Deputy Lewis expects to bring a different version of these plans early next year.
Intended to improve the pedestrian area outside the car park, the Growth, Housing and Environment Department plans proposed making a “plaza” on the multi-storey’s doorstep.

Pictured: The Minister has hit ‘pause’ on the plans so that he can use the area for his Sustainable Transport Policy.
In the design brief outlining their intentions with the site, the department wrote that the key parts of the application were:
- providing “a more open and welcoming space for pedestrians of all abilities”;
- creating “a space that people may wish to dwell in as well as pass through”;
- making the pedestrian access points more clear;
- using “long lasting and low embodied energy materials”;
- allowing for maintenance and emergency vehicles to access the car park if needed;
- retaining some vegetation but getting rid of some bushes and the “leylandii tree which have grown to dominate the space”.
Now, the Minister says that the area could be better utilised to support the STP which is currently being worked on.
Pictured: Revised plans for the car park are expected early next year.
Commenting on the withdrawal of the plans, Deputy Lewis said: “When I saw the plans, I felt that more could be done. I will be bringing the Sustainable Transport Policy to the States next month, and I see this as an opportunity to add a piece of infrastructure which will support that policy.
“As well as improving the aesthetics of the area and making the car park more accessible by people with wheelchairs and prams, I feel that it can be used to the benefit of the wider STP. I have therefore instructed officers to review the scheme, and I expect to bring revised plans back early next year.”