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Bleak assessment of "relentless focus" housing targets

Bleak assessment of

Friday 06 October 2023

Bleak assessment of "relentless focus" housing targets

Friday 06 October 2023


Ministers are falling significantly behind a target of adding 800 new homes a year to the island’s stock and Jersey is failing to deliver the 7,900 homes which are required up to 2030, a planning appeal has heard.

On Thursday, Planning consultant John Nicolson listed projects identified in the Bridging Island Plan and supporting documents which had been identified as supplying a ‘pipeline’ of homes – but when had then either been delayed, rejected or withdrawn.

An area of "relentless focus"?

He presented the dire assessment of current-versus-predicted supply in support of an application to demolish the Hotel Savoy at Rouge Bouillon and replace it with 53 apartments.

Hotel director Roberto Lora has twice had proposals refused by the Planning Committee, and an independent inspector this week heard his appeal, which was presented by Mr Nicolson of MS Planning.

Tackling the “housing crisis” is deemed an area of “relentless focus” by the Government.

Mr Nicholson said, in his assessment, around 250 new units had been added to the net housing stock last year – way short of the targets set in the Bridging Island Plan, which defines planning policy until the end of 2025.

The minimum of 800 homes-per-year target took account of the net 1,800-unit shortfall from the last Island Plan, which covered 2011-2020, and was a doubling of the previous 400-home target.

Pictured: The Hotel Savoy is opposite the Fire and Rescue Service Headquarters at Rouge Bouillon.

Overall, the BIP makes a provision for the supply of up to 4,300 homes up to the end of 2025 and sets a net target of at least 7,900 homes which are required up to 2030.

“This list of potential sites is a complete fantasy"

However, Mr Nicholson referenced some of the ‘windfall sites’ which the Government had identified as sources of supply. 

These included Westaway Court (75 units), which is now nursing accommodation; South Hill (150 units), for which plans have been rejected twice, and there is an appeal today; the Ambulance Station (75 units), whose planning permission is now lapsed; and the States’ Le Motte Street Offices (100 units); Le Bas Centre (100 units) and St Saviour’s Hospital (150 units, for which no applications have yet been submitted.

“This list of potential sites is a complete fantasy and will not come forward in the plan period. We will get nowhere near the 800 units a year,” he said.

"We are refusing more applications than we are approving"

“But the situation is actually worse than that because 106 units were earmarked for the Stafford and Revere hotels, which are now cleared for a new outpatients’ hospital, 121 affordable homes were destined for Gas Place, which is a preferred site for a new primary school and extension to the Town Park, Southwest St Helier was refused last week, and Les Sablons has also been refused.

“As a community, we are failing to meet the island’s development needs and failing to look at Bridging Island Plan as a whole. We are refusing more applications than we are approving.”

Mr Nicholson argued that it was critical that the Savoy application, which is on a brownfield site in St Helier, was assessed in this context.

"Dominant and intrusive"?

Independent planning inspector David Hainsworth is assessing the Hotel Savoy appeal against a second refusal in May by the Planning Committee, which followed the recommendation of the Planning Department.

The principal reasons for refusal were that the proposed development would result in “unreasonable harm” to the amenities of neighbours, it would be “dominant and intrusive” and “poorly related to neighbouring buildings” and the internal layout would lead to “cramped, unpractical, low-quality residential units.”

A resident to the north of the site, in Gloster Mews, made a submission in person at the appeal to argue that the proposed development would deprive her garden of daylight and sunlight.

Policy ‘GD1’ of the BIP states that no development can “unreasonably affect the level of privacy to buildings and land” and “unreasonably affect the level of sunlight and daylight to buildings and land” that owners and occupiers might expect to enjoy.

The hotel argues that sunlight and daylight modelling it has performed puts the garden within accepted parameters but the was contested at the appeal by the resident, who had commissioned her own assessment.

Mr Lora is appealing all elements of the refusal.

Having heard all arguments, Mr Hainsworth will consider the evidence before making a recommendation to the Environment Minister on whether he should accept or reject the appeal.

READ MORE ...

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