Petition against Low Traffic Neighbourhoods reaches 3,400

The petition objecting to the proposed plans for the Low Traffic Neighbourhoods (LTN) has reached over 3,400 signatures. The LTN for the West Ealing area (map above) south from The Broadway to Blondin Park and west from Northfield Ave to Boston Road is due to be implemented mid-August. Some residents will be in favour of this LTN and others will be opposed. if you are concerned about this LTN then the statement below is from the petition and explains the reasons for objecting:

‘As local residents, we object to the proposed plans for the local Ealing LTNs.  We intend to unite to oppose these plans and demand an opportunity to be consulted so that the final plans benefit all residents.  Whilst we support the overarching objective of reducing traffic & improving the environment, we don’t believe this proposal is fit for purpose.  

The essence of our objection is that:

The closure of local Distributor Roads will divert traffic onto narrower, quieter residential roads.  This will add traffic onto these minor roads, reduce air quality and add dangers to residents and their children going about their lives.

The proposals have not been officially published for consultation and therefore the residents have not been afforded the chance to consider the matter.  We deem this to be undemocratic, non-transparent, and a failure of the Council to serve the community responsibly.

We believe this lack of transparency has created much fear and anger in people. 

 We require the council to share with us the following:

*Objectives to the scheme

*Timelines of the overarching plan

*Maps of all proposed impacted areas 

*Evidence based Data on traffic in roads in question.

*Impact assessments & Risk assessments which should include statements & assessments from London Fire services, emergency services & St John’s Ambulance

 *Success criteria & measurements pre & post trials

 *Consultation period dates & timings

Many proposed plans for the area we consider to be totally impractical and contravene the LTN objectives. Should the proposed plan be submitted and accepted in its current form, much of the traffic will struggle to flow bi-directionally, as many of the routes are too narrow. This is likely to create significant congestion which will increase engine idling and increase fuel consumption, thereby delivering a negative impact on the quality of air.

We are also concerned that congestion/road blockages may cause problems for emergency service access. We have many elderly, vulnerable residents in poor health, with an increased dependency on emergency and medical services during this COVID 19 pandemic, when timely interventions can be critical.  We believe this plan to be completely ageist & discriminatory against at least 20% of Ealing’s residents.   Along with our concerns for the emergency services (fire & ambulance), we worry the impact this scheme will have on our public services and the access they require weekly to conduct their duties. The current scheme makes no provision for an alternate route for traffic to enter or leave the area. Thus, at least every week, when said public service vehicles perform their duties, all impacted residences will be placed in gridlock with little or no vehicular access.

We also object to the plan to implement this without proper consultation.  We have been informed that there will not be a consultation period before this trial starts, but a review conducted post trial.  This is totally undemocratic and will cause 6 months of stress and chaos for a huge proportion of residents at a time (Covid-19) when many are already suffering hugely. We do not accept that it is democratic for consultations to start only after the scheme/trial has been implemented.  We believe that you are abusing emergency measures which were intended to solve far greater problems than local ‘rat-runs’.

In summary, whilst we support the overall objective to reduce traffic and improve our environment, we demand an opportunity to have all plans for the area (8 LTNs) shared with us and resident’s agreements sought, prior to implementation.’

http://chng.it/DH77JktC6P

Barclays bank in West Ealing to close in October

Over the past few years one bank after another in West Ealing has closed. Now it’s the turn of Barclays. It is due to close on Friday 30th October. That will leave just the Post Office and Nationwide. Needless to say the reason for closure is the move to more and more online banking services. All very well, but I suspect quite a few people in West Ealing don’t use online banking. So, let’s hope there aren’t plans to close Nationwide and the Post Office.

Map of West Ealing Low Traffic Neighbourhood

This is the map for the Council’s Low Traffic neighbourhood area south of The Broadway. Here’s a link to our story about this.

The Council’s Low Traffic Neighbourhood (LTN) plans are causing considerable concern amongst some of the residents in the affected areas. The Ealing Low Traffic Neighbourhood Action Group has been set up and their Facebook page is here.

Much of the concern centres around the disruption the LTNs will bring for local driving by pushing traffic off local distributor roads and on to quieter residential roads along with the impact on businesses , emergency services and deliveries. An online petition has been set up for people wanting the Council to have a consultation with residents before any action is taken. To date over 3,250 people have signed it. As it stands, the consultation will take place during the six months from installation of the LTNs.

Bigger and bigger: the ever changing face of West Ealing

Walking up Melbourne Avenue this sight caught my attention. It seems to capture West Ealing at the moment.

If a picture speaks louder than words then this photo shouts out build high, build big. The demolition of Woolworths allows us to see the extent of the building on the old BHS site with an even bigger one coming soon to fill this gap. And before long we will know the fate of the 19-storey tower planned for Manor Road which may soon be followed by the planned 25-storey tower opposite the station on the Majestic Wine Warehouse site.

54 new homes planned on Dean Gardens car park

As we suggested in our post last week, Ealing Council is developing plans to build 54 new homes in five and seven storey blocks on the site of Dean Gardens car park. It looks like there will be some public parking spaces left though how many is unclear.

The website for this development is due to launch today (Tuesday 21st July) . There are online Q&A sessions planned for Wednesday 5th August 1pm or 6.30pm.

Sunday 2nd August

It looks like there will be an overall loss of about 20 parking spaces across the three existing car parks of Maitland Yard, Dean Gardens car park and Leeland Terrace car park. The spaces will come down from 57 to 38.

We will continue to update this story as we find out more about the plans.

The Grosvenor set to reopen on Friday

Much to the relief of many The Grosvenor pub is re-opening Friday 17th July at 5pm. We reported some months ago on its closure as its parent company had gone in to administration. We haven’t yet discovered whether its original owners Food and Fuel have bought it back or who now owns it. No doubt all will be revealed very soon over a pint.

Drilling deep in Dean Gardens car park

You may have noticed the drilling going on in Dean Gardens car park. It looks like the car park is a designated site for a block of flats. This goes back to a Council plan in 2018 when it was picked out to be a site for 24 affordable homes. Quite what may be planned now is not clear but watch this space for further news.

Part of West Ealing to become a Low Traffic Neighbourhood

Creating a Low Traffic Neighbourhood (LTN) for the area of West Ealing south of the Uxbridge Road was originally part of the TfL funded West Ealing Liveable Neighbourhood project. The bulk of this project has been put on hold but this one element has been picked out for inplementation now as a response to the Coronaviris crisis in order to help reduce traffic and encourage more walking and cycling.

The original area for this project was to be south of the Uxbridge Rd to Leighton Rd and bordered by Northfield Ave on the east and Grosvenor Rd to the west. This area looks set to be expanded further south at the very least.

The overall aim of an LTN is to reduce through traffic by a range of measures from bollards and width restrictions to planting, cycle bays and seating.

Options for the original West Ealing LTN were displayed at a public meeting at the Welshore Community Hub in December. These are likely to form the basis of this expanded LTN.

You can read more on the Council’s website.

Planning update – Ealing Matters Newsletter

Hello everyone. We hope that you are all keeping sane and well during lockdown. There is no shortage of news to report this month from the first steps towards a new Local Plan to several major planning applications in West Ealing and Southall that have just been submitted. We start with the borough-wide news.

RED BLOCK REBELS AND EALING MATTERS LAUNCH EALING – THE SKY’S THE LIMIT VIDEO

Following on from our April newsletter, which reported on the enormous number of towers sprouting up across the London Borough of Ealing, the Red Block Rebels together with Ealing Matters created a short video tour of those that have been built or are currently under planning consideration. Called Ealing – The Sky’s the Limit, the film uses 3D modelling technology similar to that used by architects to ‘build’ each development and superimpose it on Google Earth views of the borough. The images are underpinned by figures from our database, which lists large scale developments that have either been recently built or are in the planning system. At the film’s launch on 19 May the database included 181 developments with blocks rising to 10 storeys or more and containing almost 40,000 housing units. As of 21 June 2020 Ealing – The Sky’s the Limit has been viewed almost 7,000 times.

EALING COUNCIL EMERGENCY PLANNING ARRANGEMENTS

Following the Government’s decision to introduce emergency arrangements to allow planning services to continue under the lockdown, there was concern among the Ealing Matters membership about what that would mean for Ealing specifically. Following exchanges by the Ealing Matters working group with the Chief Planning Officer, David Scourfield, a virtual Planning User Group (PUG) meeting was convened by him and Councillor Peter Mason on 16 April to discuss Ealing’s response. Since PUG meetings are not minuted, we organised a survey of the Ealing Matters membership to assess resident group reaction to the plans and to the video conferencing technology that is integral to them.

As a result, the Council re-worked their Planning Position Statement confirming that the suspension of site visits will be only temporary, that there will be no further delegation of decision making powers, that ward councillors should be considered a route to the planning department for their residents, that developer ‘micro’-websites will be set up to coincide with the submission of planning applications, that the Council will produce a ‘how-to’ guide on the ‘Search for a planning application’ page (currently chasing) and that Planning Committee meetings will be recorded and made available to the public to view online.

Separate to these points, we are pleased to report that the Council has responded to complaints that the Ealing Gazette newspaper is almost never available these days making it impossible to view the public notices, e.g. about planning applications and highway works. The Council is now publishing them on its own website. Find them at: https://www.ealing.gov.uk/info/201033/council_and_local_decisions/641/public_notices

However, other comments remain unaddressed.

• The consultation period for planning applications has been extended from 21 to 42 days, but these will continue to be communicated via site notices and neighbour notifications, which our survey found to be inadequate. The request to provide press notices on Ealing Today has not been implemented.

• Those without access to the web will be disadvantaged in terms of finding out about and responding to consultations, planning applications etc. While Ealing Council will register residents’ associations and community groups for notification of planning applications in their area, several member groups have commented that notifications are the Council’s responsibility and should not be delegated in this way.

• There has been no remedy for the current suspension of site visits on the basis that these are not a statutory planning requirement.

EALING’S FIRST VIRTUAL PLANNING COMMITTEE MEETING

Despite Ealing Matters’ reservations about the Council’s lack of experience with virtual meetings as expressed in the PUG survey, the first virtual Planning Committee meeting took place on 20 May 2020. Given the technical issues there had been with the PUG meeting, we were surprised to find that the agenda included no fewer than seven planning applications, all large scale, six had representations from objectors and three with representations from ward councillors. In the event the meeting overran by an hour raising questions about the level of scrutiny accorded to some of the applications. The effect of the technology was that the public was unable to observe the whole Committee (three of whom dropped out due to technical problems at different points in the meeting), and members could not see the public and were thus shielded from public sentiment. There were procedural breaches with individual applications that went unchallenged by Committee members. In the event, all seven applications were approved.

Following the meeting, Ealing Matters and all the objectors who spoke on the night composed a letter of complaint to Councillor Manro, Chair of the Planning Committee, which was sent to him on 7 June. His response, received on 17 June, rejected most of the co-signatories’ criticisms and concluded that ‘the Committee remains as accountable as ever and is very well aware of its duties as evidenced by the length and thoroughness of the debate on items and issues where they considered this to be necessary.’

NEW EALING LOCAL PLAN

Ealing’s Local Plan, whose core strategy document was adopted in 2012, is one of the most out of date of all the London borough Local Plans, and is now regularly ignored both by the Council and developers. Councillor Peter Mason, Ealing’s Cabinet Member for Housing, Planning and Transformation mentioned at the 16 April PUG meeting that work on a new Local Plan has started.

Local Development Plan Advisory Committee (LDPAC) meeting, 3 June

Following a further PUG meeting on 1 June to brief residents’ groups on the process, a meeting of the Local Development Plan Advisory Committee (LDPAC) dealing with much of the same material took place on 3 June. The agenda document pack for LDPAC contained ‘an update on the emerging proposals for a new local development plan for Ealing’s Local Planning Authority and proposes a programme for future meetings for comment.’ Appendix A (p18) also contains the Draft Ealing LPA Local Development Plan Timetable, which scopes out the stages of activity including public consultation between now and April 2022, when the Council hopes to be able to adopt the new Local Plan.

The first section of the LDPAC meeting was a talk by Tony Travers, a Visiting Professor in the London School of Economics (LSE) Department of Government, whose key research interests included local and regional government, elections and public service reform. Professor Travers’ talk highlighted the growth and resilience of London despite current difficulties, the downside being the lack of any easy solution to the need for more housing and its role in cross-subsidising public services. His observation that it is the job of local politicians to explain these trade-offs to their communities struck a chord in the context of residents’ groups’ difficulties in getting the Council to engage with them at all.

Ealing Matters took the opportunity of the LDPAC to try and accelerate delivery of the Authorities Monitoring Report (AMR) for 2014/19, particularly those sections relating to housing delivery. The purpose of the AMR is to measure the Council’s progress in delivering the current Local Plan, and it (or the elements 3 that make it up) should be published annually. Despite requests dating back to 2016, the last published AMR for Ealing relates to 2013/14. Since the AMR measures where we are now, we consider it essential to have this information as soon as possible and before deciding where we want to go and how we plan to get there.

Public Local Plan meeting with Councillor Peter Mason

At the LDPAC meeting, Councillor Mason made the offer to engage directly with Ealing Matters’ member groups about the Local Plan. We are therefore planning to convene a virtual meeting at which local communities will be able to express in their own way concerns about planning and development over the last 10 years to him as well as, ideally, to members of LDPAC and the Planning Committee, while he would have the opportunity to explain the Council’s objectives and priorities as well as their position on contentious issues (as Tony Travers suggested in his talk).

Councillor Mason has in principle agreed to such a session, and we are in the process of agreeing a format and a date and time (probably end of June/beginning of July). We will be in touch once we have firmed up the session, but in the meantime please start thinking about questions that you would like him to answer about the Local Plan as input to the development of the new one.

CROSSRAIL

Work has re-commenced on building the new stations at Acton Mainline, Ealing Broadway, Southall and West Ealing. No completion dates are available.

Despite the fact that more than £35,500 has been spent on consultation since 2011, there is still no coherent plan for the public realm changes outside Ealing Broadway station. There are some concerns whether TfL funding for these will still be available.

Below is a round-up of what has been going on in individual areas across the borough:

ACTON

Friary Park redevelopment In our last newsletter we reported that, following approval by Ealing Council in late 2019, the 990-flat Friary Park scheme was with the Mayor of London for final approval. Despite lobbying by Central Acton Neighbourhood Forum (CANF) for the Mayor to withhold his approval and demands for an explanation from Ealing Council with regard to the absence of the required Environmental Impact Assessment, approval for the scheme was granted on 14 April by the GLA’s Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe (though only communicated to local activists 17 days later).

Planning application for land adjacent to Underground tracks, Bollo Lane (201379OUT) out for consultation

An outline planning application has now been submitted for development of the long, narrow strip of land that borders the northern side of the rail tracks behind Acton Town station opposite the South Acton Estate. This follows two public consultations, one in October 2019 and another in January 2020. The latest plans comprise 852 flats across 11 blocks ranging from 4 storeys at Acton Town to 25 storeys at the Chiswick end. The consultation ends on 5 August 2020.

CENTRAL EALING

Victoria Hall

On 7 April 2020 the Charity Commission wrote to Friends of Victoria Hall (FoVH) with its Review of Ealing Council’s application to take control of the assets of the charitable Trust that owns the Victoria Hall and Prince’s Room. The Review blocks the Council’s current proposals for selling the Hall, along with other Trust property and the rest of Ealing Town Hall so that the site can be turned into a boutique hotel. The Charity Commission verdict means that the Council’s deal with hotel developer Mastcraft cannot proceed unless the Council substantially revises its proposals.

FoVH has now written to all nine councillors on Ealing Council’s General Purposes Committee (GPC) to draw their attention to their responsibilities as Trustees of the Victoria Hall charity and to call upon them to consider what is in the best interests of the Charity and its beneficiaries – the people of the London Borough of Ealing – rather than those of the Council as a landowner. The GPC will meet virtually on Monday, 29 June 2020 from 18.00 to 20.00, and the future of Victoria Hall is expected to be the main item on the agenda. FoVH is encouraging as many people as possible to attend and will publish details of how to do so.

Premier Inn Hotel extension

Outline planning permission has been granted for a 15-storey extension of the Premier Inn Hotel to be built in front of the existing hotel. This will comprise 14 floors of hotel accommodation with 91 rooms, together with a flexible penthouse floor to be used either as a restaurant/bar or an additional 6 bedooms. This, as with the nearby Perceval House application, further undermines the 2012 Local Plan’s intention ‘to develop a “boulevard” along the Uxbridge Road…’

HANWELL

QPR abandons Warren Farm deal with Ealing Council As reported in our April newsletter, Hanwell Nature secured a Judicial Review of Ealing Council’s decision not to carry out an Environmental Impact Assessment before granting consent for Queens Park Rangers (QPR) FC to take over and convert its 61-acre Warren Farm into a training centre for the football club. On 6 May 2020, before Hanwell Nature were due to face the Council in the High Court, the news broke that QPR had walked away from its 200-year lease deal with the Council. This is a victory for local residents, who have been campaigning against the deal for over seven years and raised more than £84,000 to fight the proposals.

OLD OAK AND PARK ROYAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION (OPDC)

Old Oak Common – HS2’s west-London super hub On 19 May 2020, the OPDC granted planning permission for HS2’s west-London super hub, Old Oak Common, the largest newly built railway station in the UK. It will be located on the site of the Old Oak Common traction maintenance depot where HS2 meets the Crossrail/Elizabeth Line. The station will have 14 platforms, a mix of six high speed and eight conventional service platforms, and carry an estimated 250,000 passengers per day. The projected cost is £1.3 billion, and the station is expected to open in 2029.

PERIVALE

Hoover Building/Tesco car park

The ‘Wiltern’, 278 build-to-rent flats in a block of 10-16 storeys proposed for the rear of the renowned Art Deco Hoover Building, was the first development to be approved via video conference at the first virtual Planning Committee meeting that took place on 20 May 2020. An earlier application to build 305 flats in a block rising to 22 storeys which came before the Planning Committee in September last year had failed, but although more Committee members objected to this second application than to any other on the night, it was approved by eight votes (including the Chair) to five.

SOUTHALL

CASH challenge to Council Leader Julian Bell

On 10 June following the Black Lives Matter protests, Councillor Julian Bell posted that he has commissioned a review of diversity across Ealing’s public realm similar to Sadiq Khan’s London-wide version. One proposal is to change the name of a section of Havelock Road in Southall to Guru Nanak Road.

In response, Clean Air for Southall and Hayes (CASH), whose issues with air pollution at the Southall Waterside site we highlighted last year, have published an open letter to Ealing Council pointing out the fact that ‘Ealing’s anti-racism initiatives won’t prevent (Southall residents) from choking on airborne carcinogenic chemicals from the Southall Waterside site.’ CASH will be hosting a virtual public meeting on 16 July to give Councillor Bell, GLA member Onkar Sahota and Virendra Sharma MP the opportunity to answer their questions.

Planning application for Southall Sidings (201888FUL) out for consultation

A planning application has been lodged for a major development of the Southall Sidings, just to the north of Southall Station. This will comprise 460 flats to be built in five towers of 11-15 storeys in height. One local resident has written to Ealing Matters saying that: ‘These developments are clearly just developers taking advantage of the Crossrail and exploiting Ealing’s poorest areas to buy land cheap and make millions. This has nothing to do with the housing crisis…. The area I live is predominantly ethnic minorities who have no idea how to engage in democratic processes and whose first language is not English.’ Consultation on the application ends on 15 July.

WEST EALING

Planning application for Metropolitan Open Land (MOL) at Gurnell (201695FUL) out for consultation

Ealing Council wishes to replace the Gurnell Leisure Centre, claiming that ‘having been operational for over 38 years it has fallen into a state of considerable disrepair and requires extensive modernisation to bring it up to modern standards’. Notwithstanding the fact that the facility sits on Metropolitan Open Land (the London equivalent of the Green Belt), Ealing Council says that it can only afford to part-fund the replacement facility, and is looking to a housing development of seven blocks ranging from five to 17 storeys and containing 599 flats (mostly not affordable) to pay for the rest. As the landowner, the Local Planning Authority and the developer (through Be:Here Ealing Ltd), the Council is hopelessly conflicted. Objectors believe that this development is wrong on a multitude of levels. Visit www.savegurnell.org.uk to find out more including how to object.

Planning application for 51-56 Manor Road and 53-55 Drayton Green Road (corner site next to West Ealing Station) (202231FUL)

The planning application for this development is now out for consultation prior to going before the Planning Committee. The shape of the development has changed since the public consultation last summer from a single building with 9 and 26 storeys to one with effectively 12 and 18 storeys above double-height ground floor retail, reducing the accommodation by five units to 144 flats, all designated affordable (94 classified as London Shared Ownership and 50 at London Living Rent). Visit Stop the Towers for more information about the development and how to object.

Green Man Estate – Phase 4 ‘adapting to new surroundings’

The ratcheting up of building heights and densities continues with Phase 4 of the Green Man Estate. When originally specified in 2010, 184 flats were to be built in blocks of up to 7 storeys. The second public consultation that took place as a webinar on 6 May 2020 (and is still open for comment) referenced recent developments along Singapore Road from 9-15 storeys to help make the case for building higher in Phase 4. The representative of Conran + Partners, the architects, argued that ‘the context provides an opportunity for an area where the Local Authority encourage any height to be located and therefore help to deliver more new homes on the estate.’ So the latest plans for Phase 4 are for up to 380 flats in towers ranging between five and 15 storeys, with a planning application expected in Summer 2020. By our calculations this will increase the total units from the 706 approved in the original masterplan to 915, almost twice the number on the old estate (464).

Chignell Place

The planning application for a block of five up to eight storeys containing 66 ‘shared living’ studio flats (i.e. single en suite rooms with communal kitchens and lounge areas) scheduled to be decided at the 18 March 2020 Council Planning Committee meeting was deferred to a later date at the last minute. It will be interesting to see whether and in what form it re-appears.

Woolworths building

The demolition of the classic Art Deco façade at 96-102 Broadway (one of the high-rise developments name checked in the Green Man Estate webinar) has now commenced.

Dean Gardens

On 22 May 2020, Ealing Council stated that the £9 million Transport for London (TfL) West Ealing Liveable Neighbourhood project is one of £114 million worth of such projects across 18 London boroughs to have been suspended due to TfL’s ‘financial predicament’, and which may now be subject to wider review. The suspension includes the £1.4 million transformation of Dean Gardens, which has been delayed until at least Autumn 2020. West Ealing Neighbours Committee agreed on 4 June 2020 that better lighting and a cycle path in the southern part of the gardens were the only changes it felt were necessary.

With thanks to Eric Leach for compiling much of the information for this latest issue. Contributions that you think would be of interest to Ealing Matters member groups are welcome