H&F Council Leader Blasts 'Incompetent' Earls Court Developer


As cabinet agrees to £2.15 billion scheme to regenerate 'derelict' land

Earls Court development site


Hammersmith and Fulham Council will embark on a £2.15 billion bid to take back swathes of 'derelict' land in Earl’s Court, in the hope of building thousands of homes.

Labelled ten years ago as the Earl’s Court Opportunity Area, work on the chunk of land once home to the Exhibition Centre of the same name, and equal to the size of 29 football pitches, has been stagnant.

At a council cabinet meeting on 7 October, Council leader, Cllr Stephen Cowan took aim at developer Capital and Counties (Capco) for leaving the area 'desolate'.

Hammersmith & Fulham Council Leader Cllr Stephen Cowan

The Labour leader said: "It’s hard to see a less competent approach to redevelopment than the one that Capital and Counties have taken."

After threatening Capco for several months, council chiefs voted on 7 October to go ahead with a bid to force the company to sell off sections of the land, and break a long-running deadlock.

Cllr Cowan said: "It’s a desolate and derelict site… in a capital city, during Brexit and an economic slow-down that’s on the horizon. It’s a crying shame when you consider the housing crisis.

"It is only right that when this moribund scheme isn’t going forward, that we should move forward with a compulsory purchase order… and provide the economic infrastructure and homes that are much needed for London.

"Capco are not a developer. What Capco are, is a property speculator."

Much of the site was sold to Capco by the council when it was led by the Conservatives. It was given planning permission  to build 7,500 homes across the site in 2013.

A recent council report said: "The compensation cost to acquire the land alone is estimated to be £650 million based on information currently available."

And that’s before it plans its own giant housing scheme, which it predicts could cost "a further £1.5 billion over and above the remaining infrastructure costs".

As part of its case for making the CPO, The report suggested that 'funding' would come from borrowing, and trying to establish 'market interest' in joining with an 'investment partner'.

However the report also said that, if the council gets its way, the end of 2021 may be the earliest it can reclaim the land and plan its new housing scheme.

A spokesperson for Capco said it was "advised that LBHF [the council] has not demonstrated that they have a credible position in relation to CPO, a process which is only likely to slow down the Earl’s Court scheme and delay the range of public benefits that could arise from the Opportunity Area".

Capco, also a major real estate mogul in Covent Garden, has reportedly been trying to sell its stake in Earl’s Court for up to a year.
 
The Mail on Sunday reported on 6 vOctober that Capco has been in talks with property giants including: Delancey, Canary Wharf Group, Hong Kong-based CK Asset Holdings, and 'Asia’s richest man', Li Ka-shing.

A spokesperson for Capco said this was 'speculation'.

In this unusual case, the CPO could prove controversial because large parts of the site, such as the Lillie Bridge Depot, are co-owned by Capco and TfL. Another section ― the area north of West Brompton Station – sits outside the council’s land, in Kensington and Chelsea.

The CPO area does not include the West Kensington and Gibbs Green estates, where residents have felt uncertainty about the future of their homes.

In a public inquiry that would decide whether the CPO is valid, the council would have to show that no other options were available to free the land from Capco. Permission would also have to be given by the current Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government.

The council and Capco dispute whether 'formal talks' between the two sides, about selling the land back to the council, have taken place.

A Capco spokesperson said previous comments by Mr Cowan, that Capco had wanted to sell the land back to the council, were 'not factually accurate'.

A report produced for the council by real estate services company, Avison Young, has advised the council it should pursue a final round of negotiations with Capco for a period of four months next year, before submitting the CPO plans to the Government.

The council hired Avison Young for £3.2 million to compose a strategy for the CPO.

A TfL spokesperson said: "We share Hammersmith and Fulham Council’s desire to see development underway at Earls Court. We welcome any proposal that will see development commence quickly with much higher levels of affordable housing brought forward."

Kensington and Chelsea Council did not respond to requests for comment.

Owen Sheppard - Local Democracy Reporter

October 8, 2019