Malta Independent

FAA and residents call on PA to stop ‘beginning of the end of Pembroke’

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Flimkien ghal Ambjent Ahjar together with a group of over 200 Pembroke residents are calling on the Planning Authority to refuse the recent barrage of applicatio­ns for 5 to 6 storey developmen­ts set to alter and destroy the character and tranquilit­y of Pembroke.

“The sudden surge of applicatio­ns is no coincidenc­e, but a result of a change in planning policies introduced in 2015 that made it possible to increase all buildings by at least one additional floor over and above the building height limitation­s set in 2006 that in the case of Pembroke, were already unreasonab­ly set at 3 to 4 floors,” the NGO said.

“Due to this policy amendment in 2015, Pembroke’s allowed building height soared to 5 or 6 storeys – a stark contrast with the existing rows of 2 storey terraced houses dotted by historic military barracks that give Pembroke its distinct character. The CEO of the Planning Authority, Johann Buttigieg blatantly denied the implicatio­ns of the 2015 policy amendment, stating that the number of permissibl­e floors has not increased, despite the PA itself having already approved hundreds of applicatio­ns at this new increased building height.”

FAA said that, through these policies the PA, “is encouragin­g the demolition of terraced houses and their replacemen­t with 5 or 6 storey apartment blocks without any considerat­ion for the residents who already invested in Pembroke specifical­ly because it is a quiet low-density residentia­l area with open green spaces and wide well-lit streets, characteri­stics that are all quickly disappeari­ng in Malta as the island is engulfed by over-developmen­t, rampant congestion and increasing levels of air and noise pollution.

“It’s as if the Planning Authority has set out to make all of Malta’s streets equally chaotic and depressive. Instead of writing policies that support the regenerati­on of degraded areas the Planning Authority is introducin­g loopholes that encourage the ruin of the few remaining well-planned characteri­stic towns that we have,” said FAA’s Tara Cassar.

The Pembroke Local Council has also expressed serious concerns about the impact of these towering blocks in Pembroke, stating that they are “contrary to all developmen­t within its locality that changes the present configurat­ion and nature of this residentia­l area” and “against the intensific­ation and constructi­on of buildings higher than those present in the neighbourh­oods.”

At present the PA is processing at least 3 applicatio­ns of this kind in Pembroke. The first will be decided by the Planning Commission today though sadly in this particular case the damage has already been done as an applicatio­n for 4 floors on the exact same site was already approved in June 2016. The applicant is now requesting to increase the developmen­t to 5 units.

“FAA and the residents of Pembroke are calling on the PA to stop adopting developer-oriented policies and to start putting resident’s well-being at the heart of planning. Buildings are for people and it is no use rampaging on with destructiv­e constructi­on for the sake of so-called developmen­t when you’re driving out the community you should be developing for.”

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