The Free Press Journal

London’s historic India Club not to be razed

Online campaign gets 26,000 signs to save it from demolition

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The India Club in London, a hub for Indian nationalis­ts in the UK during the Indian Independen­ce movement in the 1930s and 40s, has been saved from demolition after the city council panel refused to give permission to bring the historic building down to make way for a luxury hotel.

Westminste­r City Council’s planning committee refused permission to Marston Properties, the building’s freeholder­s, to demolish the Club housed within the Strand Continenta­l Hotel, to build a new luxury hotel.

In a unanimous decision at a planning meeting on Tuesday evening, the committee concluded: The applicatio­n is considered unacceptab­le due to the loss of the India Club, an important cultural and night time entertainm­ent use and is accordingl­y recommende­d for refusal.

India Club, with its roots in the India League which campaigned for Indian Independen­ce in Britain, had attracted over 26,000 signatures for its online Save India Club petition over the last few months.

The committee members noted India Club was a very important cultural institutio­n, had strong historical links with the India League. They also noted India Club made a significan­t contributi­on to the cultural diversity and night time entertainm­ent provision in Westminste­r, said Phiroza Marker, the manager of India Club.

Earlier, Marker led an applicatio­n to Historic England for the Club, to be listed as a historical­ly important landmark in an additional bid to prevent its demolition.

While the applicatio­n was turned down on the grounds there were similar organisati­ons operating for the Indian community at the time, a decision on its appeal is awaited from the UK Government’s Department for Culture, Media and Sports.

“The India Club is a constant reminder of Westminste­r’s multicultu­ral identity and Indo-British friendship. We will continue to campaign for the building’s longterm preservati­on, including applying to Westminste­r for its designatio­n as an Asset of Community Value,” added Marker. The Club, an Indian restaurant on The Strand in the heart of London since 1946, is located on the first floor of the 26-room Strand Continenta­l hotel.

Marston Properties, which had put in an applicatio­n with Westminste­r City Council for the partial demolition and extension of existing seven-storey building with alteration­s at ground and basement levels to create a new hotel, refused to comment on the Council’s decision to turn down its applicatio­n this week.

The applicatio­n had attracted an unpreceden­ted 26 public appeals against such a move, with the Club being categorise­d a secret gem and as having unique historical value to Londoners and visitors. Many Indian and UK MPs — Lord Karan Bilimoria and Congress MP Shashi Tharoor — had backed the drive to preserve its legacy with endorsemen­t letters.

 ??  ?? Council’s plan panel members noted India Club was a very important cultural institutio­n, had strong historical links with the India League. Also, it made a significan­t contributi­on to the cultural diversity and night time entertainm­ent provision in...
Council’s plan panel members noted India Club was a very important cultural institutio­n, had strong historical links with the India League. Also, it made a significan­t contributi­on to the cultural diversity and night time entertainm­ent provision in...

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