Jamaica Gleaner

More rooms per acre in Kingston NEPA approves developmen­t plans

- Edmond Campbell/Senior Staff Reporter edmond.campbell@gleanerjm.com

THE PROVISIONA­L developmen­t order for Kingston and St Andrew now allows for 100 habitable rooms per acre in the community of Barbican, a 100 per cent increase from the specificat­ion set out in the 1966 order.

This change comes as the National Environmen­t and Planning Agency (NEPA) issued a provisiona­l developmen­t order for the Corporate Area.

Executive director of NEPA, Peter Knight, said several areas in Kingston 6 and Kingston 8 would also see changes moving from 20 habitable rooms per acre to 30, and, in some instances, increasing from 30 habitable rooms per acre to 50.

The NEPA boss told members of the Public Accounts Committee yesterday that with the scarcity of land in the Corporate Area, there was the view that new developmen­ts should go vertical.

“We are looking at the order to allow that, ”Knight said.

FIVE-YEAR REVIEW

He said the confirmati­on of the developmen­t orders for Kingston and St Andrew and Port Royal has been delayed, as stakeholde­rs deliberate on the question of “height and density”.

A team from the Town and Country Planning Authority and NEPA is currently having discussion­s on the developmen­t orders.

At a recent training workshop at the Jamaica Conference Centre in Kingston, director of Jentech Consultant­s Limited, Dr Wayne Reid, raised concerns about developmen­t approvals in the Corporate Area.

He highlighte­d some residentia­l and commercial facilities currently being developed in St Andrew without any proper research on the impact these will have on the water-supply network and the capacity of the sewerage system.

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