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Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Live
National
Robyn Bell & Donald Turvill

Edinburgh radio station to be turned into new city centre hotel

Plans to turn a a radio station into a new hotel have been given the go ahead by planners.

The 55-room Supercity Aparthotel on Forth Street and Broughton Street Lane will be the first in Edinburgh.

It will incorporate Playfair House and Forth House, which is home to Radio Forth and will be primarily aimed at business travellers and guests staying for extended periods.

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Forth House, which is a B-listed building, will remain mostly unchanged on the front, preserving the historic building. Minor changes to the back are proposed. Playfair House which has its entrance on Broughton Street Lane will be stripped back and have a new façade of natural stone and precast concrete to align with the neighbouring buildings.

The upscale aparthotel will have a 24/7 reception, a communal lounge and bar area and a gym, and around 18 jobs will be created by the new operation.

Plans to repurpose the B-listed buildings as an aparthotel have been met with a mixed response, with neighbours concerned about potential disturbances from renovations and the "transient population" the development would bring to the area.

Discussing the proposals lodged by Supercity Aparthotels at a meeting on Wednesday (June 15), councillors were caught up in a dispute about the number of parking spaces required but agreed unanimously to give the go-ahead.

The parking out the front of the building will be reduced from 24 to 7 spaces with 5 of them having electric vehicle charging points. there will also be secure bicycle spaces and additional car spaces within the undercroft of the building.

Speaking as plans went before the Development Management Sub-Committee, SNP councillor David Key said he was "delighted" that parking provision had been reduced but asked: "Why do we need car parking spaces at all in a city centre aparthotel with transport links that are basically door?"

He added: "I'm very unhappy about this car parking malarkey, clearly we're bound by the guidance that is written down in various documents and I think we as a committee need to revisit that guidance. There's no reason at all why a city centre aparthotel should have parking spaces of that numbers unless they are for disabled people."

Cllr Lezley Cameron, Labour, replied: "Interesting phrase 'car parking malarkey', it's a huge, serious issue, we're trying to encourage active travel and sensible car use and all of that, however people with mobility problems and mobility issues, everybody is different in terms of their mobility needs.

"I welcome that there is a reduction in car parking spaces which supports our aims in terms of sustainability and active travel and all of that, but I for one do not want to be part of a council or planning authority that does not take seriously the needs and the aspirations of people with permanent, with temporary, with unexpected mobility difficulties. We've got to be mindful of those needs of our citizens and visitors as well."

The Greens' Kayleigh O'Neill responded by pointing out that "not all disabled people use wheelchairs and not all disabled people rely on cars".

Cllr O'Neill, a wheelchair user who testified to having "a big amount of lived experience", added: "A large majority of disabled people in this city rely on buses, adapted bikes and stuff like that. So using disabled people to get more car parking isn't helpful."

Fellow Greens councillor Chas Booth told the committee that according to Boogie in the Morning, Forth One's breakfast show, "they don't actually vacate the building until Friday".

He added: "I think while the office has moved the radio studio is still there."

Cllr Booth pointed out that several local residents have concerns about the "potential impact this change of use and this development might have on their amenity".

In an objection to the council, one neighbouring resident said noise form renovations would be "exceedingly frustrating".

They added: "There could also be increased noise from hotel guests against our shared wall. My partner and I are essential workers and need a quiet place to sleep and recover - not a home where we hear hotel guests talking and TVs blaring."

Another said the aparthotel would be "another development attracting only a transient population"

"We need more permanent residents (including families) living in the city centre" they went on. "There are already enough, if not too many, such developments, i.e. hotels, hostels, airbnb and student accommodation, in the immediate vicinity. The development is too big and, for all the hype, will inevitably become another airbnb."

Highlighting projections that showed the development could result in a 'reduction of 159 jobs and £11.411 million GVA per annum (2019 prices)' Cllr Jo Mowat, Conservatives, said: "I appreciate that the uses are supported in this area, but we're talking about a substantial loss of potential employment opportunities much greater than for an Aparthotel."

She added: "We still need office accommodation in town, we still need still need that to be centrally located next to great transport links which this is."

Roger Walters, Chairman of Supercity Aparthotels commented: “We are delighted that our aparthotel operation has been approved by the committee, which will preserve the fabulous Forth House. This is an excellent location for our first operation in Edinburgh, lying close to the busy city centre and will also serve to benefit the community through reducing movements to and from the building than is currently the case.

“We look forward to working commencing onsite and will continue to engage with the community to ensure that it is kept updated as works progress.”

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