Sunderland Echo

Call to stop tram shelter cafe plan

- Pamela Bilalova echo.news@jpimedia.co.uk @sunderland­echo

Residents want the council to revoke its decision on leasing the Grade II-listed building

More than 1,000 residents have signed a petition calling on Sunderland City Council to keep Seaburn Tram Shelter “in its original form”, instead of converting it into a café.

Planning consent for the change was granted in 2019 as part of wider plans to regenerate little-used buildings on the seafront with plans for the buildings to become cafés or restaurant­s.

Last month it was announced that the former Bay Shelter building on Seaburn's Lower Promenade is set to be transforme­d into a high-end seafood restaurant by the team behind popular citycentre restaurant Mexico 70.

Allison Hicks, from Seaburn, who started the petition, said: “My feeling is that we have lots of eating and drinking venues already on the seafront that have either just been built or that are going through a change of use right now and I think they’ve absorbed that eating and drinking kind of offer.

“We need to think a little bit more differentl­y and we shouldn’t be providing that at the expense of losing our history and our heritage.

“The shelter is representa­tive of Seaburn, and Roker and the coast for me.

"It is a place where I’ve walked past many times as a child growing up into a woman and I still do now.

“It’s a symbol of Seaburn, of home, of years gone by at the seaside.”

The petition has gained more than 1,100 signatures since launching and Allison says residents want to engage with the council and come up with different ways of keeping the shelter free to the public as an informatio­n centre or a community building.

“There are examples of fine heritage buildings that are modernised, repurposed and are used very well,” she said.

“It needs to be a cultural representa­tion or a symbol of our coast.

"Anything that fits with the building, that maintains the building at its standard and its current level that the public feels they have a right to open the door and go in without paying money.”

Sunderland City Council’s Cabinet Member for Dynamic City, Councillor Rebecca Atkinson, said: “The new uses are about bringing increased investment and vibrancy to a part of the city that has vast potential.

“Since 2019 the Tram Shelter, including the undergroun­d toilets, has been listed by Historic England.

"Its conversion requires Listed Building consent, in addition to the previous planning permission which was granted, before any works can take place.

“It is considered, however, that a sympatheti­c conversion of the shelter can be undertaken that will both preserve the historic fabric of the building and allow it to be used as a café/restaurant.

“Any applicatio­n made to the Local Planning Authority for Listed Building consent will undergo public consultati­on before being presented to the Planning Committee for a decision.”

 ??  ?? The tram shelter at Seaburn.
The tram shelter at Seaburn.

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