OPDC’s second revised draft (Regulation 19) Local Plan was approved for public consultation by the OPDC Board on 12 June 2018.
The public consultation on the second revised draft Local Plan and supporting studies runs from 14 June until midnight on 30 July 2018.
This presentation was from one of OPDC's consultation events during the consultation period to give you the opportunity to speak to OPDC officers and find out more about the amendments to the revised draft Local Plan.
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OPDC second revised draft Local Plan consultation - Town Centre Uses & Social Infrastructure
1. Revised draft Local Plan
Regulation 19(2)
Town Centre Uses and
Social Infrastructure
Tom Cardis
5 July 2018
2. 1. What’s happened so far?
2. What are we consulting on?
3. Why are we consulting?
4. What are the key changes to the Local Plan?
5. What are the main changes to the Town Centre
Uses policies?
6. What are the main changes to the social
infrastructure policies?
7. What happens next?
8. How to respond
Agenda
4. CONSULTATION
ON 1ST DRAFT
(REGULATION 18)
LOCAL PLAN
CONSULTATION
ON 1ST DRAFT
REGULATION 19
LOCAL PLAN
FEBRUARY ‘16 JUNE ‘17 JUNE ‘18 AUTUMN ‘18 WINTER ‘18/19
SUBMISSION
TO SECRETARY
OF STATE
LOCAL PLAN
ADOPTION
LOCAL PLAN
INDEPENDENT
EXAMINATION
CONSULTATION
ON 2ND DRAFT
REGULATION 19
LOCAL PLAN
SPRING ‘19
WE ARE HERE
Programme
5. Consultation details
• 29 June to 11 September 2017
• Adverts in 4 local newspapers
• Letters to over 33,000
residents/businesses
• Emails to over 2,000 stakeholders
• 6 focussed drop-in sessions
• Facebook updates
• 2 live Twitter sessions
Consultation responses
• 119 respondents
• 2,900 individual issues
• 11 key consultation issues
DRAFT LOCAL
PLAN
REGULATION 18
CONSULTATION
REVISED DRAFT
LOCAL PLAN
REGULATION 19
CONSULTATION
FEB ‘16 JUNE ‘17
2017 Revised Draft Local Plan Consultation
7. 1. Changes to the revised draft Local Plan
2. Changes to supporting studies
3. New supporting studies
• Any comments from the first Regulation 19 draft Local Plan will continue to be
valid and will be submitted to the Secretary of State
• A ‘track changed’ version and a complete copy of the Local Plan has been
published online and supplied at six public venues
• A Summary of Support Studies document identifies changes to supporting
studies
• All previously submitted issue summaries have been responded to
What are we consulting on?
8. Presentation events
Design and environment The Collective Thursday 21 June
6:30pm to 8:30pm
Transport and Old Oak North The Collective Wednesday 27 June
6:30pm to 8:30pm
Town centre uses and social
infrastructure
The Collective Thursday 5 July
6:30pm to 8:30pm
Park Royal, Park Royal Development
Framework and Employment
The Collective Thursday 12 July
6:30pm to 8:30pm
Each event focuses on a different key area of amendments:
10. 1. Changes in response to your
consultation comments
2. Responding to the Draft New London
Plan, Mayoral strategies and national
policy
3. Changes arising from new and updated
supporting studies and infrastructure
priorities
Why are we re-consulting?
11. New:
• Construction and Logistics Strategy
• Energy in Tall Buildings Study
• Land at Abbey Road Options Appraisal Report
• North Acton District Energy Study
• Old Oak North Development Framework
Principles
• Park Royal Development Framework Principles
• Post Occupancy Evaluation Study
• Quantitative Tracking Survey
• Social Infrastructure Needs Study
• Tall Buildings Statement
• Waste in Tall Buildings Study
Updated:
• Bus Strategy
• Development Capacity Study
• Duty to Cooperate Statement
• Gypsy and Traveller Accommodation Needs
Assessment
• Healthy Town Centres Study
• Heritage Strategy
• Housing Evidence Statement
• Industrial Land Review
• Infrastructure Delivery Plan (IDP)
• Integrated Impact Assessment
• North Acton Station Feasibility Study
• Park Royal Intensification Study
• Precedents Study
• Retail and Leisure Needs Study
• Waste Apportionment Study
New and updated supporting studies
12. 4. What are the key changes to
the Local Plan?
13. Key changes
• Proposed outcomes
• Shortened visions
• Homes and jobs targets
• Site allocations
• Old Oak North Development
Framework Principles
• Park Royal Development
Framework Principles
Places and Strategic Policies
14. • Up d a t e d O l d O a k
No r t h P l a c e
d i a g r a m
• De t a i l e d
g u i d a n ce f o r t h e
O l d O a k No r t h
a n d S c r u b s L a n e
S u p p l e me nta ry
P l a n n i n g
Do c u me n t
Old Oak North Development Framework Principles
15. • Revised town centre boundary
• Key development sites:
• Central Middlesex Hospital
• ASDA
• Other smaller development
sites
• Capacity for between 650 –
1,100 homes
• Capacity for around 1,400 jobs
and 3,000sqm of A-class uses
• Road Junction realignment
• Detailed guidance to inform
future Supplementary Planning
Document
Park Royal Development Framework Principles
16. Existing 256,000sqm,
Capacity for
36,500sqm
Capacity for
433,100sqm
Industrial intensification
• The draft London Plan requires no
net loss of industrial floorspace
• Requirement to demonstrate no
net loss
• 256,000sqm of existing industrial
floorspace in Old Oak
• No net loss can be achieved by:
capacity to deliver an
additional 433,100sqm in Park
Royal SIL; and
Capacity to co-locate
36,500sqm in Old Oak
17. • Phasing updates
• Capacity updates
• New development sites
• Release of SIL sites for
development
• Removal of development
site
Development capacity and phasing
18. • Tall Buildings
Statement
• Definition of tall
buildings
• Locations
appropriate in
principle for tall
buildings
• Average density
Tall buildings and densities
19. 5. What are the main changes to the
Town Centre Use policies?
21. Managing impacts of town centre uses
Retail and Leisure Needs Study Addendum:
• Updated floorspace requirements (slightly reduced from 68,500sqm to 64,500sqm)
• Further clarity for assessing cumulative impacts in Retail Impact Assessments
Healthy Town Centres Study updated:
• Reflect updated national, regional and local policy context
• Reflect further surveying work undertaken for Harlesden and East Acton Town
Centres
22. Managing the impacts
Amendments to Policy TCC1 (Locations for and impacts of town centre uses):
• Clearer focus on avoiding adverse impacts to existing centres
• Amendments to approach within Strategic Industrial Location to align with mayoral
policy
• Includes relocated policies (ie. Harlesden and retail impact assessments)
Amendments to Policy TCC2 (Vibrancy):
• Reference to the government’s Food Buying Standards
Amendments to Policy TCC3 (A-Class Uses):
• Updated floorspace needs
• Parts of policy relocated to TCC1
23. Culture, sport and leisure
Amendments to Policy TCC5 (culture)
• Stronger protection of existing facilities
• Reference to Mayor’s new draft Culture
Strategy
Amendments to Policy TCC6 (sports and
leisure):
• Continuing to require provision of public
access sports centres, with concessions.
• Stronger protection for existing sports and
leisure facilities
• Protection/enhancement and provision of
new outdoor playing pitches
24. Culture, sport and leisure
• Clearer requirements for marketing:
o Appropriate price, independently valued
o In appropriate publications
o In a condition that allows the premises to
be operated as a pub or community use
• Some elements of the policy were challenged
and have been removed:
o CAMRA viability test
o Reference to Assets of Community Value
25. 5. What are the main changes to social
infrastructure policies?
26. Education
Early years/nurseries
Primary schools
Secondary schools
Further education/higher
education
Health
Health/GP facilities
Acute and specialist care
Hospitals
Pharmacies/dentists
Public toilets
Drinking fountains
Community
Libraries
Places of worship
Halls for hire
Youth space
Sports centres
Emergency services
Policing infrastructure (inc CCTV)
Fire brigade
Ambulance
What is social infrastructure?
28. • Stronger protection of existing facilities:
o Equal or better quality or location
o Clear evidence that facility would not result in shortfall of provision
• General support for provision of new social infrastructure facilities, where there
is an identified need
• Clearer requirements for social infrastructure to be well located to serve people
– good access by walking, cycling and public transport
Changes to social infrastructure policy (TCC4)
29. Off-site expansion Potential additional
patients
Potential additional
floor area
Park Royal Medical
Practice
c.15,000 patients 600sqm
Hammersmith Centre for
Health
c. 6,000 patients 200sqm
Willesden Centre for Health
and Care
c. 8,000 - 10,000 patients 500sqm
Cloister Road Surgery c.3,500 patients 145sqm
To meet needs from 2018 -2023 (based on current modelling)
Health need – off site
31. The CCG’s preferred delivery approach is for a central hub facility to meet the needs
of the future population in the plan period,
comprising:
• One centrally located facility to service OPDC
area
• 23,000 patient list size (plan period)
• 2024 trigger year for the facility (c. 1100sqm)
• Potential expansion to c.1500sqm in phase 4
(2033)
• Providing primary care services plus
• Pharmacies
• Dental services
• Drinking fountains
• Public toilets
Health Precedent: Parkview Centre for
Health (White City)
Health need – on site
32. Educational need
• The SINS has identified sufficient
capacity in existing primary
schools to meet the needs arising
from phases 1 and 2 of the Local
Plan period (2018 – 2028)
• The growth in pupil numbers
moving into the secondary phase,
means that existing secondary
schools are unlikely to have
available existing capacity to help
meet needs arising from the early
phases of development
Off-site provision
Primary Secondary
33. Educational need
On-site provision
Primary Secondary
• Monitoring of on-site provision of
primary schools starts from
Phase 3 (2029)
• SINS has indicated a need for a
4FE primacy school in 2030 –
840 pupils
• Monitoring of on-site provision of
secondary schools starts from
Phase 1 (2018)
• SINS has indicated a need for a
9FE secondary school in 2027 –
1350 pupils
36. Emergency
Service
Off-site On-site
Met Police None required. 3 Dedicated Ward Officer
(DWO) hubs of 50sqm at
such a time where
necessary. Can be easily co-
located.
London Fire
Brigade
None required. Ongoing monitoring of the
requirements for extension to
Park Royal Fire Station.
Ambulance
Service
625 sqm of offices, stabling
for vehicles, equipment
storage, rest rooms in 2023
(18,000 homes)
None required.
Emergency service needs
37. • Community centres could provide a variety of space, including libraries, places
of worship, halls for hire, youth space, adult learning and training space,
flexible meeting space etc.
• OPDC’s Social Infrastructure Needs
Study identifies need for 5,200qm of
community space based on the area’s
project future population
• The study recommends this is provided
in two community hubs, delivered in
2026 and 2037
• The Local Plan identifies these should
be delivered in the Old Oak North
and Old Oak South Places
Precedent: Wembley Library
Community service needs
38. Sport and leisure needs
• Sport England study commissioned by
LBHF shows the OPDC area is deficient
in access to public sports centres
• The Study estimates that development in
the OPDC area is likely to generate a
need for 14 badminton size sports courts
and 2 x 25 metre swimming pools
• The Local Plan identifies that this need
should be met through 2 on-site sports
centres – one in Old Oak North and one
in Old Oak South
• Need for protection/enhancement of
existing and provision of new outdoor
playing pitches Precedent: Fulham Pools
39. • 1 primary school
• 1 secondary school
• 1 health hub
Expansions to Central
Middlesex Hospital &
Hammersmith Hospital
• 4 super nurseries
• 2 community hubs
• 2 sports centres
Allocated on-site social infrastructure
41. 1. Positively prepared
2. Justified
3. Effective
4. Consistent with national policy
When responding…
42. Consultation runs from 14 June 2018 and you will have until midnight 30 July
2018 to respond via:
• Email on: localplan@opdc.london.gov.uk
• Post: Local Plan Consultation, OPDC, City Hall,
Queen’s Walk, London SE1 2AA
Please focus your comments on the amendments to the second revised draft Local Plan.
Previous comments submitted during the 2017 consultation will be submitted.
Thank you!!
How to respond