Retailer tears into secretary of state after ordering public inquiry into Pilbrow’s proposals to flatten flagship store

Marks & Spencer has accused Michael Gove of “grandstanding” after he ordered a public inquiry into the retailer’s Pilbrow & Partners-designed plans to demolish and rebuild its flagship Oxford Street store in London.

It said it was “bewildered and disappointed at [his] baselessdecisionto call in the proposed redevelopment of our Marble Arch site”.

The firm’s property director Sacha Berendji added: “The secretary of state has blocked the only retail-led regeneration in the whole of Oxford Street in a building which was refused listed status due to its low design quality and, while safe, cannot be modernised through refitting as it’s three separate buildings containing asbestos.”

marks and spencer

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Built in the early 1930s, M&S has been at the site since 1967

Gove firstput the scheme on ice in Aprilbut an independent planning inspector will now consider evidence for and against the project before preparing a report and recommendations for the government in the coming months.

The scheme, if approved, will see the Art Deco store torn down and replaced with a 10-storey retail and office block.

参考伦敦最著名的街道之一涌现出的一些破旧的商店,Berendji说:“(戈夫)似乎更喜欢出售假冒商品的商店激增,而不是以零售为主导的黄金标准来振兴英国最受欢迎的商业街。”

“All the while this political grandstanding goes on, we cannot get on with creating a better place to shop for our customers, a better place to work for our colleagues, and a better public realm for the community in a store that would use less than a quarter of the energy required by the existing buildings.”

London mayor Sadiq Khan had given the plans the green light, despite revisiting the issue when it emerged the Greater London Authority had failed to consider a scathing report that had raised concerns about its carbon emissions.

But Berendji said: “An independent assessment of the building’s carbon impact across its whole lifecycle concluded that the new build offered significant sustainability advantages over a refurbishment and, on completion, will be amongst the top 10% performing buildings in London.

“For a government purportedly focussed on the levelling up agenda, calling in this significant investment in one of our most iconic shopping locations will have a chilling affect for regeneration programmes across the country.”

Pilbrow &  Partners' proposals for the Marble Arch branch of Marks & Spencer

Pilbrow & Partners’ proposals for the Marble Arch branch of Marks & Spencer

保留该建筑的活动人士对玛莎百货的说法提出了质疑,并表示应该对其进行翻新,而不是面对着毁灭之球。

News of the public inquiry is set toincrease the nervesof those behind another scheme Gove has called a halt to via a so-called Article 31 notice.

Approved by Lambeth council earlier this year, the secretary of state last month said he wanted another look at the plans by Make Architects to turn the former ITV Studios on the South Bank into a mixed-use development.

Local campaigners have said the £400m scheme, which includes a 26-storey tower, is out of keeping with the area and should be torn up and redrawn.

No reason for the Article 31 notice at the site has been given but, as well as being criticised for its appearance, concerns are growing at government level about the wisdom of developers knocking down buildings and replacing them.

The scheme at 72 Upper Ground was set to be built by Lendlease with McGee set to start demolition work on the 1970s block this summer. It is being developed by Mitsubishi Estate and CO-RE.