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art deco factory demolished


steveo

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The following is from the St Mary's conservation area supplementary planning document adopted by Lewisham Council on 12 December 2006.

http://www.lewisham.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/615672DD-8DB1-466B-B7C7-6A5D68CAA9DE/0/StMarysSupplementaryPlanningDocument.pdf (PDF 319k)


"Former Adhesives Specialities Ltd, 59 Ladywell

Road. Locally listed. This building was built in the

1930s as Neuk Laundry in a simple ?Moderne? style

by a local builder, Mr Howkins. It was altered in

1988-9 by another local firm, Rainey and Rainey,

which added metal windows and a clock and

heightened the parapets, giving the building a

more Art Deco style. This is a building type that is

uncommon in the conservation area as well as across

the borough and it is a popular local landmark.

It relates well to the scale of buildings in the area

and is a focal point at the beginning of the bridge.

For these reasons, it makes a positive contribution

to the character and appearance of the conservation.

Any development on this site should therefore retain

the main body of the Art Deco building, although

development may be possible to the remainder of

the site."


There's also an Excel document (53k) containing the ?related public consultation comments http://www.lewisham.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/EA81DC84-3252-4B64-9E01-17EA19F60744/0/Item8appendix429November2006.xls, which contains these responses by the council:


"For a building to be listed [by English Heritage], it must be "of special architectural or historic interest" on a national scale. For a building to be included in a conservation area, it needs only to be considered to contribute to the character or appearance of the conservation area. In this case, the building is cherished, is locally listed, and makes a positive contribution to the character of the area; therefore it is considered that it does merit inclusion in conservation area." and


"Outside conservation areas, demolition does not require planning permission, so at present the Adhesives building can be demolished without any consent. However, once in the conservation area, conservation area consent is needed for demolition. A planning application has been made for redevelopment of this building which will be determined under policy at the time of the decision. If the building is subsequently included in the conservation area, consent will then be needed for demolition."

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'Demolish and move on' is such a sad way to look at our classic british buildings. Any art deco building that survived ww2 should be treasured. That's why we have organisations such at British Heritage and the RIBA !! I bet they building an ugly block of flats or offices that only last a few years before crumbling.
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If you want to see the history of the planning applications, go to http://acolnet.lewisham.gov.uk/lewis-xslpagesdc/acolnetcgi.exe?ACTION=UNWRAP&RIPNAME=Root.pgesearch, enter 59 Ladywell Road in the Location field, and Search. In fact there were repeated demolition refusals from 2003 to 2006, then permission granted, conditional on redevelopment, etc, in 2007, with further applications right up to this year. The latest ones are still stated to be pending. Whether this is a case of the records not being up-to-date, or of someone having jumped a gun, I've no idea. You're right about flats.
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