AN ABANDONED car park which has attracted fly-tipping and anti-social behaviour while lying vacant for a decade will be turned into 105 houses and flats.
Basildon Council’s latest bid to redevelop the ‘Car park 14’ site, now referred to as Chapelgate, was approved at a planning committee meeting last week.
Councillors and planners at the meeting said there was a “desperate” need for housing in the town centre. But others criticised the application, which was submitted by the council’s commercial housing arm Sempra Homes, as dull and not in keeping with the area.
This is the second attempt to build houses in the site, between Laindon Link and Nether Mayne. A larger scheme was withdrawn in late 2021, shortly after a change in administration in the council.
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Melanie Keys, service manager at Sempra Homes, said: “[The site] has remained unused for over ten years, attracting anti-social behaviour, nuisance and fly tipping.”
Craig Rimmer, councillor responsible for regeneration, said: “We need to build homes in Basildon. This is a worthwhile project with homes that meet the national space standard.”
The buildings will reach up to six storeys tall, according to a report, and will be a mix of one to three bedroom-apartments and four-bedroom houses.
Planners said the latest version of the scheme had been significantly reduced from the version which was withdrawn last year.
The previous plan proposed 233 homes, including tower blocks up to ten storeys tall.
But Kerry Smith, who was deputy leader under the previous Labour-Independent administration, said the older plans were more in keeping with the area.
He said: “If you’ve got a great set of plans, make them dull. Take the greatness out of it, that’s what we’ve got here tonight.
“I want this site developed, but I just look at it and I think to myself we’ve traded a perfectly good diamond for a cheap bit of crystal glass.”
Additionally, there will be no affordable housing in the Chapelgate development. According to a council report, an independent assessment concluded it would be financially unviable to contribute to provide affordable housing without access to grant funding.
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