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A report in today's issue of "The Times"
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article...550818,00.html demonstrates clearly how important convenient access to extensive rail services is in stimulating investment in property development. The area concerned is between Croydon's main rail stations, beside the hub of the modern tram/light rail network. Unfortunately, the developers concerned are unlikely to make a significant contribution to funding the public investment in transport facilities that has made their operations so profitable... Regards, - Alan (in Brussels) Is Croydon about to take a bite of the Big Apple? By Giles Whittell It's not Manhattan but developers are planning £2 billion skyscrapers (...) Not for the first time, the great suburban node of office blocks that is Croydon is being talked up as South London's new Manhattan. The reason is a sudden frenzy of bidding from international developers to build skyscrapers here. More skyscrapers. To the pride of its boosters and the shame of many of its residents, this tangle of concrete and tramlines on the edge of the A to Z pioneered the vertical British brutalist architectural style in the 1960s. The most famous result was Lunar House, a 20-storey slab on Wellesley Road that is not the Empire State Building but does a passing imitation of Ellis Island: huddled masses gather underneath it every morning to petition the Home Office for visas. Five developers want to spend £2 billion over ten years on a clutch of gleaming high-rises - and even an ersatz Carnegie Hall - that will surely have Donald Trump wondering why he never thought of Croydon. Carnegie Hall, in fact, does not quite capture it. The 12,000-seat indoor arena planned for a 12-acre site next to East Croydon station by the Arrowcroft group will be more like Madison Square Garden on steroids. An artist's impression has the arena as a gleaming UFO flanked by steel and glass towers, one of them 35 storeys high. There is a problem: a rival group owns most of the land and does not want to sell. There is a similar awkwardness over Croydon's next-biggest project, to expand the old Whitgift Shopping Centre (once the biggest in the country, now merely the biggest in town) and make it the biggest in the country all over again. The council backs Minerva plc and its million sq ft plan for a shopping and eating mecca called Park Place. But the Whitgift Foundation believes that Park Place is not viable, and it is used to getting its way. It has owned the freehold on much of central Croydon for 400 years. But, as Sinatra would have hollered, if invited, Croydon's a helluva town. Its Rockefellers insist that the can-do spirit that delivered the Wellesley Road underpass and the Duppas Hill flyover will prevail. "There'll be a snowball effect," Geoff Sparrow said. He is the investment director of Howard Holdings, which is planning a £90 million menu of developments for Croydon, including a 25-storey residential tower constructed from "post-tension concrete slab clad in terracotta, steel, aluminium and glass". "All these developers wouldn't be committing to projects like this without faith in the location," Mr Sparrow said. "And £2 billion in ten years is an awful lot of faith." SNIP rest of story |
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