap.

The LibDem council leadership put this to Brent Planning, asking them to come up with a new policy.

Brent Planning, with typical slipperiness, came back with a document that specifically precluded a height cap, and had dodgy clauses in it that would have made a low-rise development difficult.

HEIGHT CAP

Brent Planning’s document went before the council Executive on the 23rd of August. Fortunately, the LibDem leadership invited STT to make a written submission and speak at the Executive, so we were able to make our case against Brent’s dodgy new policy.

Crucially, Council Leader Paul Lorber then put forward an alternative motion, calling for a predominantly low-rise building of mostly 4 to 5 storeys, with the highest part restricted to no more than 12 storeys. This was approved, so Brent Planning now have to draw up a new policy that reflects this. This is a great result for everyone who has supported the campaign to stop giant blocks being built in QP.

WHERE WE ARE NOW

12 storeys is more than most people want. The QPARA survey showed that 66% want 8 storeys or less, and that the majority of local people want fewer than 6. STT’s poll gives the average maximum height that the local community would accept as 7 storeys.

However, since the existing policy calls for tower blocks up to 20 storeys tall, a height cap of 12 storeys is a big step in the right direction. And Paul Lorber’s motion specifies that the tall part of the building must only be a small part, the rest being low-rise.

In addition, it was made clear at the Executive that a cap of 12 storeys was just that – a cap – and not a mandate to necessarily build that high. So the finished building can still be lower.

STAKEHOLDER FORUM

Brent Planning’s rigged Stakeholder Forum finished its work last month. Despite what you may read elsewhere, there was no consensus on the designs put to it. Brent hired Munkenbeck and Marshall (an architectural firm with a good reputation) to come up with some alternative ideas.

Brent extended the site under discussion (it now includes Cullen House and the bus stop part of Premier Corner as well as the car park and Kenniston Press). Munkenbeck and Marshall put forward a courtyard design, mostly low-ish but with a tower at one corner.

This is the context behind the reference in Paul Lorber’s motion to a “small part” of the development which is taller than the rest.

It’s not clear which corner will have the tower under the current proposals. STT prefers having it on the South-East corner, where the land is lower.

WHAT NEXT

Munkenbeck and Marshall’s courtyard proposal seems preferable to Genesis/O’Hara’s huge blocks. But it’s not necessarily optimal – it was the only option presented to the Stakeholder Forum, despite residents’ requests to be shown a range of options. It’s not the product of a competition, or even an involved design process.

Fortunately, Paul Lorber’s motion calls for consultation on the new policy, so this time residents will get a chance to have some input - something that didn’t happen when Brent drew up their tower block policy.

We’ll do our best to keep you informed of when and how the consultation is happening. October/November is the likely time.

Finally, Stop The Tower remains unaffiliated to any political party. If this email sounds pro-LibDem it’s simply because, thus far, the new councillors and leadership are delivering on their election promises.

That’s it for now.

Barney for STT

Labour Loses Brent

May 5th, 2006

Labour has lost overall control of Brent Council, with the LibDems now the largest party in the borough.

Queen’s Park now has three LibDem councillors, all of whom campaigned on an anti-tower ticket.

Kilburn has two new LibDem councillors.

The election was very close, with less than fifty votes between the highest-polled Labour candidate and the lowest LidDem, so it’s very possible that the Stop the Tower campaign made a decisive impact.

We are, however, still waiting to know what next for the Council and its leadership since no party has an outright majority.

We’ll keep you informed. For now, a big thank you to everyone who helped leaflet.

Here’s to increased hopes of a tower-free future.

Response to Labour Election Letter

May 2nd, 2006

You may have received a letter from the Labour party (dressed up as from “fellow residents”) claiming that there’s no threat of Labour building a towerblock in Queen’s Park.

We’d like to make sure you know the truth before casting your vote on Thursday.

• Labour Brent’s current policy is for a 20-storey tower on the station carpark. This is spelt out on page 84 of the 2005 Supplementary Planning Document. Labour Brent refuses to change this policy.

• Labour’s letter says it is “not true” that Labour is backing a 26-storey tower in Queen’s Park. But we never said they were. Their policy is for a 20-storey tower – something they don’t deny in their slippery letter.

• Stop the Tower has been trying for seven months to get Labour Brent to listen to the over 400 people who wrote to the Council objecting to the towerblock plans. But Labour Brent has refused even to consider the possibility of changing the 20-storey planning policy.

• Instead we’ve had a waffle-shop (the “Stakeholder Forum”) designed to kick the issue into touch until after the elections. The Forum has met once in the five months since it was promised by Labour leader Ann John. Its membership has been rigged by Brent. Local people have been excluded. And it hasn’t been allowed to consider building height.

• The Labour candidates’ woolly “commitment” that any new planning application must be “sympathetic and suitable” and have “wide community support” is the sort of bureaucratic blather we hear from Brent whenever we try to get a clear answer on anything tower-related.

Brent describe their policy for a 20-storey building as being “broadly supported by the community” despite having held only three public meetings on it, all in the same week, and with attendances of 10, 11, and “approximately 6″ people respectively.

• Labour Leader Ann John’s alleged promise that the tower “will be no higher than the surrounding buildings” is dangerously vague. Which surrounding buildings does she mean? Does she include the 15-storey blocks on Carlton Vale? Does she include Trellick Tower? Residents who attended the Area Consultative Forum in December 2005 will know how dismissive Ann John is of residents’ concerns over her towerblock plans.

• Labour quote QPARA’s Colin George saying “the tower is dead”. We have to ask - how would he know? We’ve been at the same meetings he has, and there has been no commitment to a low-rise building on the site. Indeed, a motion for a height cap was put to the council and Labour Councillors voted against it.

• Labour’s claim that the Genesis application for a 26-storey building was withdrawn thanks to pressure from Labour Councillors is laughable. 400 local people wrote to Brent to protest. Meanwhile, Labour Councillors manned the Genesis-sponsored tent at Queen’s Park day to try and sell the highrise development to the community.

• The Labour candidates were in office when Brent drew up the towerblock policy in the first place. How good a job did they do of involving you in the so-called public consultation on the policy? And, once it was adopted, how good a job did they do of letting you know about the new policy and what it meant for your neighbourhood?

• The Labour candidates were still our local councillors when the Genesis proposal was put in - how good a job did they do of informing you about the proposal and, in particular, the height of the buildings? Did they want your opinion, or did they try to slip the towerblock through on the quiet?

• One of the signatories to Labour’s letter, Steve Crabb, has written to us to say that neither he nor Natasha Finlayson gave permission for their names to be used in this way.

Stop the Tower is not a politically-aligned group. We receive no support, financial or otherwise, from any outside source. Many of us have been life-long Labour voters so taking this stand has not been easy. But we feel it’s essential that the people of Queen’s Park and South Kilburn know what’s going on.

A VOTE FOR LABOUR IS A VOTE FOR THE TOWER

SKNDC

April 18th, 2006

You might be interested to know why South Kilburn New Deal For Communities (SKNDC) are so keen on the tower block - it’s because no one wants to live in them.

Sounds weird? Well, the SKNDC council tenants were balloted on what they wanted to live in, and they said 6 storeys or less.  As a result most of the new buildings in South Kilburn will be low-rise.  This means that to hit density targets in South Kilburn as a whole, Brent has to build tower blocks near the station to compensate for the lowering of the existing estate. If you think this sounds like simply shifting the problems of tower blocks north and westwards, we’d agree with you.  And if you think raising the other buildings from six storeys to seven would be better than building a tower block, we’d also agree with you.

We got this information from Peter Jones at the Stakeholder Forum. You may be interested to know that the head of the pro-tower SKNDC, Jack Davies, and his deputy have just been suspended from their £100k/year and £80k/year jobs for using a flat provided for NDC office-use as a London pied-a-terre.

Artists Impressions of the tower

April 13th, 2006

Here are some artists impressions that show how the tower will dominate the landscape, towering on the horizon over Queen’s Park.  These are Brent and Genesis (the developer)’s own pictures.
Artists view from in Queen's Park

Artists view from Salusbury Road

Another artists view

Press Release 28th Jan 2006

April 12th, 2006

Brent risk losing council majority over decision to railroad through Towerblock in Queen’s Park.

Brent Council is determined to push through plans to build a massive tower block next to Queen’s Park Station, despite enormous opposition from the local community.

Read the rest of this entry »

Press Release 25th Jan 2006

April 12th, 2006

BRENT PLANNERS IGNORE WISHES OF STAKEHOLDER GROUP

Brent planner Dave Carroll announced today that Brent will ignore the views of an overwhelming majority of the Stakeholder Forum it set up to consider plans for a towerblock in Queen’s Park.

Read the rest of this entry »

Press Release 5th Jan 2006

January 5th, 2006

Stop The Tower, the local pressure group set up to fight Brent Council’s plans to build a massive tower block in Queen’s Park, responded today to Brent’s proposals on how the Stakeholder Forum, set up by Brent to discuss those plans, should be run.

Read the rest of this entry »

Way Forward for the Stakeholder Forum?

January 5th, 2006

Dear Stakeholder Forum Member,You will have received a letter from Dave Carroll setting out Brent’s proposals for the issues and structure of the Forum.We would like to offer an alternative: one that will be more inclusive and representative.

Read the rest of this entry »

Joint press statement between Genesis and Brent Council

October 18th, 2005

The Genesis Housing Group today [Monday 17 October] announced that it is withdrawing its current planning application for a landmark tall building next to Queens Park Station.

Brent Council worked closely with Genesis on the application but has concerns about certain requirements, which were also expressed by the Greater London Authority (GLA).

The GLA’s main issues were regarding elements of the design of the building as well as whether it meets sustainability requirements and was able to deliver local improvements.

Genesis has taken the opportunity to listen to residents in Queens Park, South Kilburn and Westminster and will continue to actively involve those groups in future plans for the site. Genesis plans to submit a new proposal next year following further consultation.

Anu Vedi CBE, Chief Executive of Genesis Housing Group, said: “We are committed to providing much-needed affordable homes on this site. We intend to continue to work with the council in agreeing further consultation with the local community on the future of the Keniston Press and Salusbury Road carpark site.”

Councillor Ann John, Leader of Brent Council, said: “I would like to thank Genesis Housing Association for agreeing to take another look at this scheme and consider the matter further with local residents and planners.”

Brent Council’s Planning Service has arranged a public meeting on 3 November to update local residents and explore future options for the Salusbury Road Car Park site, south of Queens Park Station.

Councillor Neil Nerva, Chair of Kilburn and Kensal Area Forum, said: “The meeting on 3 November provides a real opportunity to explore how local residents can be actively involved along with Genesis and Brent Council in plans for this site.”