Ashbourne News Telegraph

Apartments plan for ex-store

■ One of Ashbourne’s biggest empty shops could be turned into 11 flats, if plans submitted to Derbyshire Dales Council get the thumbs-up. But part of the former Bennetts store in St John Street would live on as a retail space.

- By Gareth Butterfiel­d gareth.butterfiel­d@ashbournen­ewstelegra­ph.co.uk

ONE of Ashbourne’s biggest empty shops could be turned into 11 flats, if plans submitted to Derbyshire Dales Council are given the thumbs-up.

Part of the former Bennetts store in St John Street would live on as a retail space under the plans, drawn up by Derbybased architects Terry Malpas Associates Ltd.

The designs put before planners include two new shop spaces on the 1,050 sq m building’s ground floor, with the rest of the former department store’s space being converted into apartments.

They would range in size from 36 sq m to 72 sq m and two would have two bedrooms, while the others would be single-bedroomed units.

In a design and access statement compiled on behalf of the applicant Peter Cook, the agents explain that a four-storey retail property is too large in the current retail climate.

It explains that the building has been profession­ally marketed for 18 months and is said to have not attracted any “real interest”.

The statement reads: “The applicant therefore wishes to pursue the possibilit­y of developing the vacant upper floor levels into new residentia­l apartments, while retaining existing retail use on the ground floor, in order to maintain a commercial street presence and with potential new tenants attracting much welcomed footfall back into the town centre.”

The proposed new layout would see the buildings various access points, which were used as fire exits, and its seven staircases, becoming doorways for the new apartments.

While the two new shop spaces would use the existing high street doorways rways two doors to the side, e, facing the elderly person’s rest room, m, would become e ground floor stairway access points for three of the flats.

A door slightly higher up the paved slope, near to The Galllery, would become me the first-floor access point for two more flats, and the remaining six flats would be accessed through a rear door in The Gallery i itself. The design wou would inclu clude a s space on the first floor, accessed off The Gallery, for communal indoor bicycle storage. The building has no parking spaces for cars.

Summing up the applicatio­n, the agent writes: “The existing building, site and local infrastruc­ture can support the proposed residentia­l apartments, in redevelopi­ng this sustainabl­e location, which overall will inject new life into the town centre, bringing a welcomed increase in footfall and subsequent revenue for existing businesses within the immediate area, together with an over-riding objective to help secure the long-term future of this prominent building that has stood empty for 18 months.”

Ashbourne’s Bennetts store closed its doors for the last time in April 2019 after the firm’s administra­tors failed to find a buyer. Seventeen members of staff lost their jobs.

Despite hopes of a rescue bid, including a crowdfundi­ng scheme that attracted pledges of more than £20,000, no sustainabl­e new use was found for the building and it has stood empty ever since.

Planners are set to decide whether to grant permission for the change of use of the building in the coming weeks.

The vacant upper floor would become flats, while retaining existing retail use on the ground floor

Applicants

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 ??  ?? The former Bennetts store premises
The former Bennetts store premises

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