PATCHAM PLACE TO BE BUSINESS CENTRE & COMMUNITY HUB

THE CITY COUNCIL HAVE APPROVED THE SALE OF A LONG LEASE OF PATCHAM PLACE TO KINGSPAN, A LOCAL BUILDING COMPANY FOR USE AS OFFICES. An application for change of use would be required and is awaited. The Council’s Heritage Team has produced a Conservation & Design Briefing Note for the building.

THIS IS GOOD NEWS. There is likely to be space for smaller firms and rooms for the community to rent. The Preston & Old Patcham Society have always considered that offices were the best use for Patcham Place as the conversion would do the least damage to the interior of the building, unlike a hotel with many bathrooms and lots of plumbing. Small start-up offices are also a good idea, we do not have enough of them in Brighton and they encourage new businesses to establish themselves.

Patcham Place, grade II* listed, is now in the South Downs National Park. It has been empty since 2007 when the Youth Hostels Association’s lease expired, except for a temporary occupier Camelot Property Management.

The Council now propose to lease the building for a number of years. It is most suitable for office space which would do least damage to the interior which is protected by the listing.

SQUATTERS EVICTED FROM PRESTON ROAD VILLAS

The villas are now securely boarded up and the front gardens have been baricaded.  A housing association recently submitted plans to renovate the villas and upgrade the flats, a plan which The Preston and Old Patcham Society welcomed. The Society fears that funding to carry out the work has been cancelled as a result of the credit crunch. The Council claimed that once the squatters had left the villas they would be refurbished and upgraded to provide temporary accommodation for homeless households. Several months later there is no evidence that work on the villas is imminent.

PATCHAM COURT FARM

It seems that a developer has plans for a new hotel and office accommodation on the Patcham Court Farm site. The Local plan designates the site for office development, but does not mention an hotel. The Preston and Old Patcham Society has always maintained that the site is only suitable for low-rise housing. The inspector did not agree with us at recent public inquiry, but supported the Council’s opinion that the site should be used for offices.

Schemes for offices and an hotel would generate an enormous amount of car borne traffic as the site is not well served by public transport. The Preston & Old Patcham Society will continue to oppose these kinds of proposals.