Located on London's South Bank near the Oxo Tower, the scheme is being developed by Coin Street Community Builders who want to build an 8292 square metre community centre including a new swimming pool, with an additional 829 square metres of retail space.
To pay for the community centre, the developer also wanted to build a 140 metre tall tower rising to 43 floors with 329 apartments in total split between it and adjacent 7 and 8 storey blocks.
The scheme had been opposed by English Heritage which was concerned about the effect the building could have on the roofline from inside the courtyard of the Grade 1 listed Somerset House although this has already been broken by the under construction Silken Hotel which barely registered a murmur from heritage groups as it sailed under their height radar.
Concerns were also raised about the visbility of the tower from St James Park and how it would break above the established roofline of neo-classical Victorian buildings. The public inquiry into this found that the intrusion would be minimal and the view would continue to be dominated by the historic buildings in the foreground.
There was disagreement though on this between the planning inspector and Secretary for State with Blears not agreeing with the view that "the tower would appear disturbingly prominent or oppressive in scale" and that the inspector was overstating his argument when claiming the amount of harm the project would do.
What harm would be done by the project, the Secretary of State has said will be countered by the community facilities that Coin Street aim to construct as part of the project and that as a result the planning gain makes the scheme worth it.
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