Committee chair admits she āabsolutely hatedā the prospect of the mixed-use scheme being built
Westminster councilās planning committee has unanimously voted to approve controversial plans by AHMM to demolish and rebuild an entire city block in Marylebone despite several members strongly criticising the mixed-use schemeās ānondescriptā design.
In a three hour meeting devoted entirely to the project, committee chair Ruth Bush admitted she was ādeeply disappointedā by AHMMās design proposals for the site and said she āabsolutely hatedā the prospect of it being built but voted in favour of the plans due to the boroughās need for grade A office space.
Designed for a joint venture between Derwent London and Lazari Investments with the Portman Estate, the eight-storey scheme would replace a row of five unlisted buildings along Baker Street including the former headquarters of the Special Operations Executive, a government spy agency active during the Second World War.
The proposals, which will still need final sign off by the mayor of London to go ahead, would include 28,000 sq m of office space and 17 homes on what is considered the areaās last remaining strategic development site.
All councillors on the committee voted in favour of the planning officerās recommendation to approve the application in the meeting.
Bush, criticising the design of the scheme, said her vote to approve came āgenuinely with a very heavy heartā.
āI am deeply disappointed by the size and design of this building. I just think the lack of imagination, the lack of sensitivity to what surrounds it⦠I know weāre being told how it makes appropriate reference to the conservation area but I think these colossal verticals are completely out of place,ā she said, referring to a series of large columns proposed for the facade of the building.
She added: āI absolutely hate the idea of this building being up there for 50 odd years or moreā¦.but every time we make one of these decisions a building stays for decades and it should. This is too big a building to be where it is in the context of where it is.ā
Councillor Paul Fisher, who has sat on the committee for more than two years, said the proposal was āone of the most difficultā that he had determined but voted in favour because of the high demand for high quality office space in the Baker Street area.
āI donāt like the design. I think it could have done better with the design of this building in the heart of London, but thatās not the test here,ā he said, adding: āAll things considered, it would be reckless given the demand for grade A office space for me to reject it.ā
Councillor Jason Williams described the proposed building as ārather nondescript and it could be anywhereā, while councillor Laila Cunningham also admitted she did not like the design and said it ācould be more refined, more elegantā.
But Cunningham said the current site was not sustainable and would need to redeveloped in the future, and AHMMās proposals were āalmost as good as it gets in terms of sustainabilityā, adding: āI fear that a future application may not beā.
Westminsterās planning officers had said the proposals were āacceptable from a sustainability and circular economy perspectiveā in their recommendation to approve because of the applicantsā commitment to reuse around 59% of Accurist House, one of the buildings on the site. The new scheme would also have significantly better operational energy performance than the existing buildings.
A council report said reusing the buildings would not be viable because of differing floorplates. While the developers had looked at retaining Accurist House, a study found this would have a comparable upfront carbon impact of redeveloping the whole site.
It is the latest in a string of contentious redevelopment proposals which have come before Westminsterās planning committee in the last few months following the councilās announcement of its intention to become a āretrofit-firstā city.
A committee hearing in April refused plans by Fathom Architects to redevelop a block on Savile Row despite the scheme being deemed compliant with local planning guidance, while a Foster & Partners-designed retrofit in Mayfair was granted approval at the same meeting.
But another demolish and rebuild scheme on Savile Row by PLP was unexpectedly approved by the committee in May despite the proposals being recommended for refusal by planning officers on heritage and sustainability grounds.
The project team for the Baker Street site includes planning consultant Gerald Eve, landscape architect LDA Design, structural engineer Buro Happold, MEP and services engineer Cundall, cost consultant Aecom and project manager Gardiner & Theobald.
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