There will be a special planning committee on 16th December to make a decision about the Spurs stadium. It looks likely there will be no affordable housing on the site and that there will be no S106 money/CIL from the application for work in the local community.
A pretty big missed opportunity in my opinion. Doesn't seem right that a football club that can afford to pay its players exorbitant salaries can' t afford to put something back into the local community.
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There's lively and there's lively, Michael. We're talking about very large crowds - sometimes containing potentially antagonistic groups - arriving and departing in a short space of time. Then multiply that pressure with the aim of having other public events 365 days a year. Perhaps think about the O2 Arena which which I think has a maximum capacity of about a third of what Spurs propose.
Yes there is a return to central London but - as I'm neither a planner nor an urbanist - my guess would be that numbers, scale, intensity, - as a planner yourself you can tell me what the correct technical terms may be - affect the character and sheer enjoyment of city streets. At what point does increasing the traffic including coaches, the footfall, plus crowded buses and trains, draconian 7 day parking restrictions; turn city liveliness and conviviality into unpleasant overcrowding which many people will wish to avoid?
Since Spurs publicised their 365 days a year proposal perhaps Haringey planners have advised Haringey Councillors - and published their advice so residents can also read it - about the potential downside of this. I can't remember them doing so when I was a councillor.
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