Scheme to be built close to Millwall’s football ground
A housing development that will deliver 120 flats and 605 co-living studios has been given the go-ahead by Southwark Council.
Architect TP Bennett’s proposals for Ilderton Road in Bermondsey are a reworking of a scheme by SPPARC Architecture for the site – a stone’s throw from Milwall FC’s The Den stadium, which Southwark resolved to approve in 2020.
The plans for co-living developer Fifth State and Wittington Investments comprise two buildings separated by a pocket park.
The northern building features towers of 27 storeys and 18 storeys, linked by a five-storey podium. The southern building has towers of 16 storeys and 10 storeys linked by a five-storey podium.
In terms of height, the TP Bennett proposals are broadly in line with SPPARC’s 312-flat scheme, which was drawn up for a different client. Wittington acquired the site last year.
The latest proposals also feature a 123 sq m not-for-profit community café, 363 sq m of flexible commercial space and 460 sq m of flexible employment space, the majority of which will be “affordable”.
>>See also: The co-living mini-boom and why not everyone is happy about it
Recommending TP Bennett’s proposals, council officers said the scheme would deliver “exemplary” purpose-built co-living accommodation alongside 120 “high quality affordable dwellings”.
“Forming an interesting composition and possessing a strong urban character, and with robust and high-quality materials specified throughout, the proposed buildings would achieve an exemplary standard of architectural design,” officers said.
“The proposal would make efficient use of a prominently located and under-utilised site to deliver a high-quality and sustainable development that accords with the council’s aspirations for the area.”
Five planning committee members voted in favour of the scheme with one abstention.
As well as TP Bennett, Wittington’s team for the project includes structural and drainage engineer Expedition, QS Quantem, fire engineer BB7 and landscape architect Churchman Thornhill Finch.
No comments yet