Scheme to replace 1960s shopping centre with mixed use development
Designs by architect JTP for a major redevelopment of a Maidenhead shopping centre have been given the green light.
The Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead voted unanimously to approve the proposals, which JTP said will see the “obsolete, outdated” 1960s Nicholsons shopping centre flattened and replaced by a mixed-use town centre development.
The scheme, dubbed the Nicholsons Quarter, will consist of 346 homes, 307 senior living homes, 30,000 sq m of office space, up to 60 shops and restaurants and 1.5 acres of open space.
The practice said that the new homes have been designed to support home working with larger rooms, business entre amenities and private open spaces.
The redevelopment is being driven by development manager Areli, working on behalf of the owner of the existing shopping centre, Tikehau Capital.
The project team also includes planning firm DP9, transport consultant Aecom and Exterior Architecture.
JTP partner Emmet O’Sullivan said that the go ahead was a “tremendously positive step forward, especially in a time where high streets and town centres have been completely assaulted by the impact of the pandemic”.
It will also include a new public space named Sir Nicholas Winton Square by local residents.
Winton was a British banker who supervised the rescue of 669 children from Nazi Germany during the Second World War.
He lived for much of his adult life in Maidenhead and was buried in the town after his death in 2015 aged 106.
A statue of Winton at Maidenhead railway station was unveiled by then-home secretary and local MP Theresa May in 2010, a year after a similar statue of Winton at Prague’s main railway station was unveiled.
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