Camden New Journal
Publications by New Journal Enterprises
spacer
  Home Archive Competition Jobs Tickets Accommodation Dating Contact us
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
spacer
By RICHARD OSLEY
 
Protests over bodies at bottom of garden

Plan to turn storage shack into mortuary sparks controversy

A STORAGE shack backing onto gardens in Tufnell Park is set to be turned into a mortuary with a refrigeration unit big enough to hold eight bodies.
Planning officials have recommended that the Town Hall gives permission for funeral directors Green Endings to convert the shed.
The company, which operates from nearby Fortess Road and is known for organising environmentally friendly burials, now only needs final approval from a panel of elected councillors for the change of use of the building at The Yard in Oakford Road to go ahead.
A decision on the conversion is due to be made at a planning meeting tonight (Thursday).
Objectors who live in surrounding roads are unhappy that bodies will be stored so close to their homes and gardens. The planning department has received more than 300 letters of objection – one of the largest protests over a single application in recent years. Several residents will appear at the crunch meeting tonight.
Roz Maxwell, 70, who lives in Oakford Road, said: “It has caused great distress in the community. It is amazing that so many people have objected, even more than for applications for new tower blocks, but people feel strongly about this, crying and taking tranquillisers.”
She added: “It is an inappropriate place to have a mortuary. I used to work in a hospital and it was a rule that the mortuary should be kept as far away from the patients as possible.”
Ms Maxwell added that she hoped the recommendations from planning officers had been included solely to cover the council in case of an appeal.
The mortuary will have a maximum capacity of eight bodies, most of which will be stored there for between three days a week. Relatives of the dead will be able to visit the building, where bodies will be washed and prepared for burial.
Camden’s public health directorate has warned that the mortuary process can lead to an infection risk but has told the council it did not know enough about the plans to declare the conversion a danger to neighbours.
Green Endings boss Roslyn Cassidy said: “Any drained fluid is captured in specially designed jars, where it is mixed with sufficient water to be safely emptied into the sluice unit and flushed into the foul water drain. Thus there are no toxic substances being discharged into the local system.”
A council planning report recommending that councillors back the proposals said: “The unusual nature of the application has raised a number of concerns regarding the distress caused by residents who live in close proximity to a building which is used to store dead bodies. Officers appreciate these concerns. However, they are unusual and consideration has to be given to the weight that can be attached to them as material planning considerations.”
The report added that, subject to conditions, the building could operate as a mortuary.
spacer
» A-Z of Theatre
» Local Reviews
» Local Listings
» West End Reviews
» West End Listings
» Theatre Tickets
» Theatre & Hotel Packages













spacer


Theatre Music
Arts & Events Attractions
spacer
 
 


  up