Forum topic: Civic groups unite in opposition to council green belt and tall buildings plans
Civic groups unite in opposition to council green belt and tall buildings plans
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14 Jul 2021 11:32 6095
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With around seven weeks remaining for residents to provide feedback on the draft Enfield Local Plan, two of the borough's civic groups have joined forces to campaign against the council's proposals to dedesignate several areas of green belt land in the borough to allow their use for large-scale housing developments. A third group says that the draft plan will not solve the borough's chronic shortage of family-sized and affordable homes.
Advice on how to object
The long established Enfield Society and its much younger (and somewhat confusingly named) ally Enfield Road Watch are urging residents to use the current consultation window to signal their disagreement with key sections of the draft. They have jointly produced advice to supporters on how to navigate the long and detailed draft plan document and how to respond in opposition not just to building on green belt, but also to the council's proposed tall buildings policy.
Among their primary concerns are proposals for:
- 3000 homes at "Chase Park", the new name for open countryside between Trent Park and the Ridgeway, extending both sides of Enfield Road a
- 3000 new homes at Crews Hill and potentially 7.500 extending all the way to the M25
- 160 new homes in green belt land at Hadley Wood
- Industrial and office development in the green belt near Rammey Marsh in the north east of the borough
They also object to encouragement of tall buildings, including in Enfield Town's Palace Gardens shopping centre.
Chronic overcrowding and unaffordable homes
The draft plan is also being criticised, though from a different perspective, by the campaigning group Better Homes Enfield, whose objective is to end overcrowding and homelessness caused by the chronic shortage of high-quality, suitably sized and affordable housing in the borough. Writing in Enfield Dispatch, Matt Burn says that concerns being voiced by some people about the scale of housebuilding envisaged by the council - 25,000 homes over 20 years - need to be balanced against the acute shortage of affordable housing in Enfield, particularly affordable family housing. According to his calculations, only around 6,500 new housing units are likely to be "affordable" for local people, while the borough currently needs at least 10,000 affordable homes.
Matt Burn argues that the council will fail to achieve its goal of ensuring that people who grew up in the borough will have the opportunity to remain: "some will have to move out, while those who remain will live precariously in housing they struggle to afford or in housing that is too small for them". The blame, he says, can partly be laid at the council's door because it is failing to take advantage of the opportunities created by the Meridian Water redevelopment, while the government bears responsibility for not adequately funding affordable housing:
If there was more government funding, and if the council could make better use of its opportunities, there’s a good chance Enfield could build the affordable housing it needs without large-scale development of the Green Belt and without tall tower blocks.
Matt Burn, Enfield Dispatch 12 July 2021
What's in the draft Enfield Local Plan?
The document which is currently out for consultation is actually just one of a series which together will comprise the Enfield Local Plan. To quote from official government guidance, "Succinct and up-to-date plans should provide a positive vision for the future of each area and a framework for addressing housing needs and other economic, social and environmental priorities."
The draft document specifies which "sites" should be "allocated" for particular types of use, eg housing, employment, agriculture etc, and also provides guidance as to what forms of development will be considered appropriate and thus are likely to receive planning permission.
The draft defines nine "placemaking areas" identified as suitable for a larger amount of development - two of them in what is currently green belt land, the rest in areas that are already built up. They include the area that is centred around Southgate Circus.
Most of the draft site allocations are in the placemaking areas, but there are other, including some in Palmers Green and Winchmore Hill, primarily supermarkets and surface-level car parks which are classified as suitable for housing or mixed development - the rationale seems to be that large single-storey buildings and extensive car parks are an inefficient use of scarce land, which should preferably be used for multi-storey buildings, eg flats or offices with shops on the ground floor.
The two tables below are taken from the draft. The first shows draft site allocations for housing and indicates the number of housing units, the second also includes sites allocated to other uses - for instance, part of Firs Farm is allocated for a new crematorium.
Sites allocated for housing
Sites allocated for housing or mixed use including housing. Sites in Palmers Green, Southgate and Winchmore Hill are highlighted in yellow.
For more details of each site, including maps and dates for potential redevelopment, see the section of the draft plan entitled Housing and Mixed Use Site Allocations, which begins on page 327 of the PDF
Site Allocation Reference |
Site address |
Proposed land use |
Estimated capacity |
Enfield Town (PL1) |
|||
SA1 |
St Anne's Catholic High School for Girls, Enfield |
Housing |
236 |
SA2 |
Palace Gardens Shopping Centre Enfield |
Housing |
350 |
SA3 |
100 Church Street, Enfield |
Housing |
56 |
SA4 |
Enfield Town Station and the Former Enfield Arms, Genotin Road |
Housing |
100 |
SA5 |
Enfield Civic Centre |
Mixed Use |
150 |
SA6 |
Southbury Road Superstore Area |
Mixed use |
291 |
SA7 |
Oak House, 43 Baker Street, |
Housing |
55 |
Southbury (PL2) |
|||
SA8 |
Sainsburys Crown Road |
Mixed use |
1,041 |
SA9 |
Colosseum Retail Park |
Mixed use |
1,587 |
SA10 |
Morrisons, Southbury Road |
Mixed use |
892 |
SAll |
Southbury Leisure Park |
Mixed use |
450 |
SA12 |
Tesco store, Ponders End, 288 High Street, Enfield |
Mixed use |
350 |
Edmonton Green (PL3) |
|||
SA13 |
Edmonton Green Shopping Centre |
Mixed use |
1,173 |
SA14 |
Chiswick Road Estate (Osward and Newdales) |
Housing |
272 |
Angel Edmonton (PL4) |
|||
SA15 |
Joyce Avenue and Snells Park Estate |
Housing |
1,217 |
SA16 |
Public House 50-56 Fore Street London |
Housing |
68 |
SA17 |
Upton Road and Raynham Road |
Housing |
198 |
SA18 |
South-east corner of the North Middlesex University Hospital Trust of Sterling Way |
Housing |
400 |
Meridian Water (PL5) |
|||
SA19 |
IKEA store; Tesco Extra, 1 Glover Drive; Meridian Water Willoughby Lane and Meridian Way |
Mixed use |
5,000 |
Southgate (PL6) |
|||
SA20 |
Southgate, 130 Chase Side, Southgate |
Mixed Use |
165 |
SA21 |
Southgate Office Village 286 Chase Road. |
Mixed Use |
125 |
SA22 |
M&S Food |
Mixed Use |
150 |
SA23 |
Minchenden Car Park and Alan Pullinger Centre, 1 John Bradshaw Road, Southgate N14 6BT |
Housing |
48 |
New Southgate (PL7) |
|||
SA24 |
Arnos Grove Station Car Park |
Housing |
162 |
SA25 |
Land between North Circular Road and Station Road |
Mixed Use |
230 |
SA26 |
Station Road, New Southgate |
Housing |
203 |
Crews Hill (PL9) |
|||
SA27 |
Land at Crews Hill |
Housing |
3,000 |
Chase Park (PL10) |
|||
SA28 |
Land at Chase Park |
Housing |
3,000 |
SA29 |
Arnold House (66 Ridgeway) |
Housing |
62 |
Other proposed site allocations outside of the place making areas (urban areas) |
|||
SA30 |
Claverings, Centre Way, London N9 OAH |
Mixed use |
587 |
SA31 |
Cockfosters Station Car Park (Parcels a and b) Cockfosters Road, Barnet |
Housing |
316 |
SA32 |
Sainsburys Green Lanes |
Mixed use |
299 |
SA33 |
Blackhorse Tower, Holbrook House and Churchwood House and 116 Cockfosters Road |
Housing |
200 |
SA34 |
241 Green Street |
Mixed use |
148 |
SA35 |
Land at former Wessex Hall Building |
Housing |
110 |
SA36 |
188-200 Bowes Road |
Housing |
86 |
SA37 |
Main Avenue Site |
Housing |
82 |
SA38 |
Land at Ritz Parade |
Mixed Use |
79 |
SA39 |
Travis Perkins Palmers Green, Bridge Drive, Broomfield Lane |
Mixed Use |
76 |
SA40 |
Land known as Brimsdown Sports Ground EN3 7LL, EN3 7QZ, EN3 7RN EN3 7RP |
Mixed use |
50 homes and community uses |
SA41 |
Albany Leisure Centre and Car Park and 55 Albany Road |
Housing |
30 |
SA42 |
Fords Grove Car Park |
Housing |
24 |
SA43 |
Lodge Drive Car Park (incl. Depot), Palmers Green |
Housing |
18 |
Other proposed site allocations outside of the place making areas (outside urban areas) |
|||
SA44 |
Land opposite Enfield Crematorium (known as The Dell). Great Cambridge Road |
Mixed Use |
270 |
SA45 |
Land between Camlet Way and Crescent West, Hadley |
Housing |
160 |
All site allocations
Site Allocation Reference |
Site address |
Proposed land use |
HOUSING AND MIXED-USE SITES |
||
|
Enfield Town (PL1) |
|
SA1 |
St Anne's Catholic High School for Girls |
Housing |
SA2 |
Palace Gardens Shopping Centre |
Mixed Use |
SA3 |
100 Church Street |
Housing |
SA4 |
Enfield Town Station and the Former Enfield Arms |
Mixed Use |
SA5 |
Enfield Civic Centre |
Mixed Use |
SA6 |
Tesco, Southbury Road |
Mixed use |
SA7 |
Oak House, 43 Baker Street |
Housing |
|
Southbury (PL2) |
|
SA8 |
Sainsburys, Crown Road |
Mixed use |
SA9 |
Colosseum Retail Park |
Mixed use |
SA10 |
Morrisons, Southbury Road |
Mixed use |
SA11 |
Southbury Leisure Park |
Mixed use |
SA12 |
Tesco, Ponders End, 288 High Street |
Mixed use |
|
Edmonton Green (PL3) |
|
SA13 |
Edmonton Green Shopping Centre |
Mixed use |
SA14 |
Chiswick Road Estate (Osward and Newdales) |
Housing |
|
Angel Edmonton (PL4) | |
SA15 |
Joyce Avenue and Snells Park Estate |
Housing |
SA16 |
Public House, 50-56 Fore Street London |
Housing |
SA17 |
Upton Road and Raynham Road |
Housing |
SA18 |
South-east corner of the North Middlesex University Hospital Trust, Sterling Way, London |
Housing |
|
Meridian Water (PL5) |
|
SA19 |
IKEA store; Tesco Extra, 1 Glover Drive; Meridian Water Willoughby Lane And Meridian Way |
Mixed use |
|
Southgate (PL6) | |
SA20 |
ASDA Southgate, 130 Chase Side, Southgate |
Mixed Use |
SA21 |
Southgate Office Village, 286 Chase Road |
Mixed Use |
SA22 |
M&S Food, Southgate |
Mixed Use |
SA23 |
Minchenden Car Park and Alan Pullinger Centre, 1 John Bradshaw Road, Southgate |
Housing |
|
New Southgate (PL7) |
|
SA24 |
Amos Grove Station Car Park |
Housing |
SA25 |
Site between North Circular Road and Station Road |
Mixed Use |
SA26 |
Station Road, New Southgate |
Mixed Use |
|
Crews Hill (PL9) |
|
SA27 |
Land at Crews Hill Housing | |
|
Chase Park (PL10) |
|
SA28 |
Land at Chase Park |
Housing |
SA29 |
Arnold House (66 Ridgeway) |
Housing |
|
Other proposed site allocations outside of the place making areas (urban areas) |
|
SA30 |
Claverings, Centre Way, London N9 OAH |
Mixed use |
SA31 |
Cockfosters Station Car Park (Parcels a + b) Cockfosters Road |
Housing |
SA32 |
Sainsburys Green Lanes |
Mixed use |
SA33 |
Blackhorse Tower, Holbrook House And Churchwood House and 116 Cockfosters Road |
Housing |
SA34 |
241 Green Street Enfield |
Mixed use |
SA35 |
Land at former Wessex Hall Building |
Housing |
SA36 |
188-200 Bowes Road |
Housing |
SA37 |
Main Avenue Site |
Housing |
SA38 |
Land at Ritz Parade |
Mixed Use |
SA39 |
Travis Perkins Palmers Green, Bridge Drive, Broomfield Lane |
Mixed Use |
SA40 |
Land known as Brimsdown Sports Ground |
Mixed use |
SA41 |
Albany Leisure Centre and Car Park and 55 Albany Road |
Housing |
SA42 |
Fords Grove Car Park |
Housing |
SA43 |
Lodge Drive Car Park (incl. Depot), Palmers Green |
Housing |
|
Other proposed site allocations outside of the place making areas (outside urban areas) | |
SA44 |
Land opposite Enfield Crematorium (known as The Dell). Great Cambridge Road |
Mixed Use |
SA45 |
Land between Camlet Way and Crescent West, Hadley |
Housing |
INDUSTRIAL SITES |
||
|
Southbury (PL2) |
|
SA46 |
Crown Road Lorry Park I Industrial | |
|
Meridian Water (PL5) |
|
SA47 |
Ravenside Retail Park I Industrial | |
|
Crews Hill (PL9) |
|
SA48 |
Land at 135 Theobalds Park Road Industrial | |
|
Other sites outside the place making areas |
|
SA49 |
Land to the south of Millmarsh Lane, Brimsdown Industrial Estate |
Industrial |
SA50 |
6 Morson Road |
Industrial |
SA51 |
Montagu Industrial Estate |
Industrial |
SA52 |
Land West of Rammey Marsh |
Industrial |
SA53 |
Car Park Site, Wharf Road |
Industrial |
SA54 |
Land East of Junction 24 |
Industrial |
SA55 |
Land to the North West of Innova Park |
Industrial |
ALL OTHER USES |
||
SA56 |
Land at Picketts Lock |
Sporting / Leisure |
SA57 |
Whitewebbs Golf Course, Beggars Hollow, Enfield |
Nature Recovery |
SA58 |
Alma Road Open Space |
Burial |
SA59 |
Firs Farm Recreation Ground (Part) |
Burial |
SA60 |
Sloemans Farm |
Burial |
SA61 |
Church Street Recreation Ground |
Burial |
SA62 |
Land at and within the vicinity of Tottenham Hotspur Football Club Training Ground, Hotspur Way, Whitewebbs Lane. |
Sporting |
Links
New Local Plan page on Enfield Council website
Enfield Society draft local plan page
Information on the Enfield Road Watch website
Why this Local Plan won’t deliver the housing Enfield needs (Enfield Dispatch 12 July 2021)
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Council sharply criticised over draft Local Plan's references to London National Park City
PGC Webmaster
14 Jul 2021 23:44 6096
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Copy addressees include senior figures, starting with the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan.
Councillor Nesil Caliskan Leader
London Borough of Enfield
Civic Centre
Silver Street
London EN1 3XA
By email
14 July 2021
Dear Councillor Caliskan,
London Borough of Enfield and London National Park City
We write on behalf of the National Park City Foundation, the charity behind London National Park City to point out recent remarks which we consider misappropriate and misrepresent London National Park City and its status, and to ask that you and Council colleagues rectify so that future references to London National Park City and its aims and status are accurate.
We should be pleased to meet you and colleagues to explain the points in this letter. Equally, should there be any questions arise we should be pleased to discuss and clarify those to overcome any misunderstandings and reach a position where we can work together productively.
Our concerns centre on the London Borough of Enfield’s preferred option to de-designate considerable areas of London Green Belt for housing and its use of London National Park City in justifying and making the case for that policy.
As we understand the proposal, the London Borough of Enfield has justified its proposed loss to development of Green Belt in the borough on the basis that remaining Green Belt would be improved as part of London National Park City.
That is a misreading of London National Park City, which is about the entire urban realm and fabric, not just parks, green spaces. We appeared at the Examination in Public (EiP) into the new London Plan in defence of London’s Green Belt and Metropolitan Open Space, attending the same session as Enfield Council representatives. It should therefore be clear to anyone at Enfield Council that London National Park City does not support the loss of green space not least Green Belt. It is therefore misleading for the London Borough of Enfield to refer to London National Park City in writing or verbally as part of justifying its proposals for the loss of Green Belt.
We note numerous references in Enfield Council’s Local Plan to London National Park City including the dedicated policy 3.7 on page 70, which we would normally be pleased to see. While the Council’s proposals for the restoration of Enfield Chase appear laudable and the planned enhancements for public access seem ambitious, they are not a justification for the loss of Green Belt, which we do not support, and which both government planning policy and the new London Plan aim to avoid.
Paragraph 3.8.8 on page 71 of the Enfield Local Plan states that “The designation is not strictly a national park...”. To be both clear and correct, London National Park City has no formal planning or legal status and neither has nor seeks the kind of planning role of the established National Parks.
Any comparison with England’s 10 National parks established in law is only valid in terms of applying the kind of thinking at the heart of National Parks to start reversing London’s declining environmental conditions which have a bearing on learning, health, fitness, recreation and community. Planning policies must start improving life in London, including protecting and restoring nature and ecosystems, not finding new ways to justify deliberate choices to allow their further erosion.
Along with all Local Planning Authorities in London the London Borough of Enfield already has the powers in planning rules to set the policies and supplementary guidance to ensure protection for existing green and blue spaces, including both Green Belt and London’s unique designation of Metropolitan London Land (MOL).
It is incorrect and misleading for anyone to imply or state that London’s National Park City status can provide any form of protection for land, features or natural assets either extant or in the future. London National Park City does not confer any protection of existing or remaining Green Belt neither does it provide any assurance that future threats either from further development pressures or from the application of Local Planning Authority policies.
It is also not clear to us from reading the Local Plan how future Green Belt in Enfield borough would not also come under pressure for the very same reasons used in the recent justifications.
Paragraph 3.8.9 also on page 71 adds that “The National Park City designation has the potential to achieve a net increase of 25% green cover in Enfield...”. Serious application of London National Park City thinking can and should lead elected members, officers and others involving in forming, setting and applying policy, to make better decisions, but it cannot make up for political decisions which require the loss of green space, space for health, recreation, learning and nature.
As London National Park City is also about the entirety of London, not just the parks, green spaces and Green Belt, the London Borough of Enfield and all Local Planning Authorities in London should be examining the entire urban fabric and should avoid using National Park City as a bargaining chip to justify loss of Green Belt and green space.
We very much welcome where Local Planning Authorities seek to make the most of London National Park City. We can help LPAs do that well in ways that fully respect and avoid misappropriating the purpose and aims of London National Park City, including the contribution of the many thousands of people, organisations and companies that made it happen.
On 21 and 22 July we mark two years since London became the world’s first National Park City and you and your colleagues would be very welcome to join in any or all of the events to find out more: https://www.nationalparkcity.london/week2021
We look forward to hearing how you and your colleagues will rectify matters and ensure accurate references to London National Park City from now on to our satisfaction.
Yours sincerely,
Paul de Zylva
Chair
National Park City Foundation
Daniel Raven-Ellison
Founder
National Park City
cc:
Sadiq Khan, Mayor of London / Shirley Rodrigues, Deputy Mayor, Environment
Ruth Knight, GLA
Elected Members, London Borough of Enfield
Ian Davis, LBE Chief Executive
Sarah Cary, LBE Executive Director Place
London Green Belt Council
London National Park City network contacts in Enfield borough
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Council leader under fire from a second charity head over green belt housing proposal
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21 Jul 2021 23:17 6105
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For the second week running council leader Nesil Caliskan finds herself the addressee of an angry letter from a charity leader. Last week it was the National Park City Foundation writing, this week the head of campaigns at CPRE London, the London branch (!) of the Council for the Protection of Rural England.
Alice Roberts is strongly critical of the leader's claim, quoted in Enfield Dispatch, that unless Green Belt land is used for new housebsuuilding, the only alternative will be to "[pack] people into small units in dense towers with a lack of access to open space and supporting infrastructure". On the contrary, she argues that it is proven that there is sufficient brownfield land to satisfy requirements and that building on the greenfield sites allocated in the draft Enfield Local Plan would produce precisely those shortcomings of supporting infrastructure and the lack of public transport provision that will work against the need to create low-car or car-free development.
"As you know, it is the council’s duty to investigate brownfield opportunities and present evidence via the Local Plan Development process to make a case for land allocation. At a minimum, given there are a large number of well-informed and well-respected stakeholders who believe there is no need to build on Enfield’s Green Belt, and that doing so would in fact be the worst possible option, we believe the council should be giving brownfield options more serious consideration.
"Instead it has put forward its own opinion publicly, in a way which is itself prejudiced and, in using emotive language, appears designed to prejudice responses to the Local Plan consultation."
The full letter can be read on the CPRE London website .
The Enfield Dispatch report containing the quote which upset CPRE London was published on Tuesday. It is based around the letter reported by PGC last week and the council leader's reaction.
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Civic groups unite in opposition to council green belt and tall buildings plans
Karl Brown
01 Sep 2021 10:25 6158
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Civic groups unite in opposition to council green belt and tall buildings plans
Colin Younger
01 Sep 2021 14:49 6159
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We already face the loss of sites to housing such as the Colosseum retail park on the A10 , and the Brunswick Park site just over the boundary in Barnet, which will lose local employment and service/retail assets used by local residents.
The once flourishing garden centre focus of Crews Hill is a shadow of its former self; discovering that developers had already bought up the land could partly explain why the decline has been so marked. Nothing will bring this back, and although it sticks in my throat to say so, and it will reward developers who will not build affordable homes, might it be an acceptable trade off to build on some of the greenbelt and keep some of the useful "brownfield" sites as they currently exist?
What is not clear to me is whether once the plan is approved, can anyone control where development takes place? Will we lose both green and brown sites?
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Civic groups unite in opposition to council green belt and tall buildings plans
Karl Brown
02 Sep 2021 08:14 6164
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On the plan, my understanding is that once agreed normal planning processes would still need to be followed but that may be different should Enfield fail to meet its annual statutory house building target – pretty much equivalent what the plan seeks to build over its term I believe. At such a stage I have a recollection of reading of possible government intervention and a weight given to developers to get on with it. How Wild West that may be I don’t know or the specifics driving such government action.
But overall given the statutory (as well as moral) need to house people, we seem to have options to build up (hasn’t gone down well so far), build out (isn’t going down well), or knock down parts and re-plan with a denser housing landscape (I think Haringay tried that recently without success and a lot of damage to politicians and the host community). There’s no easy solution and we shouldn’t pretend there is, however often simply build on all this apparently available brownfield land gets trotted out. Probably useful if someone identifies just where it is and if it’s deliverable rather than simply talking about it in the generality.
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Civic groups unite in opposition to council green belt and tall buildings plans
Karl Brown
15 Oct 2021 09:44 6189
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“Instead of having to get in the car and make the weekly trip to the supermarket, customers can now shop whenever, wherever and however they want.”
On line is served via in store picking and Tesco are now building local fulfilment centres to bolster this.
The convenience market has seen rapid growth in the last few years and in Tesco’s case is served by 2000 Express stores plus 950 owned and franchised One-Stop stores. “This is where the bulk of store investment will go, in finding new sites and adding new franchisees, as the firm aims to become more ‘capital light’. That means no more expensive, out of-town megastores.”
Tesco is also piloting on demand services for deliveries within 60 minutes, while urban fulfilment centres have the potential to allow customers to order a full weekly shop and collect it minutes later.
All the well-known names will have their own strategies but all are going to be operating in the same environment which does appear to be one which is looking to be ever less reliant on an own-car based big shop at a big store, but instead smaller, more frequent baskets which are instead and increasingly brought to you. On the flip side I guess it could be an opportunity for our high streets / town centres
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