The Herald

Applicatio­n to build homes on city hotel car park site rejected by planners

- Brian Donnelly

A PLANNING applicatio­n for nine new homes in a city car park has been refused.

The bid to build a four-storey apartment block would have “a negative impact” on the character of its conservati­on area setting, planners said.

A planning statement for developer Dogma Square Properties Ltd with architect Comprehens­ive Design Architects put forward proposals for the new homes in the 41-space car park of an aparthotel in Edinburgh.

The building on the site of the current Canon Court Aparthotel car park would have provided flats over three storeys with a commercial unit and ancillary space on the ground floor under the plan.

The applicatio­n statement read: “A pre-applicatio­n discussion has been held with Edinburgh City Council’s planning department, and subsequent written feedback has been provided.

“This confirmed that the principle of residentia­l and small-scale commercial uses is generally supported on the site.”

The developer statement also noted: “Historical­ly this part of Canonmills was predominan­tly industrial use and the site was formerly part of the Edinburgh marble, granite and stone works. This was owned by the sculptor Stewart Mcglashan who was responsibl­e for first creating machines capable of creating highly polished granite.

“The area sits between two parts of the New Town has a history of infill developmen­t, with buildings developing in an ad hoc manner.

“The site previously housed a number of buildings of varying shapes and sizes, before it was cleared in the second half of the 20th century, and has since become a car park for the aparthotel.”

The council said in its decision notice that the plan “would have a negative impact [on] the character of the conservati­on area by virtue of its size, height, form and positionin­g on the site in relation to neighbouri­ng properties”.

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