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Lime Road – 13 Dec 2013

Lime Road site entrance 13 Dec 13

Lime Road site entrance 13 Dec 13

Last week I visited the Lime Road development site especially to meet the site manager, Stuart, and explore how I might help. Well, I don’t wield a hammer or know how to lay bricks, but I can get the word out about what’s planned for the coming weeks. I thought that might be a help. Hillview is the site agent’s office, should you need to contact him.

Christmas break: last day of work 20 Dec 13, first day back is 6th Jan 2014.

Just completed: brick work on show homes is done, so the brick-layers (and associated deliveries) are finished for a bit.

This week before Christmas, the focus is on getting the main entrance road finished and tarmacked. (They call it ‘blacked’.) The main gate will have a gate-guard with special care taken during the school commute time (8:30-9 and I don’t remember if they said 3-3:30 or 3:30 to 4pm — but during the main time for walking home from school). Deliveries will avoid these times. Hopefully the fencing around the construction site will be completed (it’s partially there now).

Once the road is done, the full time gateman will see a delivery lorry approaching (and they will always come from Cumnor Hill direction) and wave them in the gate so the deliveries are made well back in the site.

The Christmas break is a welcome two weeks.

From 6th of Jan, the first job is to remove the two remaining buildings. Expect some noise and dust, but they will do what they can to minimize nuisance. Once the demolition is done, the rubble from all over the site will be hauled away, so there will be some noisy and dusty work for a few days. (They anticipate 4 days.)

The no-parking cones that have been crushed by lorries (irony not lost) will be maintained. Please could residents not park there. Additionally, the two-car-length spot just in front of Hillview should be kept clear. This is primarily so there’s no impedance to the buses making the turn into Lime Road.

The next area of development will be the buildings on the west edge of the property, adjacent to the playing fields.

I notice road signs are now referring to this as ‘Harcourt Place’. I’ve no idea if that’s official. For a short while they were calling it ‘Oak Mills’.

The parish council will be considering street names. Five are required, I believe. If you have an idea, contact the parish clerk on nhpcclerk@msn.com. My imagination went along these lines: we can name them after citrus, since the streets are off Lime Road (Lemon, Orange, Tangerine, Kumquat and Mandarin). Or we could decide on things related to Lime (Key, Marguerita, Dacquiri, Twist and Zest). what do you think? No, probably not.

Finally, can parents please remind their children to stay well away from the building site. It is dangerous to scale the fences, and against the law to pilfer supplies stored there.

All for now.

 

 

My speech from last night

Here’s the motion I tabled:

“Council acknowledges the strong local opposition to the proposals outlined by Doric Properties for the redevelopment of the West Way area, Botley, on the grounds that residents feel their scale is inappropriately large and completely out of character for a suburban residential area.

“Council urges Cabinet to do all they can to persuade Doric Properties to meet with residents and work in partnership with the local community of Botley to find a way forward.”

And here’s what I said to Council in support of the motion:

“I was once given some great management advice: “The main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing.”

“In this case, isn’t the main thing to provide a redevelopment that works for Botley? I’ve heard everyone say this. So, who knows best what’s best for Botley?

“There was an expectation that a decision to sell off all our local shops and services would be consulted upon – that didn’t happen. There was an expectation that developers would hold a genuine consultation, taking feedback from local people into account – that didn’t happen either. Now there’s an expectation that some open discussion and collaboration could find a way forward with all of us working together – I’d like to see that happen.

“So, if the main thing is to keep the main thing the main thing, then we all need to remember what the main thing IS.  We have to ensure a redevelopment meets the needs of Botley. Who should decide that? The Vale thinks Cabinet is best placed to decide. Botley thinks local people and businesses are the ones who should decide.

Even when we don’t have a statutory or constitutional duty to consult, we should consider whether we have an ethical duty to do so. Does it help? Will it mitigate risk? Can it build good community relations?

“In the past few months it’s been made very clear to us that decisions affecting people’s everyday lives matter a whole lot. People deserve a say in what happens to their community, to their lives, to their sense of well-being. I think members have a moral responsibility to the people who’ve elected us to ensure they DO have a say in what happens to them.

“I’m very proud to be a member of the Botley community, and of how the people of Botley have come together to work for the betterment of the whole community.”

 

West Way Concern’s Petition to Council

Last night about 50 Botley area residents and supporters of West Way Community Concern came along to the Vale district council meeting to present their petition to stop the current plans for a massive redevelopment of West Way shopping area.

The Oxford Times covered it here: http://www.oxfordtimes.co.uk/news/yourtown/oxford/10871151.West_Way_petition_is_2_000_strong/?ref=rss&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

Caroline Potter petition 11 Dec 13 The motion passed unanimously. Here is what it said:

“Council acknowledges the strong local opposition to the proposals outlined by Doric Properties for the redevelopment of the West Way area, Botley, on the grounds that residents feel their scale is inappropriately large and completely out of character for a suburban residential area.

Council urges Cabinet to do all they can to persuade Doric Properties to meet with residents and work in partnership with the local community of Botley to find a way forward.”

This gives us a platform to hold Cabinet to account for doing all they can to get Doric to work with Botley to get the development that’s best for the community.

 

 

 

West Way – the Land Deals

Confusion exists over just who is doing what to whom, in the West Way Doric deal.

Until there is a planning application submitted to the Vale Planning Department, this is only a land sale. There are two sites involved currently.

Site 1: Comprising Botley Baptist Church, Co-op car park, back half of the Co-op store, Seacourt Hall and public toilets, the empty Grant Thornton building, and the building that houses the Library, Andrews Dry Cleaners and Elm Court.

Site 2: West Way Shopping Centre (that’s the precinct, or The Square) including the front half of the Co-op and the multi-storey office building at the other end. And the larger car park behind Tesco, off Arthray Road.

Site 1 has several landowners. They entered into a joint agreement in 2011 to sell this land with a mind to developing a food store and replacement community hall, church and library facilities, all to complement West Way shopping centre. The Vale owns only a portion of this land; the agreement splits the proceeds proportionately. The Vale intended to use some of their proceeeds to improve West Way Shopping Centre.

Site 2 wasn’t originally offered for sale. But Doric expressed an interest in developing all of this land (and a bit more) so the Vale decided to sell it.

Doric is the buyer for both Site 1 and Site 2. The Site 1 seller is a consortium that includes the Vale. The Site 2 seller is the Vale.

Doric has expressed their intention to also develop land currently occupied by Elms Parade, the Vicarage, and Field House. These three properties are not owned by the Vale, but by three other, spearate owners.

A planning application can be for any land, even land that you do not own. Yes, you read that right. I could apply for permission to build a skatepark on the land where your house sits. I wouldn’t, but I could. If planning permission is subsequently granted, then it is up to the developer to acquire title to that land before development can commence.

So Doric will seek planning permission that includes Site 1, Site 2, Elms Parade, Vicarage and Field House. If they get permission, then Doric will need to acquire the land from the Howse Family (who own Elms Parade), the Church of England (probably a diocese, I’m not sure), and Sovereign (owners of Field House). I would expect that negotiations are already taking place, but I have no knowledge of this.

So, who’s the one wants to flatten frail and vulnerable elderly people’s homes, demolish Elms Parade and obliterate the Sykes’ home? Well, that would be Doric. Not the Vale. Some people have mentioned that Doric plan to offer replacement housing for Field House residents. I didn’t see this in their plans; did I miss it, or wasn’t it there?

 

 

West Way Scrutiny Cttee – 21 Nov 2013

Westway precinct

On Thursday 21 Nov 2013, the Vale Scrutiny Committee had a close look at the sequence of events that led to the sale of Westway Shopping Centre (WSC) and its interest in the land nearest the corner of West Way and Westminster Way, referred to as Site 1.

Site 1 has several landowners who jointly offered their land for sale. Site 1 comprises the vacant Grant Thornton Building, Elms Court and the building housing the library and Andrews Dry Cleaning, Seacourt Hall and the public toilets, Botley Baptist Church and the car park next to the Co-op. Oddly it also includes the rear half of the Co-op store.

Here’s the timeline:

1967: Botley Shopping Centre is built, “with its attractive variety of modern shops”. See the newspaper article.

2000: Vale buys WSC for about £5,800,000.

Nov 2010: The Vale Executive, having consulted with Botley community, decides to join with other landowners to offer Site 1 for public sale, with the aim of achieving the best terms, subject to delivering a development within 5 years that complemented the existing WSC. Parties had in mind a large food store with a replacement community hall and Baptist church, with space for a new library (subject to OCC as libraries authority). Food store was envisioned to be slightly larger than Abingdon Waitrose, with 450 parking spaces. Some proceeds from the sale would be used to improve WSC.

Feb 2011: land offered for sale under a marketing and co-operation agreement (MCA). There were 13 firm offers. A shortlist of 6 bidders were reviewed closely, and two bidders came top: Doric was one of those.

May 2011: Tories win the election and take over management of the Vale. They start to expand the scope of the West Way redevelopment from the smaller scale original development, to a much larger scale regeneration: demolition of Site 1, West Way Shopping Center, and other areas (Elms Parade, Vicarage, Field House) to build the High Street Botley never had. This is all done with no communication to the people of Botley, until the first Doric consultation in Feb 2013.

May 2011- approx Apr 2012: Extended negotiations with the other bidder, which ran into (unspecified) trouble and the parties to the MCA decided to go with Doric. Dates not clear.

Feb 2012: North Hinksey Parish Council hosted a public meeting about the West Way Redevelopment. Vale officers attending introduced the concepts of Site 1 and Site 2. They expressed their view that it was too early to discuss specifics of the potential proposals. We learned later that only the sale of Site 1 was then being negotiated. Nonetheless, public feedback was solicited and captured.

Apr-Nov 2012: Doric produced proposals  for a comprehensive redevelopment of WSC, to widen the catchment and presented their ideas at Cabinet briefings (these are secret; no details are available to the public).

Dec 2012: Cabinet agreed they should use ownership of WSC to facilitate the regeneration of Botley. Contracts exchanged with Doric for Site 2. (Contracts already exchanged for Site 1 at some unspecified earlier date.) All done with no consultation with local community. Contracts are conditional, so there are get-out clauses, but the specifics of the conditions are secret.

Feb 2013: Doric’s first consultation, with high level proposal showing zones of activity.

April 2013: West Way Community Concern’s survey, which had 720 responses.

22 May 2013: West Way Community Concern public meeting to share results of their survey. See these results here.

Sep-Oct 2013: (Originally planned for spring, then July, but delayed). Doric’s second consultation with a ore detailed proposals for Land Usage.

Oct 2013: Liberal Democrats launched a petition in support of community opinion to tell the Vale to Drop the Doric Deal. In 10 days it got over 900 signatures. At Council meeting, Lib Dems proposed a motion to Vale to drop the deal, which resulted in agreement from Tory leader to bring the decision to scrutiny.

18 Nov 2013: Over 300 people come to St Peter’s and St Paul’s Church for a standing-room-only public meeting about West Way redevelopment. Several speakers, Q&A sessions and tea and cakes made for lots of conversations and suggestions for strategy.

21 Nov 2013: Scrutiny Committee meeting well attended by public, with many questions and some answers. Feeling is disappointment at the attitude of Tory Leader that this deal is going through no matter what the local opinion is.

23 Nov 2013: nearly 600 people gather for Arms Around Elm’s Parade, to protest the Doric proposals to demolish Elms Parade.

11 Dec 2013: West Way Community Concern has over 1200 signatures (as at 25 Nov), enough to get their petition onto the Vale full council agenda, where members may debate it.

Nov -Dec 2013: Planning application expected from Doric.

 

To see everything, check out the West Way Community Concern website: click here

 

 

Feb 2012:

 

 

Lime Road – Construction Management Plan

Bovis Homes have just provided the Construction Management Plan (CMP) for the Lime Road development site.

I’ve published it online; you can access via this link: Lime Road CMP

(When it opens, you’ll likely have to scroll to the top of the doc. Sorry – techie thing I haven’t been able to fix. Also consider downloading it to your machine so you can more easily read it. )

 

Lime Road has begun – rather prematurely

An aware neighbour contacted me yesterday to let me know things were happening at the Lime Rd site. (I didn’t go that way yesterday, so didn’t notice. In fact, I try to avoid the hazardous Lime Rd/Yarnells Hill corner altogether now and for the duration of the temp traffic lghts! What a mess!!!)

I have received no notice of planning permission from the Vale, although I’ve been expecting it any day. Neither have I received the construction management plan, which I also expect any day.

Last night I contacted our planning officer at the Vale, Mr Martin Deans, about my lack of notification about planning permission. I heard from him just now.

He said, ‘Planning permission is likely to go out today or Monday. Although not condoning commencement of work in advance of a planning permission, government guidance is clear that the council should not take punitive action against a developer who starts work when it is likely that a planning permission is to be issued shortly, otherwise there is a clear warning that the council will be hit for costs for taking unnecessary action and holding up a development that was likely to be authorised within a matter of days.”

So, no penalty for jumping the gun a bit.

I’ve also contacted Mr Alan Cook of Bovis homes for a copy of the construction management plan. He’s away until Monday, so Martin Deans is going to see if he can source a copy. When I get it, I’ll publish it and send out a link.

I’ll keep you posted.

3-Storey Buildings Moved Away from Existing Homes

Red; 3 storey. Blue: 2 storey. Yellow: 1.5 storey.

Red; 3 storey. Blue: 2 storey. Yellow: 1.5 storey.

I carried your message to Bovis Homes.

Based on what you told me was important to you, I impressed upon Bovis the importance of ensuring current residents in Lime Road and Yarnells Hill wouldn’t be overlooked by 3 storey buildings going up next to their properties.

Bovis Homes have moved all 3-storey buildings away from the boundaries shared with existing houses, and further back into the middle of the estate.

Bovis previously removed all 4 storey buildings in response to community complaints about the height of the development.

In my book, this is a major win!