Bristol Post

Castle Park View Mayor defends fewer

- Tristan CORK tristan.cork@reachplc.com

THE Mayor of Bristol has defended a decision which has seen the biggest residentia­l developmen­t in the city centre in a generation go ahead – but with only half the affordable homes it should have.

Marvin Rees said the decision was taken to allow developers to break the council’s policy that insists 40 per cent of all homes in developmen­ts in the city centre should be affordable so that the scheme could go ahead.

Developers Bouygues won planning permission in 2018 to build Castle Park View, the 26-storey tower block complex that is now nearing completion, with its landmark building now a major feature of the Bristol skyline.

The entire developmen­t site on the south east corner of Castle Park was the former central ambulance station and headquarte­rs for Bristol, and had been empty for years before developers finally won permission.

The land was owned by a combinatio­n of Bristol City Council and, because it was originally owned by the NHS, by Homes England – the Government land and housing agency that controls state-owned land. Despite being under public control, when developers came with a plan to build a total of 375 flats there, they initially proposed only including 12 per cent of those flats being ‘affordable’ – for local people on the housing waiting list.

Back in 2016 and 2017, Bouygues and council housing chiefs negotiated a deal which lifted the proposal to 20 per cent, which means one of the five apartment blocks is being handed over to the housing associatio­n Abri.

It contains 75 flats, 17 of which will be offered under a shared ownership scheme, and the other 58 will be rented by Abri through the council’s Home Choice housing waiting list system.

But in recent years, across the city, the council has consistent­ly failed to enforce its own policy of having 30 or 40 per cent affordable homes in large scale developmen­ts, and Mr Rees said the priority with the site that became Castle Park View was to make sure something got built there, and the site didn’t continue to be left empty for years.

There had been other gains as well as getting 75 affordable flats built, including making sure the developmen­t connected to the fledgling Bristol City heat network, as well as the developmen­t kickstarti­ng other investment­s in the city.

“The housing crisis is significan­t, 13,000 people on the waiting list, 1,000 households in temporary accommodat­ion,” he told the Post.

“But this is 375 homes, with 75 affordable, and it makes a contributi­on.

“This is where you have to make some pragmatic decisions. You can hold out for the higher number of affordable on a complex city centre site, and then it doesn’t get built.”

The mayor hinted that the deal negotiated back in 2017 might not be the same if negotiated now, saying the council was in a stronger position because developers are keen to invest in Bristol more now than they were then. “Now we’ve proven delivery, Bristol’s a strong market, people know they can come here and work, so that’s going to be the subject of negotiatio­n in the future,” he said.

After Bouygues’ initial offer of 12 per cent affordable was negotiated up to 20 per cent, Bristol’s offices of Savills wrote a ‘viability report’ which explained to planners why the developmen­t would fail to meet the 40 per cent affordable council policy.

In that 2017 viability report, Savills told planners that the developmen­t would bring in £84 million to Bouygues in income if the council let them only build 20 per cent affordable, but if the 40 per cent rule was

the bottom line would drop to £73.5 million. Constructi­on costs would be the same - at around £58.6 million.

Savills claimed that with only 20 per cent affordable, Bouygues would make £4.3 million profit, but if they had to increase that to 40 per cent, and provide a total of 150 flats through a housing associatio­n rather than its own private rental scheme, it would make a loss on the project.

One of the reasons Savills claimed this was the case, was because the site was sloped, from the edge of Castle Park down to the Floating Harbour, and there were challenges constructi­ng large buildings on the water’s edge.

The 75 affordable flats are in one apartment block on the corner of the site nearest the St Philip and St James Church, which will be managed by housing associatio­n Abri. The rest in

Castle Park View tower itself and the three other apartment blocks on the site, will all be for private rent.

The council’s cabinet member for housing, Councillor Tom Renhard, said this was important too.

“The affordable housing on the site will go through our housing register, our HomeChoice system, which is under review right now. It will be prioritise­d based on need through our banding system,” he said.

“We hear about there being a shortage of private rented sector properties in the city so actually this is good news for people, there’s 300 more properties they can potentiall­y rent.”

There is no word yet on how much an apartment at Castle Park View will cost to rent, either through the private rented scheme or the ‘affordable’ flats through the council and Abri. In the original planning applicatio­n, Savills described the private rented flats as being at the “higher end of the rented spectrum”.

Architects said they were keen to make sure there was little difference between the affordable and private housing blocks and none of the controvers­ial features that have caused uproar in major residentia­l developmen­ts in London, where the people living in the affordable flats are ‘ghetenforc­ed, toised’ with separate doors and restrictio­ns on the facilities. Nick Thursby, from architect firm Chapman Taylor, said: “We were very conscious at the outset that we didn’t want to separate the affordable,” he said. “So I think hopefully as you walk around the outside, you wouldn’t know which was private (rent), which was shared ownership, or affordable.”

There’s a shortage of private rented sector properties in the city so ... there’s 300 more properties they can rent Cllr Tom Renhard

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 ?? PHOTOS: JONATHAN MYERS ?? Left, Mayor Marvin Rees looks out over Bristol at the Castle Park View developmen­t, right
PHOTOS: JONATHAN MYERS Left, Mayor Marvin Rees looks out over Bristol at the Castle Park View developmen­t, right
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