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  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [1]

    • Question by: Hina Bokhari
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Hina Bokhari AM: Shared ownership has been a key part of London’s housing and planning model for the last two decades. Today I want to ask questions about how it is working for ordinary Londoners. I will start by asking Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe about planning for shared ownership homes in mixed developments. There were widespread reports recently of residents enjoying the world’s first swimming pool suspended between two buildings at the Embassy Gardens development in Wandsworth. However, the benefits of this facility are not equal as the shared owners in the building are not allowed to access it. This...
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [6]

    • Question by: Neil Garratt
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Neil Garratt AM: Good morning. I would like to ask a question to Deputy Mayor Pipe, if I may, about family housing. It seems to me that if we are mainly building one and two‑bedroom properties, then that is what families will be living in, and they will be living in overcrowded conditions in those flats. We have seen particularly over the last year how big a problem that can be. People often imagine they are going to move out of inner London into outer London when they start a family, and they might be surprised to discover that that...
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [10]

    • Question by: Sakina Sheikh
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Sakina Sheikh AM: Good morning. My question is to Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe, regarding building safety. For many of us, particularly the victims’ families, Grenfell Tower is scarred into our memories and the pursuit for justice continues. The Grenfell Tower Inquiry Phase 1 report found that in the context of national legislation there was compelling evidence ‑ and I quote ‑ that, “[T]he external walls of the building failed to comply with Requirement B4(1) of Schedule 1 to the Building Regulations 2010, in that they did not adequately resist the spread of the fire having regard to the height, use...
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [11]

    • Question by: Onkar Sahota
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Dr Onkar Sahota AM: My question is for Deputy Mayor Pipe. Jules, how will the new London Plan and its Supplementary Planning Guidance help to deliver on your promises to Londoners?
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [12]

    • Question by: Marina Ahmad
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Marina Ahmad AM: My question is to the Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe. As we know, London is the engine of the UK economy and accounts for almost a quarter of the country’s economic output. The coming years are going to be dominated by how London responds to the pandemic and the damage it has caused the city, which is why the Mayor’s manifesto focused on the recovery needs of the city and talked about jobs, jobs, jobs. Deputy Mayor, what do we need from the planning system to support the Mayor’s aim of protecting jobs as our city recovers from...
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [13]

    • Question by: Leonie Cooper
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Léonie Cooper AM: I would like to address my questions to Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe as well. Good morning, Jules. The Mayor has stated that through his strengthening of the planning process in London, London is already ahead of the national building standards in the amount of carbon saved when constructing new homes. That was one of the points that Deputy Mayor Tom Copley referred to when he was talking about overall housing supply. However, what I would like to know is whether or not that strengthening of the London Plan and the planning process is on its own enough...
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [20]

    • Question by: Nick Rogers
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Nicholas Rogers AM: This is a question for Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe. At present, there seems to be a disconnect or an unevenness in the way that called‑in planning applications are approached. At present, there seems to be a lot of working behind closed doors with developers and this often leads to major alterations. Of course, there are very good reasons why the GLA Planning team would meet with developers. My question is: why are resident groups, who know their local areas intimately ‑ they know what will work, they know what will be acceptable to the local community ‑...
  • Housing and Planning (Supplementary) [21]

    • Question by: Peter Fortune
    • Meeting date: 01 July 2021
    Peter Fortune AM: This is a question for Deputy Mayor Jules Pipe. It is about the inappropriate proposed developments on Transport for London (TfL) car parking land. Look at the amount of opposition there is to this. I am thinking about Stanmore, which is an 11‑storey proposal, and there are about 2,500 signatures against it. At Finchley, which is a 20‑storey, there are 3,100 opposition statements about it. At Cockfosters, which is 14 storeys, there are about 3,700. With almost 10,000 Londoners being against this, is it time to rethink your proposals for that land?