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City gears up for fight over rulings on student housing



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Published Date: 21 April 2008
COUNCILLORS are set for a battle over their decision to refuse permission for a massive student housing complex – as they prepare to give the go-ahead to another scheme.

Plans by the Unite Group, which provides accommodation for thousands of students across the UK, to build new flats on Chalmers Street are set to be given the green light on Wednesday.

At the same time, councillors are expected to rubber-stamp th
eir decision to throw-out a similar project by Unite for McDonald Road in anticipation that the company will appeal to the Scottish Government.

The Chalmers Street scheme, which would see rooms for around 250 students created on the former NCP car park by the old Royal Infirmary, has itself drawn waves of protest from local residents and community leaders who claim that the area is already over-populated with students.

The plans have also been kept in limbo for months by councillors, who have stalled their decision over the scheme on three separate occasions in order to carry out visits to the site and evaluate the impact the flats would have on local residents.

But, after months of behind-the-scenes wrangling and changes to the scheme, the plans are now set to get the final seal of approval.

The move comes a month after Unite was refused permission for its McDonald Road scheme.

It had originally been backed by officials and would have seen almost 300 student bedrooms built in a new complex on the street, but the plans were turned down by councillors after local residents argued that it would lead to an "over-provision" of student accommodation in the area.

Councillors are expected to give a final clarification over the reasons for refusing the scheme on Wednesday, which will be used to justify their decision on appeal.

Jim Lowrie, the city's planning leader, said: "The committee refused the McDonald Road scheme after a vote last month and, although the plans are now coming back to us again this week, that decision cannot be overturned. We will effectively be rubber-stamping the reasons that were given for refusing the scheme so that they can be used if – as is expected – Unite appeal against the decision.

"However, the company have made alterations to their other proposals for the Chalmers Street student flats. We will be discussing those and making a decision on that scheme on Wednesday."

Officials from Unite said they were hopeful of seeing the Chalmers Street plans approved and added they had made "significant changes" to both schemes over the past few months.

Mike Pottinger-Glass, design and planning director at Unite in Scotland, said:

"With the obvious shortage of student accommodation within Edinburgh, we are committed to raising the choice, standard, service and quality of student housing in the city."







The full article contains 476 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 21 April 2008 1:32 PM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Students in Edinburgh
 
1

reader,

Edinburgh 21/04/2008 13:46:11
Whatever keeps students out of family flats must be welcomed. And it should be no surprise that the area around Edinburgh University has a high student population. Surely living close to one's place of work/study makes sense economically and ecologically. If more purpose-built accommodation is put up maybe some families can move back into Marchmont and create a greater diversity of people.

2

Als,

21/04/2008 13:57:07
I've seen signs for student residents all over the place! Why is it we have all these halls of residence popping up everywhere, but there still thousands of people looking for a place to live. Can the cooncil be as enthusiastic about affordable housing as they are about profits?
3

M Slavata,

Embra 21/04/2008 14:22:39
#2 - I think the Council are as enthusiastic as ever on providing affordable housing with percentages of all commercial residential schemes over a certain number having to provide affordable housing through Housing Associations.

The problem is that no developer, big or small has got the funding to deliver this housing because of the credit crunch and other stealth taxes imposed on them through Tram, cycle, car-club, carbon-offset, building the building in gold leaf, providing car parking, not providing car parking, etc etc.....

It is going to be a long time before the affordable housing requirement is met and in the meantime, there are thousands of students out there looking for places to live.
4

,

21/04/2008 16:06:27
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
5

Lady of Shallot,

21/04/2008 17:11:40
Most students couldn't afford the prices Unite charge - 119 a week for a room in a shared flat at the proposed Macdonald Rd for example! (includes a bus pass apparently so deduct cost of that)

http://www.unite-students.com/HMSOnline/QuickSearch.do

The usual price for a shared flat room is around 280 - 300 per month; 70 - 75 a week.
I pay 85 a week for my studio flat and Unite charge 157 a week!
Only the yah's can afford that.
6

Dave101,

Leith 21/04/2008 20:49:21
£119 a week!!!! That is more than I pay for my mortgage, council tax and bills!
7

M Slavata,

Embra 21/04/2008 21:28:36
#5 - Ouch!, does look pricey on the face of it! - but it appears to include all of the heating, electricity, utilities, tv and license and internet - so I guess there's how the rent is made up and maybe not such a bad deal - but shouldn't students learn to live in freezing cold, damp flats with knackered heating, no phone and no tv and have a landlord who doesn;t give a damn and nick their deposits? - how on earth are they gonna learn the hard way!!!!
8

Mr Fuzzy,

Edinburgh 22/04/2008 01:34:11
#5
For a privately rented two bedroom flat:

A monthly bus pass is around 38 pounds - say ten pounds a week.
TV license, which is about 190 pounds/year or 3 pounds/week. Internet through VirginMedia is 40 pounds/month or 10 pounds/week.
Electricity is 240 pounds/quarter or 20 pounds/week.
Basic rent as said is 70 to 75 pounds/week.
Phone bills (using Skype) = 4 pounds/month = 1 pound week
Total = 119 pounds

If you were renting a flat with people you knew on your course then it would seem a good deal. You don't have to worry about being "evicted" because the landlord suddenly decides she/he needs the flat back or wants to rent it out to a friend instead.

#7
Internet access is the most important requirement for any student flat now - all across the world. Even five years ago, landlords in remote locations found themselves besieged by student tenants simply because they were in a broadband area. Once you have that, you get TV and international phone calls for free, and you may also get to watch necessary required lectures using the Internet as well.
9

Pmonkey7,

22/04/2008 07:12:22
#8

31 quid pm for the bus pass, 140 a year for TV, I have virgin broadband at 15 a month and 10 pounds-ish a week is closer to electric, even on a meter and it gets cheaper if you are sharing it.

 

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