| The Olympia Battle is due to start 
                next month, when a Public Inquiry will be held. Over 400 residents 
                of 30 different streets in the neighbourhood, residents associations 
                and local organisations are ready to fight St George plans to 
                build 251 residential units where the Olympia Car Park is currently 
                located. If St. George has the go ahead, the Maclise Road woodland 
                will disappear, among many other adverse consequences to current 
                and future residents.
 The woodland is a scarce green lung in the area. St George proposal 
                would destroy 90% of the woodland and its diverse flora and fauna, 
                including a number of protected species. The site contains squirrels, 
                frogs among other amphibians and reptiles and many trees such 
                as Holm oak, ash, elder, sycamore and apple. Bats do use the green 
                area as a feeding site on reported sightings on various occasions. 
                Due the density of berry-bearing shrubs it is particularly attractive 
                to migratory birds for feeding and there is a variety of breeding 
                birds, including blackbirds, wood pigeons, warbles, thrushes, 
                jays, magpies, wrens, robins and woodpecker. It can be found there 
                several types of funghi, such as hypholoma, judas' ears, polypores, 
                russulae, peziza and saffron caps. Residents reported months ago 
                the sight of house sparrows, whose population is declining dramatically 
                in London, and Sparrohawk, a bird of prey that was threatened 
                by extinction in the 50's and 60's. This spring, bluebells, violets 
                and speedwell appeared in great numbers in the site. This is all 
                under threat.
 "Losing the woodland would 
                be a tragedy for the animals that live on it, and for the residents 
                who enjoy it - and for what? For St George to make a huge profit 
                out of several hundred more expensive, short-term business-rental-type 
                properties: unlikely to contribute much to the life of our local 
                community", says Alan Jenkins, a literary editor who lives 
                at 130 Sinclair Road. 
 Both councils involved, Hammersmith and Fulham and Kensington 
                and Chelsea, have unanimously rejected the first Planning Application 
                to develop the Olympia Car Park. But the biggest developer in 
                London won't be stopped easily. The company appealed against the 
                councils' decision and now a Public Enquiry will be held from 
                the 3rd September.
 
 Together with residents and other local organisations, SRRA is 
                working to present a "rock-solid case" at the Planning 
                Enquiry. The association requested independent specialist advice. 
                One of the country's leading environmental consultancies have 
                produced the first of three biodiversity report, the most complete 
                ever conducted on the site, showing how important the preservation 
                - and enhancement - of the Olympia Car Park green space is to 
                the community.
 
 St George plans are for a 435m long predominantly five-storey 
                continuous block of flats abutting the railway, with a two-storey 
                house at each end. The site, known as the Olympia car park, is 
                situated just to the north of Olympia Exhibition Centre. It is 
                a thin strip of land, running in a south-east to north-west direction, 
                between the West London Railway line and the rear of the nos. 
                2 to 150 Sinclair Road.
 Alan Jenkins says: "It would 
                involve destroying the two-acre woodland which is a valuable tract 
                of green space (a "green corridor") in a borough that 
                has very few green spaces; it is a habitat for a variety of wildlife 
                and a contributor to the biodiversity of the area - biodiversity 
                and ecological factors are given great prominence in the report 
                on planning for London published recently by the Mayor's office."
 The Mayor's Biodiversity Strategy expects planning permission 
                to be refused if a proposed development has a significant adverse 
                effect on land identified as being important for nature conservation 
                and the Maclise Road woodland has received such status by the 
                GLA.
 The whole of the proposed development 
                site lies within a "Green Corridor", as designated in 
                the Unitary Development Plans (UDPs) of both LBHF and RBK&C. 
                The land is also a Site of Nature Conservations Importance Grade 
                I.
 Both councils specially acknowledge the benefit from the trees. 
                A Tree Preservation Order (TPO) was placed on all the trees of 
                the site in December 2002 by LBHF and RBK&C. The order makes 
                it an offence to cut down, uproot prune, damage or destroy the 
                tree or trees in question.
 
 The London Biodiversity Strategy also identified that there is 
                a particular lack of woodland in central boroughs north of the 
                Thames and eastwards into Essex. "The seven boroughs along 
                the Thames, from Hammersmith and Fulham to Barking and Dageham 
                have less than 20 hectares of woodland between them, denying residents 
                easy access to this popular habitat", says the document.
 So scarce is woodland in this part 
                of London that the site alone, with 0.5 hectare of woodland, accounts 
                for over 3% of the total amount present in the seven London boroughs 
                adjoining the Thames from Barking to Hammersmith and Fulham. "The loss of a precious little 
                woodland area with its mature trees and the stupidity of putting 
                such a huge building on such a small and inappropriate site and 
                you can understand why we simply do not want it", says Lynda 
                Trapnell, from 28a Sinclair Road.
 Apart of the consequences to the local fauna and flora, the lost 
                of the woodland would also have several side effects to residents 
                as pointed out in the document submitted by Case Officer Niko 
                Grigoropoulos to LBHF Planning Committee: "The area is already 
                densely populated and suffers low standard of air quality. The 
                lost of the woodland, a green lung in the area, while the car 
                fumes would experience within a more enclosed area, resulting 
                in increased incidence of asthma, especially children."
 
 The report concludes: "The applicants fail to provide any 
                nature conservation measures within their development to further 
                the intentions of the green corridor designation. The total coverage 
                (with the exception of the northernmost tip) of the site with 
                buildings and road surface means that there is no space available 
                to provide open space and trees within the site. The proposal 
                would result in the loss of an existing nature conservation asset, 
                endanger mature trees in the rear gardens of the Sinclair Road 
                properties, make no contribution whatsoever to bio-diversity, 
                open space or play area provision. It would instead result in 
                the destruction of an existing open space, woodland, TPO trees 
                and would provide sterile built environment, to the detriment 
                of the amenities of local residents and the future occupiers of 
                this development."
 
 Residents are also concerned about the danger and lack of security 
                if the green corridor is removed. People will be able to invade 
                most of the houses, since the gardens are not prepared to prevent 
                that at the present. And the proposed building, amplified by the 
                loss of the woodland, would contrast with the appearance and treatment 
                of the rear elevation of the Sinclair Road terraced properties.
 
 "At present we look out onto woodlands. If the development 
                was to take place we would look out onto other flats and be overlooked 
                by them, affecting light and privacy", says Monica Aroma, 
                resident at 128 Sinclair Road.
 
 St George development will suppose many other adverse consequences 
                to residents in terms of traffic congestion, parking space, road, 
                noise and safety. Watch out this space next week when residents 
                will be speaking up.
 
  For more up-to-date information on how to stop St George development: 
                SRRA Web site
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