(See also draft minutes for LCCC January meeting, to be added to meeting papers page.)
McLaren Murdoch & Hamilton architects have provided the following comments and drawings about this application. Click the graphics to show full-size PDF versions:
(See also draft minutes for LCCC January meeting, to be added to meeting papers page.)
McLaren Murdoch & Hamilton architects have provided the following comments and drawings about this application. Click the graphics to show full-size PDF versions:
The 5th annual £eith Decides participatory budgeting event is nearly here. Don’t miss your chance to help allocate over £22,000! There are 37 projects asking for your support. Full details are on the Neighbourhood Partnership web page.
This revised 20mph network will be submitted to Edinburgh Council’s Transport & Environment Committee on 13 January 2015.
Further details are on Edinburgh Council’s website.
The screenshot shows LCCC’s area and the streets that would be affected.
(adapted from an email from Edinburgh Council’s head of economic development)
Edinburgh Council is consulting on the draft Leith Economic Framework. This will last 8 weeks, then a finalised version will go to Edinburgh Council’s Economy Committee on 28 April 2015. Edinburgh Council will then develop the “Priority Areas for Council Action” into an action plan with allocated responsibilities and timescales, to fit with the timetable for the overall operational plan for the Economic Development Service.
Alongside exploration of alternative options, Edinburgh Council will continue to examine options for the Leith Docks area as a hub for renewables manufacturing.
Please see papers on Edinburgh Council’s website – and let LCCC know what you think. We welcome input by post (28 Pilrig Street, Edinburgh EH6 5AJ), email and Twitter.
Leith Central’s planning subcommittee (PSC) is probing whether Edinburgh Council is using inaccurate maps in its consultation on Edinburgh Planning Guidance: Student Housing – Issues Paper. The PSC has asked the Edinburgh Councillors for Leith Walk to investigate some potential errors in maps used in the consultation paper:
LCCC does not want to delay matters, so it has asked for the maps to be amended without holding up the consultation.
There is a high correlation between the distribution of students (in the 2011 census) and the distribution of HMOs, according to Edinburgh Council’s own House in Multiple Occupation Market Review. The background to this is ‘transient pressure’ that might be created by HMOs being used as temporary housing for homeless people (including emergency cases, such as domestically abused women and their children; but also ex-prisoners). In Edinburgh, there are high densities of HMO properties in the Meadows and Bruntsfield links areas of the city, with notable concentrations at either end of the Marchmont area, Bruntsfield, Dalkeith Road, Leith Walk, the New Town and Pilrig.
LCCC is not against housing homeless people and does not cry ‘NIMBY!’ But it argues that its area is the mostly densely populated area of Scotland and any extra stress needs to be carefully assessed. If possible, it needs to be ameliorated or avoided, especially in the context of increased pressure on the dilapidated southern end of Leith Walk which may not be repaired for years to come. This dilapidation cannot be tolerated, in LCCC’s opinion.
Sheila Gilmore, Labour MP for Edinburgh East, has argued that Edinburgh Council may be taking an incorrect approach to limiting HMOs, noting that Dundee Council has adopted a policy that, in certain defined areas, more than 12·5 per cent of properties being HMOs is over-provision. Closer to home, Midlothian Council has approached homelessness/HMO issues by converting properties it already owns to house homeless people – and has saved money into the bargain.