More than 250 objectors to Sellar Group鈥檚 72-storey scheme
Architects including Ed Jones and Terry Farrell have lined up alongside Westminster鈥檚 opposition councillors and hundreds of others to call for plans for a Renzo Piano-designed tower in Paddington to be turned down.
More than 300 comments have been made about the proposals on the council鈥檚 planning website with close to 90% objecting to the plan from Sellar Group to build a 72-storey tower a stone鈥檚 throw away from Paddington station.
Piano鈥檚 development will include 330 apartments, 10,000sq m of office space along with 4,600sq m of retail.
Last month, the architect said the only way to improve access to Paddington station and improve public realm around it is to build a tower.
But dozens of objections have been sent in to Westminster council, the local planning authority, which is hoping to make a decision on the scheme on March 11.
Among those is Dixon Jones co-founder Ed Jones who said the building would cause 鈥渟ubstantial harm鈥 to its immediate surroundings, branding it a 鈥渂light鈥 and adding: 鈥淭he building, if permitted, will become a precedent for further inappropriate tall buildings in the area.
鈥淭he type of expensive flats in the tower are not needed in this area and the owners and occupiers will contribute little to the local economy.鈥
He dismissed a planned shopping mall as 鈥渦nnecessary鈥 and complained the developers behind the project were attempting to speed up a decision 鈥 an accusation made by Historic England who said the scheme is at risk of being rushed through planning while Boris Johnson is still mayor before he steps down this May.
Jones said: 鈥淭here is a distinct lack of due process and public faith in the manner in which this is being rushed through with inadequate exposure, discussion and debate. This is a major scheme of wider than local significance.鈥
And he said if the scheme were allowed, it would be another example of London鈥檚 skyline being ruined by 鈥渢he indiscriminate imposition of tall buildings鈥 and that the capital was 鈥渂eing mistaken for Manhattan. This is not to say that tall buildings should be excluded but rather that London should have a policy of where to put them.鈥
Farrell said he was objecting because there was no need to build a tower so high, having already worked for the scheme鈥檚 developer Sellar Group in masterplanning the area around the station.
鈥淭here is no capacity advantage to building high as there is ample space to get the area needed to comprehensively renew the station and area around, without going higher than 18 storeys maximum in a mix of mid-rise buildings,鈥 Farrell wrote.
He said that while he supported Piano鈥檚 Shard 鈥渢he circumstances are very significantly different here at Paddington. It is a much more sensitive site, given the proximity to Royal Parks, domestic scale squares and terraces and houses in conservation areas and the closeness of listed buildings.鈥
And he said the plans involving the station were not up to the same standards in other areas of the capital.
鈥淧addington must aspire to an integrated comprehensive scheme like that at Broadgate/Liverpool Station and at King鈥檚 Cross/St Pancras. This piecemeal, opportunistic scheme falls well short of these precedents.鈥
Also objecting is Westminster resident and Fereday Pollard senior project architect John Attwood who is working on the new Crossrail station at Abbey Wood in east London.
He wrote: 鈥淭he tower is much, much too large for its site and location. It is not a central business district. If approved, it would act as 鈥榮torm trooper鈥 development, creating a precedent for future over scaled redevelopments in west London.鈥
Westminster鈥檚 Labour group 鈥 which accounts for 16 of the council鈥檚 60 councillors 鈥 has also condemned the plans and echoed Farrell鈥檚 point that the same amount of housing could be spread across much lower buildings.
Group leader Adam Hug said: 鈥淭he developers need to go back to the drawing board and come up with a scheme that can really respond to residents鈥 concerns about the proposed design and delivers real benefits for our community.鈥
A spokeswoman for Sellar, which is developing the scheme with Great Western Development, a subsidiary of Singapore firm Hotel Properties, said the developer was not trying to rush through the scheme and had kept councillors and local residents informed throughout via briefings, exhibitions and consultations.
A version of this story first appeared on 好色先生TV鈥檚 sister title BD
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