Second height reduction takes scheme down to 28 storeys and removes 60 homes compared to original proposal
Farrells has cut a further five storeys from its controversial mixed-use tower in Battersea amid a flood of more than 1,500 objections from members of the public.
The practice has now taken a total of 10 storeys and 60 homes off its original proposals for a 39-storey tower at 1 Battersea Bridge Road after first lopping off five storeys in June.
The scheme, which is next to the head office of Foster & Partners, would be the sole high rise building in a predominantly mid-rise location at the southern end of Battersea Bridge.
Its second height reduction comes following a storm of protest from locals since it was first submitted for developer Rockwell at the beginning of this year.
The application has now amassed a total of 1,567 objections, mostly focusing on the height of the proposed building and its impact on views from the neighbouring grade II*-listed Battersea Park.
It has also been criticised by Historic England, which called for the tower to be reduced in height in a letter to Wandsworth council in June warning the scheme would be a 鈥渉armful and incongruous addition to the London skyline鈥.
Historic England sent a second letter to the council last month following the scheme鈥檚 second height reduction, saying it remains concerned and the harm caused would be 鈥渂roadly similar鈥 to the previous proposals.
鈥淲hile the reduction in height is welcome in principle, the tall building would remain a visually intrusive and incongruous addition to the townscape with wide reaching harmful impacts on the historic environment,鈥 the heritage advisor said.
鈥淲e therefore rest on our advice set out in our original consultation response.鈥
Promontoria Battersea Limited, which is the applicant for the scheme, notified Wandsworth last month that it was revising the scheme again due to 鈥渇eedback received from key stakeholders since submission of the application鈥.
The company said it would also increase the amount of affordable housing in the building from 35% to 50% and change all of the affordable tenures to social rent.
The scheme would now provide a total of 110 new homes, down from 160 proposed in June and 170 in the original application, along with 7,000 sq ft of office space and a 2,000 sq ft restaurant.
More than 120 people attended the project鈥檚 most recent consultation event in October, with views said by Farrells to be broadly in favour of redeveloping the site鈥檚 existing six-storey office block, which was built in the early 1980s.
Attendees were also said to have welcomed the provision of new housing and public realm improvements on the site, but were strongly critical of the building鈥檚 height in relation to the surrounding townscape.
Objections continue to flood in, with one local saying yesterday the tower would be 鈥渃ompletely out of scale with the site context鈥 and dominate its surroundings with an 鈥渙verwhelmingly negative impact in regard to views, massing, daylight and heritage鈥.
Another objection, posted on Wednesday, described the cut-down scheme as an 鈥渁bsolute eyesore鈥 that would be 鈥渃ompletely out of place, as was the previous proposal of only a few more storeys鈥.
The application was originally due to be presented to Wandsworth council鈥檚 planning committee in the third quarter of this year and start construction in 2025.
The tower would neighbour the Foster & Partners-designed Albion Riverside building, an 11-storey luxury apartment block completed in 2003. Fosters鈥 head office is on the other side of this building at 22 Hester Road.
The project team for 1 Battersea Bridge Road includes DP9 on planning, Montagu Evans on townscape and heritage, Exterior Architecture as landscape architect, Velocity on transport, GIA on daylight, Ashton Fire as fire consultant and EOC as structural and civil engineer.
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