Submitted by daniel on Wed, 30/10/2024 - 12:20 Picture Image Description Activists in Norbury and Streatham are halfway to a fund-raising target to meet legal costs to consider a possible challenge to planning permission for a 14-storey tower which locals fear will destroy forever one of the finest views in all London. Lambeth Council has granted permission to the Woodgate Tower development, to be built on the site of a disused Homebase off Greyhound Lane. This decision was made despite more than 1,000 petition signatures, 800 formal objections and 400 complaints uploaded on to the GLA website. “This decision sets a dangerous precedent for developers pushing these type of inappropriate applications in the future, despite overriding public objection. This should not be allowed!” according to the Woodgate Tower Protest Group. The council planning decision might be challengable through a Judicial Review at the High Court, and the protest group is seeking to raise £2,400 as a first step, to pay for a specialist barrister’s opinion on the legal grounds for quashing the plan. The decision of the council’s planning committee, the protesters say, “seems to be badly flawed”. They claim the development is “wholly unsuitable for the area and in breach of several legal requirements”. These include breaking Lambeth’s Local Plan and the impact on Immanuel Church heritage site and protected Streatham Common view. They accuse council officials of “misdirection of the committee”, including “a quite unreasonable conclusion of ‘no harm’ to the protected view from Streatham Common”. According to the Friends of Streatham Common, “Streatham Common offers some of the best views over the new Wandle Valley Regional Park.” They add: “One of the Common’s most important amenities has been the wide views offered across the Wandle Valley, extending, under the very best weather conditions, to a far horizon as far afield as Windsor, with other views across the tributary valley of the Norbury Brook and River Graveney being obtained from The Rookery.” Seven seats with view identification plaques on the high points were installed in 2000, to celebrate the Millennium. The Crowdfunder legal fund is being raised on behalf of the Woodgate Tower Protest Group. The money will be sent to Leigh Day solicitors to cover “initial advice” as soon as Lambeth issues the Notice of Decision. The crowdfunder has so far raised £1,200, and the organisers have until November 17 to achieve the target amount. For more information, visit the No Woodgate Tower website by clicking here Or go straight to the crowdfunder by clicking here Inside Croydon – If you want real journalism, delivering real news, from a publication that is actually based in the borough, please consider paying for it. Sign up today: click here for more details If you have a news story about life in or around Croydon, or want to publicise your residents’ association or business, or if you have a local event to promote, please email us with full details at inside.croydon@btinternet.com As featured on Google News Showcase We offer FREE ads to community groups when they have members who are paid subscribers to Inside Croydon Our comments section on every report provides all readers with an immediate “right of reply” on all our content. Our comments policy can be read by clicking here Inside Croydon is a member of the Independent Community News Network Inside Croydon works together with the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, as well as BBC London News and ITV London Web Link Streatham Common’s protected view under threat from tower - Inside Croydon Inside Croydon