A property speculator has removed the staircase from a residential block as part of its conversion from offices to flats, halving the available fire escapes in the building for the residents of its 119 homes.
Green Dragon House: 119 flats, but only a single fire escape
This was not long after its developers, Inspired Homes, had plastered “Vote Barwell” posters on all its windows before that year’s General Election. Two-bed flats in Green Dragon House now sell for around £350,000. One-bed flats are rented out for more than £1,000 per month.
But despite the “luxury” amenities provided by the developers, including concierge service and roof garden, in the event of a fire or other emergency, residents in the building have just a single staircase from the upper floors.
The lack of an alternative, second stairwell in Grenfell Tower has been noted by firefighters and victims as an important factor in the scale of that tragedy in north Kensington earlier this summer, when more than 80 people lost their lives and hundreds of others lost their homes.
Green Dragon House is not as tall a building as Grenfell. But when it was built as offices 50 years ago, it was designed to provide alternative escape routes for its occupants. Since the building’s conversion, under controversial permitted development rules which avoid too much interference from planning committees, one staircase has been removed so that the developer could squeeze in extra living accommodation on each floor.
Croydon town centre has more than 1,000 flats that have been converted from former office blocks. Few of those have been subjected to scrutiny by the local authority’s planning department because of the permitted development rules introduced under the former Communities Secretary, Eric Pickles. Labour councillors in Croydon have labelled some of the permitted development flats “the slums of the future”. The Labour-run council has tried to put a block on permitted developments since 2015.
Impact House will offer its residents wonderful views of the Flyover once conversion work is completed next year
Two years ago, Inspired Homes threatened never to invest in Croydon again if it was not allowed to create more of its £300,000 rabbit hutches. That appears to have been an empty threat.
Inspired Homes is now working on two more office conversions near the town centre: Central Cross, by a busy crossroads in South End, and Impact House, which offers marvellous views of the Croydon Flyover and is likely to be completed in 2018.
At Central Cross, Inspired Homes say that they “have delivered a comprehensive redevelopment of the building to provide luxurious new one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments to Croydon”.
Flats in Central Cross are likely to be flogged off later this year with a three-bed apartment on the top floor being marketed at £600,000.
Inspired say: “We strive to deliver the highest quality finish across all our developments, therefore you can expect superb, top of the range specifications including, Bosch kitchen appliances, engineered hardwood flooring, granite worktops, beautiful Bathrooms with Villeroy & Boch Sanitary ware, NEST Smart Thermostat, Concierge Service and 1GB Superfast Hyperoptic Broadband.”
Just not a second staircase and emergency exit if you live in Green Dragon House.
Inspired Homes’ chief executive is Martin Skinner, who describes himself in Companies House documents as an “Entreprenure”. Presumably pronounced to rhyme with “manure”.
Skinner has gone on the record as saying that permitted development has “no effect on fire safety”.
In 2015, Inspired Homes plastered the windows of Green Dragon House with Vote Barwell posters
As well as removing fire escapes from buildings, Tory-supporting Skinner – he plastered the windows of Impact House with “Vote Conservative” posters before this year’s General Election, too – appears to hold even his own “executive apartment” customers in contempt.
In March this year, his company was granted planning permission for a new, 11-storey residential tower to be built in a car park within a few metres of the windows of the Green Dragon House flats. The scheme even attracted complaints from Conservative councillors.
This building on Scarbrook Road is to be “single core”: that is, it will have just one stairwell serving its 11 floors.
While the Grenfell Tower tragedy has focused much attention on fire precautions and building standards, it is becoming increasingly clear that many property developers are intent on doing only the bare minimum on safety standards in an attempt to reduce their construction costs.
There is no suggestion that Inspired Homes have not complied fully with the relevant fire and building regulations in Green Dragon House or their other office-to-residential conversions. But the regulations for residential properties tend to be less demanding than for commercial buildings, and in this case, the developer has exploited that loophole to squeeze extra flats or residential space on to each floor at the expense of a potential fire exit.
Other loopholes have also been used by developers. Last month, Inside Croydon reported how the borough’s tallest building, 43-storey Saffron Tower at West Croydon, had been built without any sprinklers fitted, even though construction work did not commence until four years after building regulations made such sprinkler systems mandatory in all residential blocks above 30 metres in height. The developer was able to do so because they had registered their ownership of the site before the law change, some five years before construction started.
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