Plans to revamp Liverpool Street Station have been hit with over 2,100 objections, with the designs being labelled as “ugly and uninspired”. The public, local authorities, Historic England and Westminster City Council have all voiced their concerns on the City of London Corporation’s planning portal, calling for the plans to be rejected.
Property developer Sellar, who teamed up with MTR and Network Rail to propose the redevelopment, argued that the plans “will help London to maintain its status as a world-class city – at no cost to passengers or the taxpayer”.
The £1.5billion project, which was submitted last year, would see part of the Victorian station knocked down and a 20-storey tower built above the neighbouring Grade-II* former Great Eastern Hotel.
The plans also include £450m worth of upgrades to the station itself, such as more lifts and escalators, a new upper concourse and improved step-free access. The most contentious part of the proposed scheme is the tower, which planning documents suggest will house office and hotel space, as well as amenities like a swimming pool.
Sellar and its partners argue that the redevelopment of Liverpool Street is necessary, as it was last updated in the 1980s and is now over capacity. In fact, it has become the busiest station in Britain, with 80.4 million entries and exits recorded between April 2022 and March 2023, according to Office of Rail and Road (ORR) data, reports MyLondon.
However, since the plans were revealed, they have faced opposition from heritage and conservation groups, as well as members of the public. As of March 25, a whopping 2,192 comments had been posted on the City of London’s planning portal about the scheme.
Of these, a staggering 2,154 are objections, with just 29 in favour.
Luke Christodoulou, one of the most recent commenters, slammed the proposal as ‘ugly and uninspired’, arguing that the designs do not respect the city’s heritage.
He wrote: “If someone wants to bulldoze a historic building and plonk an office block on top (which being honest, no one needs) then they should at least pull their finger out and design something worthy of standing in the place of a historic building,” He added that the 1991 rebuild was more considerate of the original structure and character of the building.
“This new plan seeks to replace all of that with white walls, modern curves and the greatest insult: a boring glass block entirely devoid of character squatting on top. Giving these greedy and lazy developers and architects approval will be a mistake, with a constant underwhelming reminder looming over us all for the next thirty years until someone else decides to bulldoze it again because it needs ‘updating’ with whatever trendy architectural touch happens to be cheap and trendy then, as it is now.”
Others accused the plans of likely to cause ‘substantial harm’ to the existing train shed, as well as to the neighbouring hotel. “Architecturally the project is really a fist in the face,” wrote Pascal Dubois-Pelerin.
“The proposed entrance and office towers are grossly out of place in all respects, mass, location, design and style. The whole thing makes a mockery of the existing buildings, particularly the listed ones, of the area, and of common sense in general.”
Westminster City Council is also among those to file objections, due to its impact on the site of St Paul’s Cathedral and ‘strategic views as experienced from within Westminster’.
The local authority expressed their concerns, stating: “We conclude that the development will harm the setting of St Paul’s Cathedral and will harmfully change an appreciation of this Strategically Important Landmark in views identified as being of strategic importance,” and “We believe the proposal would be contrary to the policies identified within the London Plan and the City of London Local Plan.”
One group strongly against the project is the Liverpool Street Station Campaign (LISSCA), which saved the site from demolition in the 1970s. The campaign includes groups like SAVE Britain’s Heritage and The Twentieth Century Society, and is led by The Victorian Society.
Marie Clements, who speaks for The Victoria Society, said: “The plans by Network Rail, developer Sellar and rail network operator MTR will demolish much of the listed sympathetic 20th-century trainshed which closely matches the Victorian original, severing the link between the two listed Victorian buildings, and cantilevering a 20-storey tower above the hotel and station. This is unprecedented over a Grade-II* listed building.”
“The Victorian Society and 10 other amenity societies and heritage organisations believe that if these plans are approved it would set a terrible precedent which would mean that no listed building is safe from harm. As shown in Birmingham currently other developers are following this idea of seeking planning permission to cantilever over heritage buildings.”
Ms Clements added the group’s original petition against the plans garnered more than 26,000 signatures, and that it is continuing to fundraise to fight the application.
James Sellar, Chief Executive at Sellar, said: “Throughout the application process we have worked closely with the City of London Corporation and will continue to do so in the current determination period. In the context of the number of objections received, these should be balanced against the circa 130 million passenger journeys that would be improved should these essential upgrades to Liverpool Street station be approved.”
“These proposals will help London to maintain its status as a world-class city – at no cost to passengers or the taxpayer. Our entire approach prioritises protecting and enhancing the historic elements of both the Great Eastern Hotel and of the station itself. The original Victorian railway sheds at Liverpool Street station will not be touched but will be celebrated by opening up new views to and through them.”