Coalition for a Sustainable Brent Cross Cricklewood

The Coalition for a Sustainable Brent Cross Cricklewood[1][2] was formed following the submission in March 2008 of a planning application to the London Borough of Barnet by developers of the Brent Cross Cricklewood scheme in the Brent Cross area of north London.

The planning application area lies next to the border of Barnet with (on the other side of the A5 Edgware Road - the Roman road Watling Street) the London Borough of Brent.

Planning application

The submitted planning application[3] is based around a "new town centre" on both sides of the A406 North Circular Road, mostly between the A5 Edgware Road in the west, and the A41 Hendon Way in the east.

It stretches south to parts of the Cricklewood area, and is based on a Barnet "Development Framework" report[4] that also included West Hendon further north, but that area has since been developed independently.[5]

'Membership'

Map of Brent Cross (OpenStreetMap). The future development area is on both sides of east-west North Circular Road. The Dudding Hill Line freight railway branches off the Midland Main Line at a triangular junction. The Northern line (Edgware branch) and Brent Cross tube station are to the top-right.

The coalition comprises residential, environmental and transport groups which welcome redevelopment of this London Plan "Opportunity Area", but which have various reservations about the 'Development Framework' and with the subsequent planning application.[6]

The coalition says it does not mandate its "interested parties", but works within an overall framework of opposition to environmental, transport and massing aspects of the plan (which is due to be completed over twenty years).[7]

There is said to be no significant opposition to the principle of regeneration on the Brent Cross site. Many parties have stated that they welcome development, but take issue with:

Concern has also been shown over the ability, or otherwise, of Barnet Council to effectively negotiate "Section 106 planning gain" finance (private-sector payments for public-sector works that mitigate planning effects).[10] This is because, historically, Barnet has been intimately involved in the development of the Brent Cross scheme, which, it is alleged, means its independence to consider the planning application may have been compromised. The then leader of Barnet council stated in the Development Framework preface;

... To bring about this change, the Council and the Greater London Authority adopted a unique partnership approach with the key stakeholders to devise this Development Framework.

Interest in the coalition group is on an all-party and no-party basis, and has stimulated comment in the local[11] and national.[12] media.

References

  1. Coalition blog
  2. Coalition for a Sustainable Brent Cross Cricklewood Transport briefing material, 2009 onwards
  3. Planning application on developers' web site
  4. London Borough of Barnet Development Framework - Preface, contents and chapter 1 (Introduction) - chapters 2 to 7 also can be accessed
  5. London Borough of Barnet West Hendon redevelopment
  6. Brent Cross developers Planning application
  7. London Borough of Barnet Regeneration overview (the council has also given a '20-year' timeframe)
  8. Willesden and Brent Times Waste facility (February 2009)
  9. London Borough of Barnet Development Framework, chapter 5 (Transport)
  10. London Borough of Barnet Section 106 in the recession
  11. Hendon and Finchley Press Article: 'Growing opposition to Brent Cross redevelopment looks set to delay plans'
  12. The Times Environmental comment

External links

Coordinates: 51°34′26″N 0°13′20″W / 51.5738°N 0.2222°W / 51.5738; -0.2222

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