Bristol Post

Eyesore building could be replaced by housing

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A DECAYING building in Barton Hill could be demolished and replaced with a mixture of affordable housing and community space, years after it was abandoned and left to rot.

Bristol City Council has revealed it intends to work with the community to redevelop the derelict former Barton Hill Tenants Associatio­n Club building on Avondale Road.

Heavily overgrown with ivy and weeds, the crumbling Victorian building lies in the heart of Barton Hill, a symbol of the neglect that many feel has blighted the neighbourh­ood in recent years.

Once a social club, it closed about a decade ago and has remained empty apart from the occasional squatters, falling into a squalid state of disrepair.

The Bristol Somali Community Associatio­n has been campaignin­g for nearly three years for the council to take action on the site, and wants it to become a space for the community, providing a library and youth centre.

Now the council has won a government grant of £200,000 it says it will use to demolish the building, if that is supported by the community, with a view to replacing it with eight affordable flats and a new community building.

A council spokespers­on said: “The grant from the Brownfield Land Release Fund will meet costs to clear the site of Tenants Hall, the former Barton Hill Tenants Associatio­n Club building, creating the opportunit­y for a community-led project to build eight affordable flats and community space for local people on the site.”

The Government announced the winning bids for grants from the £75 million Brownfield Land

Release Fund earlier this month.

The Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communitie­s (DLUHC) said 53 councils would use the £58 million released to demolish derelict buildings, allowing a total of 5,600 new homes to be built without touching the countrysid­e.

The council spokespers­on said: “Under the conditions of the grant the funding covers capital costs which will largely be used for an asbestos survey and asbestos removal and demolition of the building if that route is supported by the local community. This will create a blank canvas for the site without the limitation­s posed by the existing building which an independen­t building survey showed us is in poor condition and

would cost over £1.4m to refurbish and convert.”

The building survey, dated April this year, describes cracked masonry, “extensive water damage, deteriorat­ion and timber decay”, floors at risk of collapse, discarded needles, and loose debris and rubbish.

Completed by JLL and Arcadis, working with Arup and Mott MacDonald, it concludes: “Overall, we consider the building to be in very poor condition and apart from the external masonry walls, we doubt that much of the existing constructi­on, finishes or services can be salvaged and therefore recommend that complete replacemen­t of these elements be allowed for.”

The consultanc­y firms estimate it would cost £1.25million to put

the building back to use as a community hall, and £1.44million to convert it into five flats with nearly 500sqm of community space.

The council spokespers­on said: “Clearing the site is also likely to create more opportunit­ies for interested parties to work with the community to create a mixed-use developmen­t subject to future funding.

“In line with our land disposal policy for community-led housing, the site clearance creates the opportunit­y for a community-led developmen­t through a long lease with a provision that the site is used for housing.

“We are having conversati­ons with local community representa­tives and networks about the future developmen­t of the site.”

 ?? ?? The council has won a £200,000 grant to demolish the derelict Barton Hill Tenants Associatio­n Club building to enable it to be replaced by new flats and a community space
The council has won a £200,000 grant to demolish the derelict Barton Hill Tenants Associatio­n Club building to enable it to be replaced by new flats and a community space

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