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By RICHARD OSLEY
 
'Greed' wins day in King's Cross

Rushed vote gives okay for £2bn scheme

PLANNING chiefs late last night (Thursday) dramatically gave the go ahead for the £2 billion overhaul of King’s Cross following a marathon five-hour council session.
Developers Argent Limited finally secured permission for their mammoth plan close to 11 pm at Camden Town Hall as councillors, some looking drained by the proceedings, voted 9-6 in their favour.
Objectors, who say that the 67-acre site is being filled with too many offices and not enough affordable homes, immediately pledged to appeal against the approval.
They hope that Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott might still be persuaded to intervene or that the blueprint could still be referred to a public inquiry.
Una Sapietis, from the King’s Cross Railway Lands Group, which has scrutinised developments on the site for more than two decades, said afterwards: “This is just an opportunity for large profits and property speculators. For us it’s a wasted opportunity. It could have had a lot more social housing and community facilities. We are planning to appeal. We’re asking for it to be called in.”
Other objectors warned historic industrial buildings would be unnecessarily flattened by the new developments.
At the moment, however, Argent appear to have a winning hand and are now set to begin work on the site behind King’s Cross and St Pancras stations.
They have already begun consulting with groups and businesses that may want premises on the land.
Chief executive Roger Madelin told the meeting that the Argent had come up with the right balance of homes, office, shops and leisure facilities.
He also told the meeting that there should be room on the site for a casino to make it an “international place”.
Of the whole project, he added: “I think we have come up with a damn good design. We want to create a place that people want to visit, want to work in, want to live in. We would be the first to suffer if we didn’t create a place like that.”
As members of the public and dissenting councillors left the Town Hall – close to development site – there were loud grumbles about the way the meeting was handled. Concern that the huge applications were deliberated over just two planning meetings were fuelled by a rushed final half-hour of last night’s session in which councillors were repeatedly told to keep comments short and reach a decision before time ran out.
Planning chairwoman Cllr Heather Johnson, heckled as a ‘bully’ by one protester, bore the brunt of the criticism and some councillors were last night (Wednesday) even talking about filing official complaints.
At one point, as councillors discussed a possible postponement of a final decision, Cllr Johnson said: “If you’re talking about deferral that means it comes back after the election” – a comment that rankled with several spectators.
In the biggest planning meeting, either Camden or Islington has ever seen, twenty-three deputations from both boroughs passed through the Town Hall.
A section of the site – known as The Triangle – will be decided by Islington Council later this month.

• Air your views at a public meeting at St Andrew’s Church on Tuesday at 7.45pm.
 
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