New regime at Brent: new hope people’s voices being heard
September 14th, 2006NEW 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