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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Joe Steen

Outcry over plans to turn part of Dalston's Ridley Road shopping village into 'slum' flats

An application to turn parts of Dalston’s Ridley Road shopping village into flats has triggered fresh protests from anti-gentrification campaigners.

New proposals to change the second floor’s use from commercial to residential were put to the council by offshore private developer Larochette Real Estate on July 16.

The plan has drawn severe criticism from community blog OPEN Dalston for floating seven “sub-standard studio flats for market rent with no affordable accommodation”.

Bill Parry-Davies, a solicitor who previously represented traders against the offshore landlord, said these plans were for “slums of the future, if not the present”.

“Some won’t meet minimum space standards and all are inadequate in terms of noise and ventilation needs,” he said.

“They will only be for market rent, with none for affordable rent. There will be no net community benefit at all.”

The latest objections reignite longstanding concerns about the market’s redevelopment.

Along with other sites at Ridley Road, the shopping village has been the subject of intense debate over the developer’s aims to convert the building into offices, shops and five “high-quality” apartments.

These plans were abandoned after community-led campaign Save Ridley Road forced a climbdown, and Larochette instead launched an application to refurbish.

But Cllr Zoë Garbett, who was involved in the campaign along with Parry-Davies, was caught off-guard upon learning of the latest plans.

“Last year, I met with Larochette, which owns the shopping village, to discuss their potential idea for flats on the second floor,” she said.

“At that time, I got the impression that it wouldn’t be pursued. I was really surprised to find out about the planning application via OPEN Dalston.

“Larochette had not informed me, they had also not had a discussion with the council before submitting (which is common practice). 

“I am concerned [they] are claiming to have done everything possible to let out the second floor, yet there hasn’t even been a poster on the hoarding of the shopping village to advertise the opportunity.”

Although traders do not use the second floor of the village, it has functioned as a space for artists and creatives for workshops, performances and exhibitions.

Public opposition to redevelopment has focused on how construction could hurt business-as-usual for traders and change the character of the market.

Garbett added that “there will also be no council properties provided, which are much needed in the area”.

She said traders and shoppers have also questioned how the flats will cope with the market’s noise, which is “part of the nature of Ridley Road”.

“People I have spoken to are concerned that if this is approved there are little protections for the rest of the shopping village from being converted into flats, which was the original proposal from Larochette in 2018,” she continued.

The shopping village was purchased for £6.5m by offshore investors in 2016, and has repeatedly sought permission for redevelopment into “high-quality” flats, offices and shops, met with vociferous community protests.

Campaigners lobbied the council to grant the historic market Asset of Community Value status to protect traders and studio spaces.

The status was granted in 2019, but Parry-Davies said the latest conversion plans could “damage our Asset of Community Value by replacing cultural uses of the space”.

In January 2022, Hackney Council took over the lease of the indoor market, announcing its plans to modernise the building in a “once-in-a-generation opportunity to help market traders grow their businesses into low-cost permanent premises”.

The Town Hall also announced a £1 million upgrade to safeguard Ridley Road and “protect Dalston’s heart and soul” in March 2023.

The council has been contacted for comment.

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