Archived News

First Neighbourhood Planning Event

Public Open Session 3 June Princes Foundation
Public Open Session Photograph by The Prince’s Foundation

From 3 to 5 July we held 2 public sessions and 1 stakeholder workshop at St Luke’s in Oseney Crescent.  A big thank you to the Rev. Jon March and his congregation for kindly allowing to use the Church over those days.  St Luke’s is a Kentish Town landmark building, built nearly 150 years ago at a time when Kentish Town was developing rapidly from a green suburb noted for its clean air into a more grimy and gritty suburb as a result of the development of the railways.  Along with the other buildings from the period including our streets and crescents, public houses, piano factories and shops it shows the vigour, energy and confidence of our Victorian forebears.  The vision of Kentish Towners from that period was a sort of neighbourhood planning that we wanted to acknowledge and develop to be relevant to those of us who now live, work, shop, worship or play in Kentish Town.
The first public session on 3 July was attended by over 80 people.  Around the Church we had displayed the results of the week long engagement we had undertaken around Kentish Town Road.  This included the wish cards and the post it notes with ideas from people as to what would most improve Kentish Town, what they would do if they were Mayor of Kentish Town, what they would like to see in Kentish Town.  During the evening this was added to and people were asked to identify the places they most liked and least liked in Kentish Town on a large map and the 3 things/areas most in need of improvement in Kentish Town.
On 4 July we held a stakeholder day attended by around 50 people including Camden Council Officers, local Councillors, owners of businesses in Kentish Town, landowners, Transition Kentish Town, the Somali Youth Development Resource Centre, the Safer Neighbourhoods Police Team and representatives from London Underground and Transport for London.  In groups we looked at identifying key issues and priorities in areas such as transport, community services/facilities, green/public spaces, planning, housing and historic buildings and economic development.

 

Stakeholder Day 4 June Princes Foundation
Stakeholder Day 4 June Photograph by The Prince’s Foundation

During the day of 5 July technical experts from the Prince’s Foundation worked to summarise all the work undertaken and put it together into a presentation highlighting some possible proposals to take forward.  The second public session on the evening of 5 July, attended by over 60 people, focused on presenting the outputs of all the engagement based on the priority areas identified by everyone who had attended the events.
The Prince’s Foundation are now collating all the information and feedback and will produce a report for us.  Once this report is finalised we will circulate it to everyone for further comments.  We will also continue with consultations with those groups we have not yet been able to contact. In the light of all those comments we will then consider those aspects of the report that could go forward into a draft Neighbourhood Plan for Kentish Town. Our aim is to develop the Neighbourhood Plan with you over the course of the next 6-9 months.

Archived News

A New Plan for Kentish Town

 

Neighbourhood Plans, recently introduced in the Localism Act, are designed to give local people a much greater ability to decide the future of the places where they live and work. This leaflet gives more information about the Neighbourhood Planning process for Kentish Town. Over the next 3 days this Neighbourhood Planning Event will identify your ideas for Kentish Town. The aim in the long term is to produce a “Development Plan” for Kentish Town that will become a statutory planning document once it has been accepted by Camden Council. Anyone wishing to carry out development within the boundary of the Kentish Town Neighbourhood Forum area will be required by law to follow the aims and ambitions of the Plan.

The first main Neighbourhood Planning event will take place over the next 3 days and will be facilitated by The Prince’s Foundation for the Built Environment that is providing support to the Kentish Town Neighbourhood Forum under a scheme funded by the Department for Communities and Local Government. As part of this process, you have been invited to attend two public sessions: Stage 1 on Tuesday 3rd July at 6.30pm and Stage 2 on Thursday 5th July at 6.45pm.

The Prince’s Foundation and Kentish Town Neighbourhood Forum will also hold a Stakeholder Day on Wednesday 4th July. This will involve representatives of various community groups, Kentish Town councillors and senior officers from The London Borough of Camden, relevant landowners, and technical advisers. They will look in more detail at the issues and aspirations identified for Kentish Town Neighbourhood Forum at the meeting of Tuesday 3rd July, and how these can be translated into proposals for change. These proposals will be presented on the evening of Thursday 5th July.

The findings that will be presented on Thursday evening are the continuation of a consultation with people who live and work in Kentish Town. There will be a lot more to do, including further consultations before Kentish Town Neighbourhood Forum is able to finalize the Neighbourhood Plan.

We hope that you find the evening sessions on Tuesday and Thursday interesting and informative. Your views and contributions are extremely important to enable the drawing up of a Kentish Town Neighbourhood Plan.

If you have not done so, please register when you attend the public sessions or email your name, address and phone number to secretaryatktnf@yahoo.co.uk.

Archived News

A Weekend Of Kentish Town Walkabouts: 21 & 22 April 2012

As a step towards forming a Neighbourhood Plan we held a series of walkabouts in April. We divided the Forum Area into 4 and repeated the walks 4 times over a weekend. The aim of the walkabouts was so that all of us could look closely at the Forum area – to see where there might be suitable sites for development, open spaces and buildings that we want to be retained and Locally Listed, and places that could be improved. There was a Leader for all of the 16 walks and the Leaders walked the areas in groups beforehand to plot out the routes and to note down places of special interest. It had been raining almost non-stop for days and the weather forecast for the weekend was dire. By some miracle the sun shone all weekend until the last quarter of an hour on the Sunday. Over 70 people took part and everyone enjoyed it hugely. We were all amazed about how, even in areas we thought we knew very well, we saw things we had never noticed before. Walkers were given record sheets and these resulted in the map you can see on the website under Neighbourhood Plan Area.