An A+ planning regime for Marsalforn
Marsalforn is quickly becoming Gozo’s version of Sliema in more ways than one.
With a hub for restaurants catering to large numbers of people situated right by the sea... one cannot help but make the comparison. But there is yet another comparison to be made... it also looks like Sliema or Buġibba, and not the parts that consist of townhouses. Marsalforn looks like a hotchpotch of mismatched buildings, with little continuity - if any - in terms of design from one building to the next.
A photo recently sent to this newsroom shows just how the Planning Authority keeps on failing to take decisions that make sense architecturally and aesthetically for the streetscape as a whole.
An application filed back in 2018 proposed that a small block of apartments be allowed to rise further above the buildings adjacent to it. This is a common issue which the Planning Authority tends to have no problem approving, to the detriment of the entire area. It looks ugly, and often leads to other buildings in the area rising in a locality that already faces parking problems.
The application, which was filed back in 2018, was to extend an apartment at fourth floor level and a penthouse as a duplex on existing airspace.
The application was approved through summary proceedings, as allowed under Schedule 2 of the Development Planning Act, as it fell under the category ‘Construction of new residential buildings or extensions or alterations of existing residential buildings which do not create more than 16 dwelling units and their ancillary parking facilities, not in UCAs nor in ODZ nor in villa nor in bungalow areas’.
The application, according to PA documents, conformed with the relevant policies, including building height limits.
This is not the only construction activity in Marsalforn that has raised eyebrows. Just last month, The Malta Independent reported on another development in the area extending the fourth floor level of a building to create a full floor and to construct a penthouse at receded floor level. That development also rose higher than the buildings surrounding it.