The Chronicle (UK)

Quayside flats plan approved by Government

- By DANIEL HOLLAND Local democracy reporter daniel.holland@reachplc.com

A GOVERNMENT planning inspector has sided with developers in the battle over controvers­ial apartments that now look set to be built on one of the last empty patches of land on the Newcastle Quayside.

The contentiou­s Plot 12 was the subject of a public inquiry in March, where neighbours claimed that £40m proposals for a 14-storey block would “devastate” their living conditions and destroy views to and from a historic church. But the 289 flats will now be given the green light, after Newcastle City Council’s 11-1 decision to reject them last year was overturned.

Planning inspector Claire Searson has ruled in favour of appellants Packaged Living and Robertson Property to develop the Homes England-owned site, which has lain vacant for decades.

In a verdict issued to the local authority last Friday, Mrs Searson said she was satisfied that the block “would not appear clumsy or out of keeping along the Quayside”, despite it being labelled “monolithic” and “painfully poor” by critics. Vocal opponents to the plans, which had attracted more than 300 objections, had urged the developers to rethink and build something smaller on the site, with fears that the new complex will block out light to residents of the St Ann’s Quay building next door. However, Mrs Searson concluded that there was “no justificat­ion” to deny planning permission in order to wait for an alternativ­e design to come forward on what is “an exceptiona­lly difficult site to develop”.

She added: “Is the architectu­re exceptiona­l? My answer is no. But, in design terms the policy conflict is limited, the developmen­t does have positive design attributes and has sought to balance a number of competing site constraint­s. The benefits offered are significan­t and crucially, I have found that substantia­l weight should be attributed to the fact that the developmen­t is in public ownership, fully funded and deliverabl­e in the context of a site which has never been realised in over 30 years and with significan­t remediatio­n needs and viability issues.”

The inspector also dismissed concerns that future residents of the new apartments will be forced to live in flats that do not meet minimum space standards and, while she could “appreciate the frustratio­n” of St Ann’s residents over the loss of light, felt there were “no unacceptab­le effects in respect of living conditions”. Fr Allan Marks, of nearby St Ann’s Church, had warned that the Plot 12 developmen­t would “destroy an historic and significan­t setting”, but Mrs Searson decided that the harm to the Grade I-listed building was “less than substantia­l”.

She said that improvemen­t to the churchyard and to St Ann’s Steps, that will be paid for by the developers, alongside the wider economic, social and environmen­tal benefits of the project were “more than sufficient to outweigh the lower level of less than substantia­l harm to the significan­ce of St Ann’s Church”. It is claimed that the scheme will support hundreds of jobs and and boost spending in the local economy by an estimated £4m a year.

A council spokespers­on said: “Naturally we are very disappoint­ed given our concerns and those of residents about the design quality and space standards of the proposed developmen­t. We will consider the decision to see if there are any grounds to challenge it or not.”

 ?? ?? New plans for the Plot 12 developmen­t on Newcastle’s Quayside have been given the green light by a Government planning inspector
New plans for the Plot 12 developmen­t on Newcastle’s Quayside have been given the green light by a Government planning inspector

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