BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just Β£1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Spitalfields Historic Trust Ltd, R (on the application of) v Mayor of London & Ors [2016] EWHC 1006 (Admin) (10 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2016/1006.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1006 (Admin) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
PLANNING COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN (ON THE APPLICATION OF SPITALFIELDS HISTORIC TRUST LIMITED) |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
MAYOR OF LONDON -and- LONDON BOROUGH OF TOWER HAMLETS -and- BRITISH LAND PROPERTY MANAGEMENT LIMITED |
Defendant First Interested Party Second Interested Party |
____________________
Daniel Kolinsky QC (instructed by Transport For London Legal) for the Defendant
Russell Harris QC and Robert Walton (instructed by King and Wood Mallesons LLP, Solicitors of London) for the Second Interested Party
The First Interested party did not appear and was not represented
Hearing dates: 26th April 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE GILBART :
SHTL Spitalfields Historic Trust Limited
BLL British Land Property Management Limited
LBTH London Borough of Tower Hamlets
GLA Greater London Authority
TCPA 1990 Town and Country Planning Act 1990
LBCAA 1990 Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990
PCPA 2004 Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004
MLO 2008 Town and Country Planning (Mayor of London) Order 2008 (No 2008/580)
NPPF National Planning Policy Framework (March 2012)
LPA Local Planning Authority
(a) The statutory scheme of development control as it applies in London(b) The relevant applications and the proposed development in question
(c) The history of the applications
(d) The case for the Claimant
(e) The case for the Mayor of London
(f) The case for BLL
(g) Discussion and Conclusions
(a) The statutory scheme of development control as it applies in London
i) as soon as an application of potential strategic importance (called by the Act a PSI) is received, the LPA must provide to the Mayor a copy of the application, together with any plans, drawings or other documents submitted with it (MLO 2008 Article 4(1);ii) the Mayor must, within six weeks, provide the LPA with a statement setting out whether he considers that the PSI application complies with the spatial development strategy, and his reasons for taking that view ((MLO 2008 Article 4(2));
iii) unless the Mayor has said that he does not wish to be consulted on the application in question, the LPA must not determine a PSI application without sending the Mayor copies of (MLO 2008 Article 5)
a) any representations made to the authority in respect of the application;b) a copy of any report on the application prepared by an officer of the LPA;c) a statement of the decision the authority proposes to make, andd) if it proposes to grant permission, a statement of the conditions it proposes to impose, and of any planning obligation it proposes to enter into;iv) the Mayor then has 14 days in which to notify the LPA that he is content to let it determine the application (MLO 2008 Article 5((1)(b));
v) if the Mayor considers that a grant of a PSI application would be contrary to the spatial development strategy or prejudicial to its implementation or otherwise harmful to good strategic planning in Greater London, he may direct refusal within the 14 day period, having regard to criteria identified in the Order (MLO 2008 Article 6);
vi) by Article 7 of MLO 2008 the Mayor may give to the local planning authority a direction under section 2A of the 1990 Act (that he is to be the planning authority) if he considers that
a) the development or any of the issues raised by the development to which the PSI application relates is of such a nature or scale that it would have a significant impact on the implementation of the spatial development strategy;b) the development or any of the issues raised by the development to which the application relates has significant effects that are likely to affect more than one London Borough; andc) there are sound planning reasons for issuing a direction.vii) In deciding whether to give a direction the Mayor must take account
a) (not relevant to this application)b) in relation to all applications, of the extent to which the council of the London Borough is achieving, and has achieved any other targets set out in the development plan which are relevant to the subject matter of the application (MLO 2008 Article 7(3)).viii) In giving a direction, his reasons must specify how those matters have affected his decision (MLO 2008 Article 7(7));
ix) Any such direction must be made within the 14 day period (MLO 2008 Article 7(5)(a))
(b) The relevant applications and the proposed development in question
"(1) In the exercise, with respect to any buildings or other land in a conservation area, of any functions under or by virtue of any of the provisions mentioned in subsection (2), special attention shall be paid to the desirability of preserving or enhancing the character or appearance of that area.
(2)The provisions referred to in subsection (1) are the Planning Acts and .."
as were the policy guidance tests for dealing with heritage assets in the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) and in the statutory London Plan.
(c) The history of the applications
i) the principle of development in relation to the London Plan;ii) issues relevant to housing;
iii) issues relating to urban design, including the ground floor layout, form, massing and architecture, and heritage;
iv) inclusive access;
v) transport, including the payment of a community infrastructure levy to help implement the London Plan, particularly Policies 6.5 and 8.3 towards the funding of Crossrail;
vi) energy.
i) site description;ii) relevant local planning policy, including Conservation Area policies;
iii) an evaluation of the proposals, in which he looked at the proposals for demolition of buildings in detail, including those which had some features retained, archaeology, new buildings, questions of scale, building footprint, public realm and permeability (i.e. the provision of access to the public), and sustainability;
iv) the balance of harm against public benefits, including employment, the provision of housing, heritage gains and new public realm;
v) the optimum viable use for consideration under paragraph 134 of NPPF;
vi) previous schemes for the development of the site;
vii) conclusions.
i) mix of uses;ii) the amount of affordable housing;
iii) the massing of buildings relating to one block (number S1) and its relationship to Blossom Street and the wider Conservation Area;
iv) the proposals were broadly supported in heritage terms but some detailed changes were sought to the detailing and articulation of western faηade of the same block;
v) some blue badge parking bays were sought to be included;
vi) more work was required on verifying energy savings;
vii) there needed to be more disabled car parking, and the submission of a car parking management plan.
i) an insufficiency of housing within the scheme, and the proportion of affordable housing being too low (the planning application);
ii) the impact of the scale and massing of the proposal on the setting of the Elder Street Conservation Area, both generally and because of the S1 block (both applications).
"(1) the decision has been taken entirely properly and reasonably by the Local Planning Authority. There are sound planning reasons for the refusal, namely
• The scheme causes substantial harm to the character and appearance , and setting, of designated heritage assets, contrary to national, regional and local policies;
• The proposals fail to provide sufficient public benefits to outweigh the harm caused.
• The proposals fail to provide an adequate amount or proportion of affordable housing.
(2) The proposals are not of a nature or of a sufficient size that will have a significant impact on the implementation of the special development strategy or objectives of the London Plan. Compared for example, with the Bishopsgate Goods yard site, the amount of floorspace proposed on the Norton Folgate site is small. The issues raised are local matters, not of London-wide or strategic importance.(3) The development site, although close to both the City of London and the London Borough of Hackney, will not have significant effects on these adjoining boroughs. No comments, either for or against the proposals, were received from either and this shows the lack of significant cross-boundary effect."
"Hi (name redacted)
Yes the report will advise that the application has a significant impact on the implementation of the London Plan and a significant effect on more than one borough and there are therefore sound planning reasons for the Mayor to intervene in this case, as per the powers of the (MLO 2008). The Mayor will make a final decision on this following the meeting on the 23rd."
"Having now considered a report on this case, reference .. , I hereby direct (under article 7 of the above Order and the powers conferred by Section 2A of the I990 Act) that I will act as the local planning authority for the purposes of determining the above planning application and the application for Listed Building Consent. My reasons are as follows, as set out in detail in the attached report:
a) The development would have a significant impact on the implementation of the London Plan.
b) The development has significant effects on more than one borough.
c) There are sound planning reasons for my intervention.
I must also have regard to targets identified in development plans. As set
out in the report, I recognise that Tower Hamlets has a good historic record in assessing and permitting planning applications for office floorspace, both across the Borough as a whole and within its portion of the CAZ. Notwithstanding this, recent trends have seen a decline in the delivery of new office floorspace within the Borough and I note that the Council is currently falling below its target for the provision of employment floorspace with a net loss of 27,073 sq.m of approved office floorspace as identified in its Annual Monitoring Report (2012-13). I also note that employment levels within the Borough currently fall short of the indicative employment projections as forecast in Table 1.1 of the London Plan. As highlighted in the report, it is likely that recent challenges to delivering office floorspace and employment growth are linked to broader economic trends and within this context, it is important that strategic office development in suitable but finite CAZ and City Fringe locations such as this are delivered in order to support London's globally competitive business cluster while promoting growth.
In due course I will notify you of the date of the representation hearing and I will consult you on any draft planning obligation. I would be grateful if you provide me, as soon as reasonably practicable, any information relevant to the application and the application for Listed Building Consent, which has not already been provided. In due course I will notify you of the date of the Representation Hearing and I will consult you on any draft planning obligation."
"Having regard to the details of the application, the matters set out in the committee report and the Council's draft decision notice, the development has a significant impact on the implementation of the London Plan, has a significant effect on more than one Borough, and there are sound planning reasons for the Mayor to intervene in this particular case and issue a direction under Article 7 ." (passages underlined are those in bold font in original)
and recommended that such a direction be made. It then recited the history of the application, including the recommendation of LBTH officers and the resolution of LBTH.
"whilst (c) deals with the reasons for the mayor's intervention, having regard to the Council's draft decision on the application. These tests are intended to ensure that the Mayor can only intervene in the most important cases."
"London's economy
13 London is a world city with a key role in the global economy. As such, it fulfils functions and attracts investment that other 'cities in the United Kingdom and in Europe do not. It has a distinctive role to play in the spatial development of the country and continent as part of a polycentric network of cities and urban areas, and the Mayor recognises the importance of ensuring London does this in ways that promote sustainable success at European, national and city region levels. He recognises the importance of this to the continued prosperity and wellbeing of London and its people (London Plan, paragraph 2.7).
14 Projections within the London Plan suggest that, despite changes to the economy in recent years, the total number of jobs in London could increase from 4.9 million in 2011 to 5.8million by 2036 - growth of 17.6 per cent or an additional 861,000 jobs over the period as a whole. Chapter one of the London Plan makes clear that this growth is fundamental to London's endurance as a national and international economic driving force, and crucial to meet the needs of a growing and changing population."
15 London Plan Table 4.1 establishes the demand for office based jobs and floorspace up to 2031. Within the Central Activities Zone (CAZ) and the north of the Isle of Dogs there is expected to be a demand for 177,000 office jobs (58% of total office based employment growth), and up to 3,070,000 sq.m of office floorspace. Paragraph 2.46 of the London Plan states "It will be important to ensure an adequate supply of office accommodation and other workspaces in the CAZ/Isle of Dogs suitable to meet the needs of a growing and changing economy. The projected increase in officebased employment in the CAZ/Isle of Dogs could create significant demand for new office space."
16 The London Plan states that the City Fringe opportunity area provides particular scope to become a business hub of major international significance and should nurture the employment, business and creative potential of the digital-creative sectors while ensuring supporting the provision of suitable levels of commercial floorspace, supporting uses and related infrastructure to meet the needs of this growing cluster. Table 1A.1 within the London Plan indicates that the City Fringe opportunity area has capacity to provide 70,000 new jobs by 2031.
17 The application site forms part of the CAZ, and is situated in a distinctive part of the City Fringe opportunity area, on the boundary of the City of London and the London Borough of Hackney and in an area where sites typically a context of existing built form and heritage assets. The whole site falls within the Elder Street Conservation Area, and as such any new development opportunities need to protect the significance of the conservation area itself and a number of heritage assets, including listed buildings that are within the vicinity of the application site. Nevertheless, given the proximity to the City of London, and the location's high public transport accessibility, the site has employment generating potential which reaches beyond the Tower Hamlets borough boundary. The consultation draft "City Fringe Opportunity Area Planning Framework (2014) identifies the application site as a key site within the inner core area where demand for employment floorspace is highest. The potential net additional demand across the opportunity area between 2013 and 2023 is forecast at between 288,000 sq.m and 385,000 sq.m.
18 This application provides 34,807 sq.m of office floorspace which includes 5,604 sq.m of Co-working/Small and Medium Enterprise (SME) space and 18,772 sq.m of 'growon' space; 1,440 sq.m of small business space; 1,126 sq.m of retail space, 3,566 sq.m of restaurant/cafι uses and 553 sq.m of drinking establishment. The proposals include an uplift of 27,100 sq.m in B1 office space across the development site which will provide a platform for significant job regeneration and contribute to London Plan targets.
19 The application would, therefore, broadly accord with the strategic aspirations for the site expressed within the consultation draft City Fringe Opportunity Area Planning Framework need to ensure adequate office capacity to meet future demand. It would generate employment and contribute to increasing the offer presented by the CAZ, serving to increase London's world city status, a key economic policy objective of the London Plan. In addition, the provision of significant office floorspace on this site, within the CAZ, would ensure a major development site would fulfil its potential, as part of a finite number of opportunities within the City Fringe, to meetCAZ priorities.
London's Transport
20 The Mayor recognises that transport plays a fundamental role in addressing the whole range of his spatial planning, environmental, economic and social policy priorities. It is critical to the efficient functioning and quality of life of London and its inhabitants (London Plan, paragraph 6.2). '21 London Plan policies 6.4 and 6.5 identify that the implementation of Crossrail is the Mayor's top strategic transport priority for London over the plan period. London Plan paragraph 6.21 states-that Crossrail is essential to the delivery of the strategic objectives of the London Plan given that demand for public transport into and within central London is nearing capacity. The employment growth expected up to 2036 will further increase this demand, and unless this is ~ addressed, continued development and employment growth in central and eastern London will be threatened. In particular, Crossrail is critical to supporting the growth of the financial and business services sectors in central London and in the Isle of Dogs, where there is market demand for additional development capacity.
22 The funding arrangements for Crossrail announced by Government make clear that the project will not proceed without contributions from developers. A funding agreement between the Mayor, Transport for London and the Government envisages that a total of £600,000,000 might be raised towards the cost of the project from developers, as follows:
- £300,000,000 from use of planning obligations or any similar system that might replace them; and
- £300,000,000 from the Community Infrastructure Levy. '
23 The site falls within the Central London Contribution Area for Crossrail, as defined by the Mayor's supplementary planning guidance Use of Planning Obligations in the Funding of Crossrail, which acts in support of London Plan Policy 6.5. Within the Central London Contribution Area a charging level of £137 per sq.m is applied to new office floorspace, £88 per sq.m for new retail floorspace and £60 per sq.m for new hotel floorspace.
24 The application includes an uplift in office and retail floorspace at the site, and gives rise to a £4,374,570 contribution towards Crossrail. The applicant remains in discussion with the Council on Section T06 contributions. Therefore, the application has the potential to contribute towards the delivery of Crossrail, thus helping to deliver the Mayor's principal transport policy priority within the London Plan."
"25 There are significant economic and transport effects on more than one borough for the following reasons.
Economic effects
26 London Plan Policy 2.10 makes clear that the distinct offer of the CAZ, which comprises the boroughs of the City of London, Westminster, Camden, Islington, Hackney, Southwark, Lambeth, Kensington and Chelsea and Tower Hamlets is based on the rich mix of local as well as strategic use forming the globally iconic core of one of the world's most attractive and competitive business locations.. The implication of this is that the value of the CAZ is worth more than the sum of its constituent part, and to support London's world city it must act as unified economic zone.
27 London Plan Table A.1.1 identifies that the City Fringe opportunity area provides particular scope to support London's critical mass of financial and business services and clusters of other economic activity.
28 The cross-borough nature of these strategic functions is borne out by the pooling of associated London Plan targets for growth, as highlighted above, across the CAZ and City Fringe opportunity area respectively.
29 The site is within the City Fringe opportunity area, which straddles four boroughs (City of London, Hackney, Islington and Tower Hamlets) and forms part of the CAZ, which straddles ten boroughs (Camden, City of London, Hackney, Islington, Kensington and Chelsea, Lambeth, Southwark, Tower Hamlets, Wands worth and Westminster) which collectively form a globally recognised core, and one of the world's most attractive and competitive business locations. The site lies on the edge of the borough boundary with the City of London and Hackney and provides particular scope to support London's critical mass of financial and business services and clusters of other economic activity.
30 The provision of high quality office floorspace in this key City Fringe location complements the offer within the CAZ, and supports an internationally competitive business cluster. __ Development at this site, and the jobs and office floorspace it would deliver has a clear relationship with the other City Fringe opportunity area and CAZ boroughs in ensuring that the Zone as a whole continues to maximise the strategic employment function of London to support 32- world city role."
"37 The principle of providing a highquality, office-led mixed use development on this CAZ site, within an opportunity area, is strongly supported in strategic planning terms. Due to the constraints to large-scale office development in City Fringe locations, suitable development opportunities, on appropriate sites, must be promoted. The provision of a significant amount of high quality office accommodation in this location would help to meet the future demands of the business and financial sector, and will enable London to maintain and expand its world city role, in accordance with national, regional and local policies. The proposal would also contribute towards meeting employment targets within the CAZ and City Fringe opportunity area.
38 Failure to promote appropriate development could potentially impact upon: the economic health of the Central Activities Zone as whole."
"Consideration of performance against development plan targets
48 Based on the above information, Tower Hamlets Council has a good historic record in assessing and permitting planning applications for office floorspace in the Borough and the CAZ area, and the Borough has seen a good level of recent employment growth to offset a proportion of the losses during 2008-09. Notwithstanding this, recent trends have seen a decline in the delivery of new office floorspace both borough-wide and in the Borough's portion of the CAZ, and the Council's latest selfassessment within its Annual Monitoring Report (2012-13) finds that performance with respect to providing additional employment floorspace (including Bl [a] office) is currently off target with a net loss of 27,073 sq.m of approved office floorspace. It is also noted that employment levels within the Borough would currently fall short of the indicative employment projections forecast within Table l.l of the London Plan. It is likely that recent challenges to delivering office floorspace and employment growth are linked to broader economic trends, and within this context it is particularly important that strategic office development, in suitable but finite CAZ and City Fringe locations, is delivered to support London's globally competitive business cluster and promote growth."
"92 The Spitalfields Trust raised objections for reasons summarised below:
- 'The proposals would conflict with Tower Hamlets Core Strategy Objectives S022, SO23 and Policy SPTO relating to the protection and conservation of heritage assets and their context.
- The proposals would conflict with the Elder Street Conservation Area Appraisal. The - development would be detrimental to the conservation area because of the high level of demolition, particularly between Blossom Street and Norton Folgate, and would include inappropriate scale of new buildings, damage to the setting of listed buildings and historic views and the replacement of finely grained incremental development with larger locks.
- The proposed land use is a poor balance between large floor plate office uses and smaller uses which define the character of the existing site.
- The proposals fail to reuse existing buildings and will result in a high level of demolition, including substantial excavation. The proposals will cause substantial harm to heritage assets including the loss of the historic fabric and plan-form and substantial harm to the character and appearance of the conservation area.
- Proposed employment uses would be mostly Grade A offices. The high cost of construction is unlikely to result in cheap rented accommodation for start-up businesses or small firms.
- The proposals conflict with the NPPF and do not deliver the 'optimum viable use'.
- The current proposal is more/damaging than the 2011 consented scheme and should be considered on its own merits."
"106 The statutory and non - statutory responses to the Council's consultation, and those representations made directly to the Mayor, do not raise any material planning issues of strategic importance that have not already been considered at consultation stage, and/or in this report. The local implications of the consultation responses have been considered by the Council, however should the Mayor take over and determine this application, in acting as the local planning authority, the Mayor would also need to consider the local implications of the representations."
109 Having regard to the details of the application, the matters set out in the committee reports and the Council's draft decision notice, the development has a significant impact on the implementation of the London Plan, has a significant effect on more than one borough, and there are sound planning reasons for the Mayor to intervene in this particular case and issue a direction"
(d) The case for the Claimant
i) Ground 1The Mayor failed to have regard to a material consideration, namely the letter from the Claimant SHTL of 28th August 2015;Ground 2ii) The Mayor's conclusion on the first criterion was vitiated by misinterpretation of the first criterion in Article 7, his taking into account irrelevant matters but failing to have regard to relevant matters, and was inadequately reasoned;
Ground 3iii) A similar ground with regard to the second criterion in Article 7;
Ground 4iv) The officer's report was not an objective assessment. The officer had made up his mind before considering the referral from LBTH, as shown by the email referred to above.
"an additional point rather than a point which impacts on his primary analysis of the significance in land use terms of the proposed development"
which was a "mischaracterisation" of his report and suggests that the Mayor doubted the lawfulness of this part of his reasoning. Paragraph 19 (set out above) of the report does not grapple with the point properly.
(e) The case for the Mayor of London
"A In view of the strategic regional importance of Crossrail to London's economic regeneration and development, and in order to bring the project to fruition in a suitably timely and economic manner, contributions will be sought from developments likely to add to, or create, congestion on London's rail network that Crossrail is intended to mitigate. This will be through planning obligations
B the Mayor will provide guidance for boroughs and other partners for the negotiation of planning obligations requiring, where appropriate, developers to contribute towards the costs of funding Crossrail, having regard to
a .
b
c strategic and local considerations
d the impacts of different types of development in particular locations in contributing to transport needs, and
e economic viability of each development concerned.
C In addition, the Mayor has produced guidance on the Use of Planning Obligations in the Funding of Crossrail which should be taken into account in the handling of planning applications. The guidance includes
a criteria for identifying developments in respect of which Crossrail contributions should be required in accordance with national policy guidance
b standard charges and formulae for calculating fair and reasonable contributions to be sought and guidance on how these should be applied to specific localities and different kinds of development
c
D The Mayor will, when considering relevant planning applications of potential strategic importance, take account of the existence and content of planning obligations supporting the funding of Crossrail among other planning considerations.
E "
(f) The case for British Land Property Management Limited (BLL)
(g) Discussion and Conclusions
"Has the respondent Corporation in seeking to carry out its functions departed from its duty of objectivity and approached the Asda planning application in an unacceptably partisan way?" (at 39).
At page 46, after considering the then Respondent's treatment of planning policy, by which it sought to justify exceptions to policies on the location of new superstores, Sedley J went on to say
"the corporation had allowed its regeneration function to dominate, if not to dictate, the performance of its planning function, its officer and advisers, without in any way forfeiting their professionalism, had lent themselves to this task. The result was that in neither quarter - the Corporation nor its advisers - was a balanced appraisal made of the case for not breaching policy. The entire exercise was weighted towards justifying the departure."
"the decision of a body, albeit composed of disinterested individuals, will be struck down if its outcome has been predetermined by the adoption of an inflexible policy or by the effective surrender of the body's independent judgment."
(2A)The High Court
(a) must refuse to grant relief on an application for judicial review, and
(b) may not make an award under subsection (4) on such an application,
if it appears to the court to be highly likely that the outcome for the applicant would not have been substantially different if the conduct complained of had not occurred.
(2B)The court may disregard the requirements in subsection (2A) (a) and (b) if it considers that it is appropriate to do so for reasons of exceptional public interest.
(2C)If the court grants relief or makes an award in reliance on subsection (2B), the court must certify that the condition in subsection (2B) is satisfied."