SHEEN COMMON BOWLING CLUB

Sheen Common Bowling Club has played on the bowling green behind the cricket pavilion on Sheen Common for 100 years. The club has a kitchen/meeting room and two locker/wc rooms. The meeting room has boards showing Club Presidents and competition winners, one the father of Peter Heard who was born in Paynesfield Avenue in 1929 and died there in 2011.

The council maintains the green which is in a lovely tranquil, sunny spot on the common.

Regular meetings take place at 230pm on a Thursday afternoon but other times can be organised by arrangement. Beginners are welcome. A brand new set of lawn bowls are fairly expensive but the club has bowls that can be borrowed. Otherwise all you need is a pair of shoes or trainers with shallow tread or ideally flat soles.

Please get in contact if you need any further information or to arrange a taster session.
Email: sheencommon_bowls@aol.com Text/Whatsapp Alasdair on 07814423648

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SATURDAY GARDEN MARKET AT THE HARE & HOUNDS

UPDATE Don’t forget the Market on 22 June 2024. Six stalls this week.

You all know the Hare and Hounds. It has been on the Upper Richmond Road in Sheen for nearly 250 years. Licensees Will and Lisa are now introducing an innovation: a Saturday morning market from 11am until 1pm. From now until the end of July there will be up to five stalls for local entrepreneurs in the garden. The initiative is in partnership with My High Street App.

On 8th June the stalls will include

Local Sheen Artists: Rachel Hunt, an architect who has turned her eye and hand to illustrations and is especially interested in rowing; Juliana Jones, showing prints, designs and illustrations; and Penny Choo showing retro / vintage inspired cards.

Daphnis and Chloe Jewellery is selling handmade, sustainable jewellery.

Lets Social is showcasing its creative social media expertise and services.

BTS Beauty, renamed in 2020, has been on the Sheen scene for 25 years offering treatments for women and men.

Polly the Facepainter speaks for herself!

The Hare has a perfect space for this new enterprise and these local businesses deserve support. So go along and browse and have a free cup of coffee or tea before you retire to the bar. The first lucky few to make a purchase on Saturday will be rewarded with a free Allora Spritz cocktail to enjoy in the garden.

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OPINION

Careful thought and scrutiny should be essential to good government. It requires an open mind and an understanding that many issues are by their nature complex and require widespread consultation. Politics now regrettably demands total loyalty, partisanship and manipulation, rather than truth and reason.

This is an editing of an idea expressed by Rory Stewart, when he was first appointed as a Minister by David Cameron and found to his apparent shock that his Secretary of State was Liz Truss.

It seems so apt a description of current political management of Mortlake matters.

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Electric Vehicle Charging Points on the Upper Richmond Road

On 24 January 2024 contractors placed notices relating to the installation of electric vehicle charging points between 199-207 Upper Richmond Road West. It was the first that almost all the business owners and residents in the nearby flats had heard about the works to be carried out on behalf of TFL and London Borough Of Richmond. Planning permission had already been granted.

Although the Council website stated that consultation notices had been served on everyone on 11 December 2023, only one actually received it. Inquiries were made of the Council who responded that neighbour notification letters were not a statutory requirement but Council records indicated that the letters had been generated and posted. And implied that Royal Mail might be to blame.

The Council stated that a site notice had been posted before planning permission was granted which fulfilled its statutory notification requirements. No-one saw that either.

There was no right of appeal. The Council said by way of reassurance that ‘a full professional assessment of the application was undertaken and the reasons for approval are set out in the Officers Report’. ‘The Council’s transport officer was consulted during the assessment process and raised no objections.’

No surprise there then and of little comfort to local people. There was no possibility of reversing the planning consent. Local traders and residents were left feeling cheated that they had not been given an opportunity to be consulted on the changes made.

Worse still nearly six months on the work has not been done. The electric charging points remain solely as posts; the spaces are unusable. There has been discussion with TFL about changing adjacent loading spaces to parking spaces. A decision from TFL is awaited.

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Mortlake Planning Inquiry : Finding Information

The Planning Inspectorate has now advised, but regrettably it seems only to those parties who are represented by Counsel, that the Inquiry has been postponed until October/November 2024.

The Case Manager will gather dates of availability of all parties concerned to set up a new timetable. What this means in practice is arranging the hearing for the convenience of their Counsel and expert witnesses.

The Mortlake Brewery Community Group state on their site, though it is not reported elsewhere, that the Inspectorate have directed Richmond Council to arrange a new venue nearer Mortlake and to have live-streaming facilities available given the level of local interest and representations.

This follows objections to Council plans to hold the Inquiry at the Exchange opposite their offices in Twickenham and to avoid streaming the hearing so that the wider public could more easily hear the evidence.

Too much of this case is shrouded in mystery. You will not find anything of current relevance on google. It is all old news blocking anything of real interest. The Council good newssheet declines to comment; Sarah Olney’s weekly newsletter has refused to mention the Inquiry at all.

You could if you had a couple of weeks to spare go the website of the Inspectorate’s agents at https://gateleyhamer-pi.com/en-gb/stag-brewery/inquiry-venue/ and read the 400 or so documents filed. But you might find them rather abstruse. You might find it easier to focus on the MBCG evidence which covers urban design and planning, the heritage that could be lost, the need for a secondary school and the transport implications of the development.

There needs to be a more open debate and we should not have to wait for that until the autumn.

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HOMEBASE PLANNING CONSENT

The Mayor of London made a final decision on 23 May 2024 on tower block plans for the Homebase site in Manor Road after taking over the application from Richmond Council. He granted the developer’s application. The development will see the building of 453 residential units in tower blocks up to eleven storeys high to include 173 affordable housing units and retail and office space at lower levels. Thirty four of the ‘affordable’ units are designated for shared ownership, which as has previously been pointed out, may not be easy for Richmond residents.

Provision has to be made for 849 cycle parking spaces, 817 for residential users and 32 for commercial use. This appears to assume that the vast majority of residents will be cycle and not users, consistent with borough and GLA planning.

Many North Richmond residents are thought to be unhappy with the decision or the process leading to it. Their councillors have asked the Council to take legal advice about the possibility of taking judicial review proceedings to challenge the decision. While local concern may primarily be about the height of the tower blocks judicial review requires a finding that the procedure, such as adequate failure to consult, was defective.

Is it not ironic that a scheme which would boost the affordable housing numbers is opposed by the Council but the scheme at the Mortlake Brewery which has only 7% is supported?

Is it not ironic that North Richmond councillors leap to the support of their residents on this application while East Sheen councillors are silent on perhaps far greater devastation to be visited on their area?

Is it not ironic that no-one seems to have given adequate thought to the cumulative effect on local infrastructure and traffic of developments at Homebase, Barnes Hospital and the Mortlake Brewery?

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MORTLAKE PLANNING INQUIRY

We have now been informed by the Inspectorate that the Inquiry has been postponed until later in the year.

Will the Council and the developers continue with their determination to get the current applications approved or will they take the opportunity for a first discussion with the local community to look for some consensus which might enable the Brewery site to be properly developed.

Now is not the time to take the summer off and forget things until the autumn.

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STOP PRESS on the PLANNING INQUIRY

It is looking like it will not start next week after all…… More to follow.

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The Stag Brewery Planning Inquiry


The Inquiry is now due to open at 10am on Tuesday, 4 June 2024

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THE MORTLAKE TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE

The Planning Inquiry may primarily focus on such issues as affordable housing, the heritage assets of the area and urban design such as the height and density of the residential area. The Mortlake Brewery Community Group has assembled an experienced group of expert witnesses on these topics. It is reasonable to hope that the Inspector will not ignore them as the Council has for years.

The average local resident may be at least equally concerned with issues such as road and rail use and their ability to get around the area. It is inevitable that there will for some years be stress on the area during construction, whatever development is ultimately agreed. Months of problems around Manor Circus demonstrate this. Closure of Hammersmith Bridge and Richmond Park illustrate that.

But the real question for transport is will this continue for years to come, when construction of 1,075 residential units, a hotel, a cinema and other related facilities, and a secondary school for 1200 pupils plus 200 staff is completed.

The Council policy is clear in the evidence to the Inquiry of Ms Thatcher, Richmond’s Planning Officer: “The Proposed Development gives priority to pedestrians and cyclists, proposes Travel Plans and a Sustainable Travel Implementation Fund, with the over riding objective to encourage sustainable travel and influence travel behaviour. With the comprehensive package of highway mitigation measures, and public transport contributions, the potential impact on the highway network is not deemed severe or significant..”.

Is that realistic in an area bordered by Richmond Park, the South Circular Road, the A316, the River Thames, the mainline from Waterloo to Richmond and Reading and a loopline to Hounslow? Or is it a pious aspiration?

Trip generation

The Council argues that the secondary school trip generation assessment remains fit for purpose. But this school is said to be technology focused and will attract pupils from a wide area. There appear to be no calculations about where pupils will travel from.

The Council might like to think many of them will be local enough to walk or get on their bike, but that will take numbers away from other local schools and reduce their efficacy. The alternative is that pupils would come from a wide area, be more likely to travel by bus and train and put more pressure on those services. And if there is a mix of local and out of borough? Just imagine even 600 pupils, half the school capacity, disgorging from Mortlake Station into Sheen Lane between 815am and 9am. And meeting 400 pupils from Thomson House Primary School.

Mortlake Rail Station

The Station and train services are said to be sufficient to meet future demand. Is the train service adequate? Immediately to the west of the Level Crossing is Mortlake station where 8 trains per hour call and an additional 4 trains per hour pass through during a typical daytime hour. Risk assessments have shown that barrier down-times at peak hours are already between 40 and 46 minutes. How long does it take for say even 300 coming from each direction to get from the train to a safe area off the platform?

It is plain for all who use it to see that the level crossing and its surroundings are not currently safe. Add in an unknown number of trips to and from school and homes and consider the consequences. But by importing superficial measures proposed in July 2017, the potential impact on the level crossing and the Station is deemed to be ‘mitigated’.

The Council states that walking and cycling routes from the school across the railway line need to be carefully managed and a regime put in place. ‘There may need to be additions to ensure that [the regime] is both feasible and manageable.” And what if it is not and cannot be made so? The Report to the Planning Committee in July 2023, at which the initial permission was given, calculated that the development would increase the number of pedestrians using the level crossing or adjacent footbridge from 749 to 1,040. How does that take account of the dramatic increase of pupils flowing around the Station? Has any provision been made for disability users, or does the school not plan to have any of those?

The Report concluded that there were capacity concerns at the level crossing and potential conflicts between traffic and pedestrians and cycles. “The main risk is a vehicular risk to pedestrians from general road users and more so road users who deliberately misuse the crossing”. The Report admits that “an increase in the number of drivers and, particularly, pedestrians waiting at the level crossing is likely to mean more people becoming frustrated waiting for the barriers to open or who risk crossing as the barriers are closing, however, the developer cannot be held responsible for any increase in deliberate misuse at the crossing”. Oh well that is their fault, even if they are children or young people.

Subject to the following footway and safety improvements, the potential impact would be mitigated (it is said):
• Additional bridge signage. (Superficial impact)
• General improvements to the pedestrian bridge to make this option more attractive. (Superficial impact)
• Moving bollards back on North and South Worple Way to provide an increased area for pedestrians to wait whilst the barriers are down. (Irrelevant)
• Setting back the stop lines, to prioritise the waiting area for cycles over other traffic and help to improve the overall amenity for pedestrians and cycles. (Understandable in the current climate but likely to increase the frustration of non-cyclists.)
• Improved surfacing of the road. (Superficial)

In spite of all these risks the Committee concluded that they should be overridden. A regrettable consequence of simply not knowing the area and / or reliance on dubious statistics.

Road travel

The adequacy of the bus service to cater for the development has been called into question. It is predicted to generate a total of 645 two-way bus trips in the AM peak and 242 two-way bus trips in the PM peak. Why there should be so many more trips in the morning than the evening is unexplained. But the real question is not whether there will be enough bus trips, but whether they will be able to deliver passengers through a road system already clogged at those hours.

“An increase in both general traffic and bus journey times suggests improvements are necessary to mitigate the Chalkers Corner Light and a package of highway works along Lower Richmond Road, Mortlake High Street and Sheen Lane have been agreed”, and with such, it is concluded the impact on the highway network is not deemed to be severe.

These proposals are superficial and untested. No mention is made of the impact on the Upper Richmond Road, the main arterial road around South London, where there are already frequent traffic jams. Readers will recall the accident at the junction of that road with Sheen Lane in April 2024. We had lorries doing U-turns, traffic backed up all round the area, an air ambulance needing to be used. What if that happens when the Lower Richmond Road becomes impassable?

It may be buried in the hundreds of documents filed, but there appears to be no assessment of the cumulative affect of pressure on rail and road, simply acceptance of the individual assessments of National Rail and Transport for London. There have been no published Travel Plans of note. Readers will recall that an attempt in 2023 to persuade the Council to carry out a transport feasibility study was contemptuously dismissed. ‘We will do it after the planning permission is granted.’

It’s all guesswork.

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