Cicketers pub – update from planning committee 13 December

The Planning Committee meeting last night very quickly accepted council officers’ recommendation not to allow the proposed development of the Cricketers Pub.

This means that three applications for the site have all been turned down by Merton’s Planning Committee.

It also means that the appeal hearing on 15 January will look at two planning applicaitons at the same time, as we had anticipated.

We still need your help – you have time to submit your views to the planning inspector and every single view will be seen by the inspector and taken into account.

Take a look at our previous post here to find out how you can help.

The Cricketers pub: Appeal hearing on 15 January – how you can help

The appeal hearing for the Cricketers pub development will be held at the town hall in Morden on 15 January 2013.

If you want to help us stop the Cricketers pub on London Road from being developed into an overpowering, inappropriate block of flats, now is the time to make your views known. Read on for the story so far and details on how you can help.

The story so far

The appeal hearing will examine two planning appliations from the same developer.

One is a design which the developer calls ‘modern’ but which we think is no different to thousands of other blocks of flats to be seen all over the country. The building is too large and too poorly designed for this sensitive site. This design was turned down by the council and the developer is appealing against that decision.

The other is, in the words of the developer, an ‘idiosyncratic design’ based on ‘fake history’. It is version of what a Victorian pub might look like if it were turned into a block of flats. This design is going to the planning committee on 13 December. Merton council officers have recommended that the planning committee refuse the application. We will report on the decision as soon as we know it.

Part of our objection to this proposal is that with so much real history on Cricket Green, this fake history would look like what it is – a confection with no real meaning. It would undermine and overpower the Vestry Hall , a real Victorian building, and the fire station, built in the 1920s. Both are locally listed.

You can read our objection to the ‘modern’ application here and to the ‘fake history’ application here.

The Wimbledon Guardian ran a story on the ‘fake history’ application last week. Read it here.

How you can help

The best way to get your views across is to send them in via the Planning Inspectorate website. The closing date for making comments on the ‘modern’ design has passed, but you still have time to make comments on the ‘fake history’ design.

The deadline for comments is 28 December – but do it now before you forget!

You can make comments here

Please also make your views known here

It is important to do this twice as there are two applications being appealed – one for planning consent for the new building (this is reference APP/T5720/A/12/2186739 and the other to demolish the existing building in a conservation area (reference APP/T5720/E/12/2186745).

Alternatively, you can write (enclosing three copies of each letter) to The Planning Inspectorate, Room 3/06 Kite Wing, Temple Quay House, 2 The Square, Temple Quay, Bristol BS1 6PN. Please quote the two reference numbers above.

The main points we have made and which you may want to consider in your own comments are that the proposals will significantly damage the character of the conservation area because they:

  • overwhelm the site and compete the with the locally listed Vestry Hall and fire station
  • remove an important community use
  • introduce a design based on “fake history” into an area rich in authentic heritage
  • fail to meet the high design standards required of such an important and sensitive site at the heart of the Conservation Area
  • introduce intrusive new railings and paved areas which have no precedent in the surrounding area
  • introduce a major new source of light pollution into the muted and sensitively lit nightscape of Cricket Green
  • prevent the future of the whole island site, including the fire station and Vestry Hall, being considered together.

Please get in touch if you would like any information or advice on how to make an impact. email us at info@mitchamcricketgreen.org.uk

Our exciting new Heritage Lottery Funded project – Know Your Cricket Green

We have secured £20,000 funding from the Heritage Lottery Fund for an exciting initiative to raise public awareness and understanding of the historic significance of Mitcham’s Cricket Green through activities which promote the area and encourage local involvement.

Know Your Cricket Green comprises a range of projects. The first projects will take place in Spring 2013 and include cleaning and conservation of the cricket memorial stone and the listed horse trough and milestone. The horse trough will also be relocated to a safer position. This conservation work will be recorded by Mitcham Camera Club. We will produce an audio trail to guide people around the heart of the area and record oral histories based on interviews with local people.

Later in 2013 we will be organising a photographic exhibition of sporting history and introducing a geocache trail through which people will explore the area. We will also provide a Hall of Fame on our website with information and photographs of famous Mitcham residents. There will be activity to raise the profile of Mitcham Cricket Green Community and Heritage in what is our tenth anniversary year; including a membership leaflet, stand at the Mitcham Carnival, display for London Open House, improved website, events, and design of a logo.

We will be working with a wide range of partners, including Mitcham Cricket Club, Mitcham Camera Club, Mitcham Society, Friends of the Canons and the London Borough of Merton. There will be a wide variety of different ways for people to get involved and special training provided for those who want to get involved in the oral histories, audio trail and exhibitions. If you want to know more or get involved then contact us at info@mitchamcricketgreen.org.uk

Is SITA a good neighbour?

Volunteers recently helped Mitcham Cricket Green Community and Heritage complete a survey of SITA traffic.

Local people have been raising concerns with SITA for a long time about large lorries using the narrow end of Church Road and the tight junction at London Road to access the SITA site.

Yet SITA has done little to encourage vehicles to use the much wider part of Church Road that leads into Colliers Wood and our survey suggests vehicles by far prefer to use the narrow end of Church Road.

Passers by were keen to talk to our volunteers as they did the survey. One volunteer reported:

“A young woman with a push chair told me how frightened she was walking along Church Rd and also crossing Hallowfield Way. “The lorries just come bombing down from Sita”

The local Guardian published an article about our survey and asked SITA for a comment. The response falls well short of the mark, suggesting that SITA takes comments seriously and wants to be  “good neighbour” but refusing to take immediate action.

Read our full survey report.

What can you do?

If you would like to help, or would like to share your own experiences of SITA lorries, please email us at info@mitchamcricketgreen.org.uk

If you see any lorries in the narrow part of Church Road, or any SITA lorries causing problems or displaying bad driving behaviour please let us know by email, telling us the date and time and describing what you saw.

Please send us the registration number of the vehicle if you can, and if you can take a photo with your phone please send us that too. We will alert SITA and keep all incidents on file.

The Cricketers pub saga continues – prepare for the Planning Inspector

Regular visitors to our web site will know of the ongoing saga surrounding the Cricketers pub on London Road.

Now it has reached a very important phase. This is a long post but please read it right to the end – it’s important!

The pub, built in the 1950s and replacing an earlier pub, was acquired by a developer which has put in no fewer than three planning applications to demolish and build flats on the site.

The first was turned down by Merton and then turned down at appeal. The second was turned down by Merton last Spring. A third application came in during the Summer.

The developer has lodged an appeal on the second application, a design it called modern but which to our eyes is no different to thousands of other blocks of flats to be seen all over the country.  The building is too large and too poorly designed for this sensitive site.

Now the developer  has also appealed the third application, even though this has not been in front of Merton’s planning committee yet.

The third design  is, in the words of the developer, an ‘idiosyncratic design’ based on ‘fake history’. It is version of what a Victorian pub might look like if it were turned into a block of flats.

Part of our objection to this proposal is that with so much real history on Cricket Green, this fake history would look like what it is – a confection with no real meaning. It would undermine and overpower the Vestry Hall , a real Victorian building, and the fire station, built in the 1920s. Both are locally listed.

We’re not against development, or against a modern design. What we want to see is a development which does the Cricket Green and its setting justice. We want something of high quality which makes the 21st century’s first important contribution to the buildings on Cricket Green.

You can read our objection to the ‘modern’ application here and to the ‘fake history’ application here.

What can you do?

There are two things you can do at this stage that would really help.

First, you can send in your views on the ‘modern’ design electronically via the Planning Inspectorate website

A plan of the scheme can be viewed here.

To submit your views to the Planning Inspectorate go here.

And then please submit them again here.

It is important to do this twice as there are actually two applications being appealed. One relates to the planning consent for the new building and the other to the conservation area consent to demolish the existing building.

The Planning Inspector will be influenced by the views of local people so it is important to make your voice heard if you can. The deadline for objections was 20 November, but no harm can be done if you submit your views after that date – if you are quick.

It will make a real impact if the Inspectorate receive a flurry of emails and letters so please do support us if you possibly can.

The main issues raised by MCGC&H are that the proposals will significantly damage the character of the conservation area because they:

  • overwhelm the site and compete with the listed Vestry Hall and locally listed fire station
  • remove an important community use
  • present a supposedly contemporary, three colour, design that feels both mundane and already dated
  • introduce a major new source of light pollution into the muted and sensitively lit nightscape of Cricket Green
  • prevent the whole island site being considered together

Second you can watch this web site for further updates.

A date has not yet been set for the Planning Inspector’s informal hearing – but we will post information here about it as soon as we get it.

We’ll also keep you up to date with information about the second ‘fake history’ application, including letting you know when we learn it is due to go before Merton’s Planning Committee and any information we get about the appeal.

Mitcham town centre regeneration project gathers steam

We’re excited about new proposals for regenerating Mitcham Town Centre.

Merton council has secured at least £3 million to invest in Mitcham town centre. The focus will be on the Fair Green, with a keen eye on breathing new life into the market, shops and open space as part of the scheme. There is also money to improve roads and transport.

The council is about to start on a major public consultation programme so that local people can influence how the money is spent.

A consultation document will be delivered to the 22,000 homes in the CR4 postcode. Schools, libraries, faith and other groups will also be contacted.

There will be a consultation event on Fair Green on 22, 23 and 24 November.

Visit the Rediscover Mitcham web site today – and watch it for further developments.