Bid To Turn Former Pissarro Site Into Residential Moves Ahead | |||||
Developer puts in planning application to Hounslow Council
The developer seeking to turn the former Pissarro site into housing has lodged a planning application with Hounslow Council which local people are likely to oppose. Last year 150 people objected to plans by Gort Investments which was was seeking to knock down the building and turn the riverside site into a three-storey residential complex. The application was this week submitted for nine residential units. Local resident say the company has not been in contact with locals since the exhibition of plans last year. A submission for a demolition order was recently granted although the building has not yet been knocked down though the date given for demolition was April 1st. Local residents wanted to see a cafe/bar remain on the site. Gort Investments was seeking to knock down the building and turn the riverside site into a three-storey residential complex. It originally sought permission to demolish the vacant building in January but withdrew the application and submitted a new prior notification of their intention to knock it down last month. Local residents are generally opposed to the proposed plans for six two-bedroom apartments, two three-bed duplex family homes and a two-bedroom penthouse. Some believe the design is incongruous with the neo-Georgian look of this area of Chiswick on the Thames and the Georgian architecture of Chiswick Mall. The picture shows the design for green roofs and private gardens The restaurant closed in 2013 and a previous application to redevelop the restaurant into residential units was turned down in 2014. The plans for the Chiswick riverside site had been controversial and nearly 200 residents had opposed a bid to extend the existing site and build eight two-bedroom flats with parking spaces and bicycle storage. The current proposed development would be set across three storeys with private ground level and roof-gardens with green roofs. A total of ten car-park spaces have been included along with cycle storage. Corney Reach Way eastern view Pissarro, which was named in honour of the 'Father of French Impressionism', Camille Pissarro (who painted many local scenes in the 1890s), opened in the late 1990s when it was owned by local investors. The restaurant has had a chequered history, and at one stage suffered a serious fire. It closed down in January 2014 with management saying there was not enough business in that area to make it a commercial success.
April 15, 2016 |