No unfortunately the neighbouring land owner was already quite far along with his plans and didn't want to join up - I think he is going to wait until our site is done now before he starts again but that may change. The artist's impression shows his development just to give an idea of what the whole lot will look like.
Yes i've just realised they don't have a website - i will ask them about that and see what we can get online as information on their work. I am sure there will be a way to comment - I'll look into this and update either here or on our website.
By the way we had an amusing (although scary incident) at John Jones the other evening - a piece of art in our latest exhibition was mistaken for a dead body... have a look at www.theartnewspaper.com for more info.
This is a pretty major development being proposed. Ground + 5 floors makes it at least twice as high as any neighbouring building. Student accomodation for approx 450 will likely change the look and feel of local establishments for better or for worse - this is a big hall of residence being proposed. Also there will be fifteen 'affordable housing' flats managed by a "registered social landlord". Commercial space on ground floor on the Stroud Green road side.
This will certainly change the look of this area.
Sustainability bit: This boiled down to a bio-mass fulled heating for the student accomodation. Air-sourced heat-pumps for the affordable housing, and green roofs. When quizzed about ground-source heat pumps for the main student accomodation, the counter argument seemed to be that PV (electricity generating solar panels) were not particularly 'proven' in terms of payback, and something about under-floor heating pipes requiring another level of flooring. Couldn't help but think it was simply due to PV + ground source costing more. The commercial units could also benefit from ground-source heat pumps? The student housing has proposed bio-mass heating to keep a general background level of heat, with electric time-limited supplemental heating.
Planning application likely to be made shortly in Janurary 2010
Am sure the shops/restaurants in the area won't have a problem with 450 studes moving in, though a big tower would significantly change the look of the place - SG is *almost* villagey. Does it look architecturally interesting? Or just a big block of concrete?
I wonder if previous failed developments on that block (for clarification, I mean the street block that's already been 'under development' for a year with Vista housing thing) will have an impact on whether permission is granted - residents close to that area must be getting well hacked off with building works restricting access/causing upheavel/mess/disturbance for literally years.
It looks huge, on the plan. I read a little about Spiritbond and Kingston Council's plans for student accommodation. It seemed to have been a saga that went on for years. Although this isn't Metropolitan Open Land, so might be easier.
Is there a University involved with this? Can't find list of the stakeholders involved.
I wouldn't mind an influx of students. I think it can be great for an area. Camberwell I think is a much better place for all it's art's students, and I quite like Holloway Road because of that studenty vibe too. Stroud Green can be really dead in the daytime. I wonder how some of the traders scrape a living, at least students might help the local daytime economy, as well as evening. To me that building does look big and boring though.
>> Am sure the shops/restaurants in the area won't have a problem with 450 studes moving in
I agree, but talking from a residential viewpoint that is most definitely a mixed issue. After all, businesses are usually primarily focused on making money, otherwise they wouldn't exist right? Not against it, but what I'm to make clear is that local businesses *and* the property developer will have a common business imperative. One arguably short term, one longer term. Residents, on the other hand, have to live with this indefinitely and may not agree.
>> SG is *almost* villagey
Yep, and IMHO that's a very important point because slapping a big 6-storey block on that area will at the very least redefine the immediate area very significantly indeed. Next time you walk past the Worlds End pub, consider looking upwards twice as high to find the roof-line of this proposed development If planning is approved as-is, it will potentially pave the way for further neighbouring developments of a similar sort. So, on one hand this is an isolated re-development, on the other hand, this could be the first brick in that wall of creating a 'high street' shopping president, whereby other planning application are compared to this one. Fast-forward 3 years - say, the neighbouring block is bought and submits a planning application thus : "Our 6-storey flats development is in-keeping with the neighbouring John-Jones development". IMHO, this is how planning applications can, and do, roll.
>> Does it look architecturally interesting?
To be honest, no.
>> dorothy : It looks huge, on the plan.
Yep, and In my view, it *is* huge. The neighbouring buildings will be dwarfed - remember its x2 the height of neighbouring buildings i.e. the Worlds End pub which is ground + 2 floors.
>> dorothy : To me that building does look big and boring though.
Me too - why not make this is a genuinely interesting building with good sustainability credentials to boot. I'm in for that. I'm not in for a block of uber-bland commercial/student development on my doorstep with potentially iffy 'developer' motives.
Your main influence in this will be during "consultation" i.e. the past exhibition, and, more importantly, upon the impeding planning application. This forum appears to be the only public space where the 'public exhibition' was posted?
Looks to me like this is a pre-application consultation excercise so there are few formal requirements for publicity. They come later.
I would like to add some concern at the bulk and scale of the building. Not so much on the SGR frontage but certainly on the corner of Lennox Road and Clifton Terrace. I think that the form should respect the domestic scale of the streets at that end.
@Kate, has the scheme been tested for its effect on daylight/sunlight to the neighbours, and also their Rights to Light?
@wideboy - "potentially iffy 'developer' motives'? Development is about profit and income. Simples.
There's a massive empty space on Seven Sisters road, that's just a big pile of rubble. That'd be an ideal spot for a college - or in one of those old office blocks on the Clissold Park side of Green Lanes. Dropping a tower into a residential area seems a bit much. ie, put it somewhere neraby that's already got similar buildings. T
I forgot to add that apparently the height of the planned building was the maximum that the council would potentially allow (not sure exacty what that means), with the very top floor set back on all sides.
g-unit, that's a good point. It should go on Seven Sisters Road.
I live right opposite the World's End so reading this fills me with dread. I love the current view from my bedroom window but I can't see myself loving it with a massive ugly building blocking my view :o(
I'm assuming John Jones wants to develop the site though, if it's not a student hostel, it'll be something else that has to be economically viable. I think the whole site isn't very attractive at the moment anyway. I agree though five storeys would look bad, from lots of directions, unless it was great design.
Reg - yes the architect has carried out the required tests for dayight/sunlight to the neighbours, and also their Rights to Light.
g-unit - this is the first time we have come close to a planning application, I'm not sure which 'previous failed developments' you are referring to - perhaps on the neighbouring site to us? We have bided our time to get it right and not to waste time.
I must stress that John Jones are staying on site and its important to us that the scheme improves the local area. As well as working here ourselves (as we have done for 20 years), we want to ensure the building is appealing and welcoming to our clients too. Its been really tough to get art collectors from South London to visit us as Finsbury Park has such a bad name for itself...
We really don't want to create something large and ugly, so we've really taken our time in finding a developer who we believe is empathic to the area and will deliver a scheme that is visually and socially appealing. We've been to visit other schemes that the architect David Gallagher has done and were impressed.
Like it or not, there are significant other changes afoot in F Park - the CIL site being one of them. The height of our proposed building has been led by the planning approval that was granted to the neighbouring site (six stories) - this half built development is going to go ahead at some point and it has set the benchmark for future developments.
We also don't want to end up with a building that is empty - as is the case with so many 'commercial' developments. Spiritbond's proposal presents the opportunity to develop a vibrant student community that will integrate with the area and support local business.
What we have now is hardly benefitting the local area - at night its a large empty car park which is often the site of drug dealing and other salubrious activity. We really want to make things better for everyone. I realise that any change is going to be debated, but I hope that I can reassure local residents that we are not selling out and we genuinely want to benefit the area.
@Kate, do you have some more images of the building from different perspectives? Unless I am being dim there is only one on your website.
I am not against large buildings at all and think that the area around the station is suitable for tall buildings but your site is the most sensitive in that it marks the transition from the "busiest station outside of Zone 1" in to a totally domestic area (both in activity and scale). Yes the precedent is set on SGR but this does not mean that this has to carry around the whole block.
Also, I would be interested to know more about the student use. I know there is another consent at the end of Fonthill Road, and also a big one on Holloway Road. What will the occupation patterns be because from my experience they are only 'vibrant' for about 30 weeks of the year. I assume these would have been 'normal' residential units under different market conditions?
@Kate : "We've been to visit other schemes that the architect David Gallagher has done and were impressed." Can you tell us what they are so we can see them too ?
"..the CIL site being one of them. The height of our proposed building has been led by the planning approval that was granted to the neighbouring site (six stories) ...."
Confused - what's CIL? Is this the next block along towards the station?
Kate: like others, I've got a lot of doubts about the size of the building that is proposed. Thanks though for sharing information and responding - particularly given we're not all agreeing with you.
Kate - thanks for starting the discussion.
From where I stand, the whole area around the station is a bit of a mess and crying out for redevelopment. City North is getting a bloody great big tower anyway:
<http://www.architectsjournal.co.uk/city-north-site-finsbury-park-london-by-benson-and-forsyth/5205872.article>
<http://www.bdonline.co.uk/story.asp?storycode=3116455?>
I'm less interested in the look of the building than how it's used.
I'd like John Jones to be an anchor tenant for a site with a bunch of mixed use artist/creative businesses, somewhere between a Coin St/Oxo Tower vibe and the Chocolate Factory in Wood Green.
If the student flats could then be allocated to Goldsmiths or CSM, it could be fantastic.
![](http://9.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_kuuznuC3QG1qzqoo2o1_500.jpg)
If I'm reading this right, the grey building on the front left with the domed roof is [Vista's currently stalled development](http://www.stroudgreen.org/discussion/1184/new-development-stroud-green-road/)
The road on the front left is Wells Terrace and the dark grey one on the far right is opposite the World's End.
Given the scale of the City North project, this looks more exciting if the tenant mix is right, with the only caveat being that the white residential ones might be a bit high.
Never find the fact a huge development is going up on our doorsteps, and we'll never get a table in the Jai Krishna again or a drink in the World's End, it's so important to get the grammar right.
@dorothy. My experience of employing new graduates leads me to think that if 450 students live here and a large proportion join the site we will spend our lives correcting grammar ...
"A BESPOKE picture framers whose clients include artists Damien Hirst and David Hockney have unveiled plans for a new £30million headquarters - with almost 500 student rooms attached."
I'd be willing to be persuaded otherwise, but I'm not sure that lots more student housing would benefit the area. There is los if student housing in the area already, ith plenty more on the way. IN addition, Finsbury Park tends to suffer already from the transient nature of much of the local population and more students housing will, at best, not help this.
There is a massive local need for more social housing and more 'intermediate' housing to help people get onto the housing ladder. Both of these forms of housing actually really do contribute to creating more sustainable local communities. I hope the developers will considered these options instead.
Not that I'm massively in favour of the tower block, but I think putting the onus on John Jones and their chosen developers to provide 'intermediate' or social housing is a bit rich.
FP / SG appears to have many studio/one-bed flats - surely these are first-step/intermediate housing. Planning Dept seem to have allowed too many houses to be converted into flats, so families need to leave the area, doing nothing to help the transient atmosphere. Perhaps stopping conversions/private landlords in FP/SG would be an idea?
Lots of families leave the area because of poor secondary schools.
Witness what happens at SG School. A lot of parents move when their kids get to about 8/9 years old to get into catchment areas of better schools than offered at SG.
That must affect the social mix of the area quite a bit leaving the less able to move youngsters and those who tough it out or have their kids travel. This kind of perpetuates the issue as the local secondary schools loose out as well. I don’t recon Haringey is doing much about this at all.
Many of the kids from Stroud Green go to Arts and Media, with 81% A-C at GCSE has much benefited from them, my kids went to Highgate Wood and didn't do well.
Comments
Can you tell us who Spiritbond are (no website..)
Thanks
By the way we had an amusing (although scary incident) at John Jones the other evening - a piece of art in our latest exhibition was mistaken for a dead body... have a look at www.theartnewspaper.com for more info.
This is a pretty major development being proposed. Ground + 5 floors makes it at least twice as high as any neighbouring building. Student accomodation for approx 450 will likely change the look and feel of local establishments for better or for worse - this is a big hall of residence being proposed. Also there will be fifteen 'affordable housing' flats managed by a "registered social landlord". Commercial space on ground floor on the Stroud Green road side.
This will certainly change the look of this area.
Sustainability bit: This boiled down to a bio-mass fulled heating for the student accomodation. Air-sourced heat-pumps for the affordable housing, and green roofs. When quizzed about ground-source heat pumps for the main student accomodation, the counter argument seemed to be that PV (electricity generating solar panels) were not particularly 'proven' in terms of payback, and something about under-floor heating pipes requiring another level of flooring. Couldn't help but think it was simply due to PV + ground source costing more. The commercial units could also benefit from ground-source heat pumps? The student housing has proposed bio-mass heating to keep a general background level of heat, with electric time-limited supplemental heating.
Planning application likely to be made shortly in Janurary 2010
Am sure the shops/restaurants in the area won't have a problem with 450 studes moving in, though a big tower would significantly change the look of the place - SG is *almost* villagey. Does it look architecturally interesting? Or just a big block of concrete?
I wonder if previous failed developments on that block (for clarification, I mean the street block that's already been 'under development' for a year with Vista housing thing) will have an impact on whether permission is granted - residents close to that area must be getting well hacked off with building works restricting access/causing upheavel/mess/disturbance for literally years.
Is there a University involved with this? Can't find list of the stakeholders involved.
I wouldn't mind an influx of students. I think it can be great for an area. Camberwell I think is a much better place for all it's art's students, and I quite like Holloway Road because of that studenty vibe too. Stroud Green can be really dead in the daytime. I wonder how some of the traders scrape a living, at least students might help the local daytime economy, as well as evening. To me that building does look big and boring though.
>> Am sure the shops/restaurants in the area won't have a problem with 450 studes moving in
I agree, but talking from a residential viewpoint that is most definitely a mixed issue. After all, businesses are usually primarily focused on making money, otherwise they wouldn't exist right? Not against it, but what I'm to make clear is that local businesses *and* the property developer will have a common business imperative. One arguably short term, one longer term. Residents, on the other hand, have to live with this indefinitely and may not agree.
>> SG is *almost* villagey
Yep, and IMHO that's a very important point because slapping a big 6-storey block on that area will at the very least redefine the immediate area very significantly indeed. Next time you walk past the Worlds End pub, consider looking upwards twice as high to find the roof-line of this proposed development If planning is approved as-is, it will potentially pave the way for further neighbouring developments of a similar sort. So, on one hand this is an isolated re-development, on the other hand, this could be the first brick in that wall of creating a 'high street' shopping president, whereby other planning application are compared to this one. Fast-forward 3 years - say, the neighbouring block is bought and submits a planning application thus : "Our 6-storey flats development is in-keeping with the neighbouring John-Jones development". IMHO, this is how planning applications can, and do, roll.
>> Does it look architecturally interesting?
To be honest, no.
>> dorothy : It looks huge, on the plan.
Yep, and In my view, it *is* huge. The neighbouring buildings will be dwarfed - remember its x2 the height of neighbouring buildings i.e. the Worlds End pub which is ground + 2 floors.
>> dorothy : To me that building does look big and boring though.
Me too - why not make this is a genuinely interesting building with good sustainability credentials to boot. I'm in for that. I'm not in for a block of uber-bland commercial/student development on my doorstep with potentially iffy 'developer' motives.
Your main influence in this will be during "consultation" i.e. the past exhibition, and, more importantly, upon the impeding planning application. This forum appears to be the only public space where the 'public exhibition' was posted?
ie, put it somewhere neraby that's already got similar buildings. T
You’re right. I guess I was just trying to point out that developers aren't necessarily driven by what's best for the area.
I live right opposite the World's End so reading this fills me with dread. I love the current view from my bedroom window but I can't see myself loving it with a massive ugly building blocking my view :o(
g-unit - this is the first time we have come close to a planning application, I'm not sure which 'previous failed developments' you are referring to - perhaps on the neighbouring site to us? We have bided our time to get it right and not to waste time.
I must stress that John Jones are staying on site and its important to us that the scheme improves the local area. As well as working here ourselves (as we have done for 20 years), we want to ensure the building is appealing and welcoming to our clients too. Its been really tough to get art collectors from South London to visit us as Finsbury Park has such a bad name for itself...
We really don't want to create something large and ugly, so we've really taken our time in finding a developer who we believe is empathic to the area and will deliver a scheme that is visually and socially appealing. We've been to visit other schemes that the architect David Gallagher has done and were impressed.
Like it or not, there are significant other changes afoot in F Park - the CIL site being one of them. The height of our proposed building has been led by the planning approval that was granted to the neighbouring site (six stories) - this half built development is going to go ahead at some point and it has set the benchmark for future developments.
We also don't want to end up with a building that is empty - as is the case with so many 'commercial' developments. Spiritbond's proposal presents the opportunity to develop a vibrant student community that will integrate with the area and support local business.
What we have now is hardly benefitting the local area - at night its a large empty car park which is often the site of drug dealing and other salubrious activity. We really want to make things better for everyone. I realise that any change is going to be debated, but I hope that I can reassure local residents that we are not selling out and we genuinely want to benefit the area.
"..the CIL site being one of them. The height of our proposed building has been led by the planning approval that was granted to the neighbouring site (six stories) ...."
Confused - what's CIL? Is this the next block along towards the station?
However 'salubrious' means healthy - I suspect that you meant unsalubrious. Although perhaps it was Freudian.
B
Never find the fact a huge development is going up on our doorsteps, and we'll never get a table in the Jai Krishna again or a drink in the World's End, it's so important to get the grammar right.
http://www.islingtongazette.co.uk/content/islington/gazette/news/story.aspx?brand=ISLGOnline&category=news&tBrand=northlondon24&tCategory=newsislg&itemid=WeED23%20Dec%202009%2010%3A32%3A52%3A487
There is a massive local need for more social housing and more 'intermediate' housing to help people get onto the housing ladder. Both of these forms of housing actually really do contribute to creating more sustainable local communities. I hope the developers will considered these options instead.
FP / SG appears to have many studio/one-bed flats - surely these are first-step/intermediate housing. Planning Dept seem to have allowed too many houses to be converted into flats, so families need to leave the area, doing nothing to help the transient atmosphere. Perhaps stopping conversions/private landlords in FP/SG would be an idea?