Red tape dogs stadium plans

Catford Stadium Catford Stadium

DEVELOPERS are poised to apply for planning permission for hundreds of homes at the Oxford Stadium site.

Oxford City Council has confirmed it has already received an initial bid for housing at the former greyhound track.

Planning bosses rejected it because it lacked some administrative details but are now expecting a fresh bid in the next few days.

Planning agent Savills is acting on behalf of Galliard Homes, which has previously said it wants to build 225 homes.

Dog racing at the stadium stopped on December 29 after the Greyhound Racing Association, which owns the business, said it was no longer viable after a lucrative Friday morning race meet was cancelled.

City council spokesman Louisa Dean said: “We have received the planning application. However, it has not been registered yet as it was invalid upon submission because the applicant did not provide the city council with the required information that we need to register and assess the application.”

She would not say what information was missing, but Savills spokesman Andrew Raven said a further application would be made soon.

He said: “We’re preparing final information and discussing what that is with the council at the moment.”

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Mr Raven said it was “hard to say” how long the next stage would take. He also dismissed calls for the stadium to re-open as a leisure facility.

He said: “There needs to be a viable proposal for the site of some kind and that’s what we’re looking at. We’ve looked at the possibility of leisure uses and they are not viable.”

He would not say how many homes the application was for.

Council leader Bob Price said the council would not back plans for 225 homes.

He said: “The council’s view, which is in our sites and housing plan, is that this is a leisure site not a housing site, and I can’t see that changing.”

Ian Sawyer, chairman of Save Oxford Stadium, said he was worried the old shell could be left to crumble like Catford Stadium in South London, which closed 10 years ago.

He said: “It’s good that the council has said it won’t give planning permission, but it needs to remain open as a leisure facility.”

When the planning application is received it will then pass to the city council’s east area planning committee for a decision.

Irish greyhound racing mogul Paschal Taggart has previously announced he would foot the bill if the council and campaigners wanted to mount a bid to buy the site to secure its continued use as a racing track.

Comments(4)

Myron Blatz says...
7:26am Thu 7 Mar 13

Gone to the dogs? It doesn't take long for dereliction to set-in, and then a 'mysterious fire' to make the main buildings into a bombsite - something often associated with unscrupulous development. And yet, it does seem strange that whereas City Council is quite happy to consider knocking down community centres and swimming pools and building on the sites which it owns, on Blackbird Leys the City Council Leader seems adamant that the site should not have homes built on it, but should remain a leisure facility. Or, does Cllr Price have the Stadium on his 'radar' for other uses - such as the new streetscene recycling depot, together with Council offices currently based at Horspath?

Arnold.Brewer says...
7:32am Thu 7 Mar 13

I cannot understand why Savills cannot get the plans in according to the rules - they are meant to be professional and seem only to be employing delaying tactics.

Let us hope that the buyer who wants it stay as a stadium is a patient man

Cityview says...
12:59pm Thu 7 Mar 13

Is there a reason this story is illustrated with a photo of Catford Stadium or has the Sandy Lane site been renamed?

Myron Blatz says...
6:53pm Thu 7 Mar 13

Dog track called 'Catford' - there's irony for you! As for the former Cowley Community Centre site, seems Mr McCloud hasn't really got such a 'grand design' after all. If he leaves it much longer, both he and the building plot will be able to claim the OAP before work starts, let alone finishes! As for Savills, don't they fit you up for suits - or is that Saville Row perhaps? Nor can Comrade Price blame the Coalition Government (his favourite scapegoat) for the Dog Track, nor the lack of housing on the former Community Centre on Barns Road, the demise of Temple Cowley pool, or the sorey state which City Council left Comnunity Centres and public toilets in for donkey's years, whilst glefully 'splashing the cash' on projets which have only had limited value. I'm afraid that like Labour in Opposition at Westminster, Labour in control of Oxford City Council hasn't proven its effectiveness in the decisions it takes and makes - especially planning, and the way it seems to want to keep on expanding its 'tentacles of power and effluence' in its bid to keep on growing. Would City Council opposition to the Stadium development be the same, if it had been a 'preferred development partner' I wonder?

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