





News from the Royal Borough of Greenwich for our residents
News from the Royal Borough of Greenwich for our residents
From ParksFest to Royal Greenwich Festivals funded by the Council, don’t miss the free, family events on your doorstep this summer...
TARU Arts Kidbrooke Carnival
Saturday 6 July, 12 noon to 6pm, free entry
Cator Park and Pegler Square, Kidbrooke, SE3 9FW
Join TARU Arts as they return to Kidbrooke to celebrate their 20th anniversary! Enjoy the Community Parade with decorations and props made by you, plus live music, performances, arts and crafts and face painting.
Royal Museums Greenwich Community Day
Saturday 13 July, 10am to 4pm, free entry
Prince Philip Maritime Collections Centre, Greenwich, SE3 9QS
This free event is packed with activities for everyone to enjoy, from behind the scenes tours to live musical performances.
Beats, Boards and BBQ
Beanfeast
Saturday 6 July, from 10.30am, free entry plus £5 per chef talk
Woolwich Works, SE18 6HD
A day of talks, discussions, demos and workshops, some free and some that have an entry charge, plus a cookbook shop with book signings and a mini marketplace.
Tramshed Union Festival
Saturday 6 July, 2pm and 4pm, free entry
Artillery Square, Woolwich, SE18 4DX
Sunday 7 July, 12 noon and 2pm
Kidbrooke Village, SE3 9FW
Reach Theatre, a company of adults with learning disabilities, present a free outdoor performance in the traditions of Cabaret and musical Theatre; in partnership with Berkeley Homes.
Saturday 13 July, 12 to 4pm, free entry
Charlton Park, SE7 8DZ
Presented by Friends of Charlton park, an afternoon of music, barbeque, Skatejam, dog skateboarding, spoken word workshops, stalls and games. Find events near you, or add events you’re organising: royalgreenwich. gov.uk/events
greenwich & lewisham Weekender is an independent weekly newspaper, covering the boroughs of Greenwich and Lewisham.
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Issue: GLW369
Get electric
Unravel is back for a second instalment, this time curated by Deptford-based songwriter-producer Ammonite in celebration of her debut record ‘Blueprints’.
Born out of a desire to find a home for electronic music and audiovisual experimentation, Unravel was founded earlier this year by four Deptford-based music producers, performers and visual artists – Ammonite, jl.segel, Semi Precious, Yasmin Vardi – as a space for their community and beyond to be bold, experiment and present work as it progresses.
Date: Friday 12 July 2024, 8pm
Tickets: £12, 14+ guidance Douglas Way, SE8 4AG www.thealbany.org.uk/shows/unravel-2
For teachers out of this world
Royal Museums Greenwich are inviting teachers, school staff and school governors to attend a celebration at the Royal Observatory to mark the end of term and look towards the new academic year.
In addition to exclusive free access to a planetarium show, guests will also have the opportunity to meet and network with the learning teams from the National Maritime Museum, Cutty Sark, the Royal Observatory, the Prince Phillip Maritime Collections Centre and other learning providers from the Maritime Greenwich World Heritage Site. Plus refreshments, learning resources and more information on school programmes for early years, primary, secondary, post-16 and learners with SEND across all curriculum areas, including STEM.
Date: Tuesday 9 July 2024, 4:30pm to 7pm
Tickets: Free for school staff and teachers Romney Road, SE10 9NF www.rmg.co.uk/whats-on/royal-observatory/teachers-evening-2024
Featuring some of London’s best drag talent; you will see drag kings and queens, burlesque, comedy and live singing at Woolwich Works’ pride event.
The lineup includes Beau Jangles, Miss Terri Box, Charlie Wood, Cabbage the Clown, Ezme Pump, Indy Nile, Ella the Great, and Alex Beighton and is hosted by Sweet FA. This is a free event organised by LGBTQ Greenwich (an initiative by Skills for Development) and sponsored by The National Lottery Community Fund.
Date: Friday 19 July, 2024, 7:30pm
Tickets: Free, 18+ guidance
The Fireworks Factory, 11 No 1 Street, Royal Arsenal, SE18 6HD www.woolwich.works/events/woolwichpride-a-queer-cabaret-variety-show
Grubby Little Mitts
Join sketch comics Rosie Nicholls and Sullivan Brown for their latest show at Greenwich Theatre, Grubby Little Mitts. The award-winning duo amplifi es the normal to chaotic extremes, using slapstick and absurdism to point the fi nger at the everyday. Their signature hyper-real style is embellished with rapid dialogue, musical interludes and an aggressively red aesthetic.
Date: Friday 26 July 2024, 8pm
Tickets: £16
Crooms Hill, SE10 8ES greenwichtheatre.org.uk/events/ grubbylittlemitts
Shaken, not stirred
Set in the underground Cribbs Parlour of Greenwich’s Trafalgar Tavern, master mixologist Luka will teach you how to create three of the pub’s signature cocktails, including their “infamous” Greek salad gimlet, a staple of the boozer. So, for a fun evening of shaking, muddling and creating delicious drinks, book on to the cocktail masterclass to learn how to make your favourite tasty tipple.
Date: Thursday 18 July 2024, 7pm Tickets: £35 Park Row, SE10 9NW www.trafalgartavern.co.uk/event/ cocktail-masterclass-2
Stand up and giggle
Gigl Comedy is hosting some of the best up-and-coming comedy stars at The Shirker’s Rest. So, if you’re looking for a cheap and cheerful way to spend your Thursday evening, the ‘pay what you like’ event is the evening for you – heavy on the laughs and
You’ll fi nd the stand-up sets every second Thursday of the
Date: Thursday 11 July 2024,
The Shirker’s Rest, 9 Lewisham
comedy-new-cross-stand-upcomedy-tickets-926956892017
Climb aboard for a weekend of lifesaving to celebrate 200 years of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution
Have you ever wondered how lifeboats work day in, and day out to save lives? Or how the workers throw life-saving lines with precision? Find your answers at the Cutty Sark this weekend.
To celebrate the 200th anniversary of the Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI), Royal Museums Greenwich has teamed up with the local Tower Crew to host a range of talks and activities centred around lifesaving at sea.
You will be able to watch demonstrations by the crew, learn lifesaving skills, hear stories about the lifeboats on the deck of Cutty Sark, and see the shipwright in action.
Since its foundation in 1824, the RNLI has worked to save every life at sea. The organisation is entirely self-funded and relies on the work of volunteers across the UK and Ireland.
What can you take part in on the day?
Throw line training
At the Dry Berth, join the local Tower Lifeboat Crew to practise using throw lines and learn how you can safely help someone in the water.
Crew kit timed challenge
Discover what it takes to be an RNLI crew member with timed kit challenges at the Dry Berth – and learn how every second counts.
Gallery favourite talk: The Clipper Ship Hallowe’en
In this talk at the Tween Deck, learn about the dramatic rescue of the owner of Cutty Sark John Willis’s ship Hallowe’en. Loaded with tea, she was wrecked off the South Devon coast and dramatically rescued by the crew of the RNLI Salcombe lifeboat, Alexandra. Get up close with Cutty
Sark’s lifesaving objects
Now to the Main Deck, take a look at the lifesaving equipment that would have been used onboard Cutty Sark and discover more about how the lifeboats formed part of the ship’s story.
Oar and fender making
Also on the Main Deck, see traditional skills being kept alive as the Cutty Sark shipwright makes oars for the lifeboat.
Looking to learn more? Head over to a free exhibition at the National Maritime Museum – Women of the RNLI – to discover the vital roles that women play in saving lives at sea.
The exhibition features photography, personal testimony and film, and offers a window into the lives of volunteers, as well as the stories of the people who paved the way for RNLI.
From crewmembers and lifeguards to fundraisers, mechanics and station managers, women contribute to every aspect of the RNLI’s work – and the exhibition offers a personal perspective on the lifesaving institution.
Saturday 6 and Sunday 7 July 2024, 11am to 4pm
Tickets: Included with entry to the ship (adult £20, child 4-15 £10, under 4s free)
www.rmg.co.uk/whats-on/cuttysark/rnli-weekend-cutty-sark
‘Deptford’s diverse community makes it a very interesting place to live’: Eliza Frost hears from the pair behind the project putting art at the heart
“Supporting skills of any level, this space is inclusive and open to all,” say husband and wife team, Dan and Zuzana Greenham, coowners of Deptford Does Art.
What started as an art project in 2015 – run by Zuzana while she managed a local pub – to celebrate local art and create opportunities and spaces for local artists to interact and sell their work, the project quickly developed a rich program of exhibitions at multiple venues throughout Deptford.
The opportunity to transform the project into a business came in 2017 with a permanent residence at 28 Deptford High Street. Zuzana was then joined by Dan, and the pair have run Deptford Does Art together ever since.
They tell The Weekender all about it – and what they love about the area.
The Weekender : What do you offer at Deptford Does Art?
Dan and Zuzana Greenham: Deptford Does Art is a curated gallery space and indie shop showcasing works by hundreds of artists, makers and designers. With no upfront or rental fees, and most of the money going directly to the traders, Deptford Does Art actively helps them on their creative journey.
We also offer mentorship and feedback to small businesses so that they can achieve their best growth in a commercial setting. Customers can browse through a variety of prints, greeting cards, clothing, ceramics, jewellery, candles, accessories, homeware, kids toys and so much more.
How do you choose products that fit your ethos?
Deptford Does Art highlights the wonderful diversity of art and craftsmanship done within the local studios and homes, and encourages visitors to change the way we all shop: small batch, handmade, unique and with an environmental conscience.
Where do you find the artists who paint your front shop window?
And how do they encapsulate Deptford Does Art?
We love bringing a bit of colour to the high street and smiles to people’s faces. Our window designs are often themed to the season or artwork is painted as part of the Deptford X festival. We do our own or invite artists we already work with to take over, highlighting their products in the shop and sharing their QR codes for passersby to discover. It’s just another way to highlight the local talents and invite people in.
Why is shopping small/ local so important?
There are so many positives for shopping small and local. To keep it short, if you love where you live, by shopping small and local you directly help your area and community.
The money stays local, supports the local economy and creates more jobs.
There is also an environmental aspect to it, products don’t travel far and are made in small batches, often with very little waste. Using eco-friendly materials and packaging, there is very little carbon footprint compared with buying from larger shops or brands.
What do you love about being located in Deptford?
Everything. Over the many years we’ve lived in Deptford, we saw the changes it’s gone through and love that the new fits in with the old. The diverse community makes it a very interesting place to live, with so many small businesses around you’re sure to find everything you need. It’s alive and exciting. It’s our home and we love it. What are your local recommendations?
Too many to mention! We love plants so we often pay a visit to Brett’s Deptford Flowers stall at Deptford Market or Forest by the station. If we need a little tipple to take to the park, then Jars Bar or Hop Burns & Black have got us covered.
So many options for food, our favourites are Kekaki Izakaya, KiliG and the best brunch is at Lomond Coffee. And if it’s a pint we’re after, then you can’t beat The Dog & Bell, Villages Brewery Taproom or Little Faith.
What’s next for Deptford Does Art?
We are working hard on developing an online shop so that we can expand and reach customers from further afield. And as artists, we are working on our own collection of products including prints that we’d love to launch later this year. As it’s just the two of us running the business, the time we have is very limited so it’s taking a while, but we’ll soon share some more.
@deptforddoesart on Instagram
“The destination really is the star of the show,” says Laura Flanagan, director of Greenwich Peninsula, which is hosting a series of summer events starting from 18 July.
From then until September, you will find a whole host of varied events happening at the Peninsula where you can discover music, film and flavour.
“Peninsula Summer really showcases the best of Greenwich Peninsula as a place to discover art, culture and new experiences. And when I say there’s something for everyone, I really do mean it,” says Laura, who oversees all marketing for Greenwich Peninsula, including the annual programme of events.
She explains that the summer starts with Wild Swing Mini Golf – “a stunning 9-hole golf course designed by Graphic Rewilding”. It is created in their signature maximalist floral style and draws inspiration from the wildflowers originally found in the historic Greenwich Peninsula marshlands.
Laura says it is “utterly Instagrammable and fun for all ages”. It is open from 18 July for £2 (+booking fee) per person.
A new event to highlight for this year is the jazz and food festival, Rhythm and Taste. “This will take over Design District with a brilliant line-up of ‘beats and eats’ – vinyl crate digging, wine-tasting, a New Orleans-inspired menu at Bureau restaurant, a listening lounge, in-conversations and a street art exhibition,” explains Laura.
installations right on your doorstep means you never need to travel far to discover something new.
“The fact that most of our events are free means that truly everyone can get involved and experience world-class creativity and arts in their own way and that’s not something we always see readily available across London.”
Laura says the growing community on the Peninsula has helped to make it what it is today – “a culturally rich and vibrant destination where people want to come to live, work and visit”.
It’s free to attend, but some events on the line-up, such as the wine tasting, will require a pre-booked ticket.
You will also see the return of Turning Tides Music Festival on Saturday 10 August, “one of London’s best free festivals showcasing the best in global music”.
Laura says: “We’re excited to have Girl Ray headlining this year, along with Flamingods, Das Brass and Ibibio Sound Machine, to name a few, so everyone should definitely make sure to have their dancing shoes on.”
When approaching the organisation of Peninsula Summer, Laura says
“community was vital to us”.
She explains: “We always look to make our events programme accessible to as many people as possible. This means hosting free or low-cost events and activities for all ages while not compromising on quality.
“We like to explore ways we can let our unique Peninsula location shine, whether that’s inviting artists to reimagine the riverside walkways or get inspired by the local heritage, celebrating the Design District’s stunning architecture, or working with organisations like Greenwich + Docklands International Festival to turn our neighbourhood into their
stage for world-class performances.”
And building on that community feeling is also important. From day one on the Peninsula, Laura says they have been invested in art and culture as they see the value of it for the community here – locally, across the borough and also wider London.
Laura adds: “Peninsula Summer and our year-round events programme helps to create an exciting buzz for the place, so whether you live directly on the Peninsula or in the surrounding areas, there is something for everyone.
“Knowing that there’s a fun music festival or cutting-edge art
And what other events are on the Peninsula Summer schedule for September? There will be the first-ever Picturehouse Outdoor Cinema coming to Central Park and the Greenwich + Docklands International Festival will delight with artistic acrobatic performances across Peninsula Square, Design District and Central Park.
Plus, Kitty Joseph will be dressing Greenwich Peninsula’s riverside walkway and Tide Square in joyful technicolour fabrics and reflective surfaces, making it her largest design to date.
Fill up your diary with Peninsula Summer events and experience the magic of a London summer, right on your doorstep.
www.greenwichpeninsula.co.uk/ whats-on/peninsula-summer
There is less than one month to go until Charlton Athletic Football Club will be hosting a FREE Family Fun Day during the summer holidays and you’re invited!
The Fun Day is set to run from 12pm to 4pm on Tuesday, July 30th in the car park at The Valley (Floyd Road, SE7 8BL).
Bring all the family to an exciting day with lots of activities for everyone, whether you love your football or not! Get involved in lots of different games and funfair attractions, meet the men’s and women’s first team players and enjoy delicious food and drink, plus much more!
All activities other than the food and drink will be free of charge on the day with local vendors on site as part of the food and drink offering, where both cash and card payments will be accepted.
Over 2,500 people have already signed up to attend the event which promises to be even bigger and better than the previous Family Fun Day the club held in April.
The event is free to turn up to on the day
but if you pre-order your tickets all Under 11s in your booking will receive a FREE Charlton Athletic goody bag on the day!
To find out more about the event and to pre-order your tickets, scan the QR code.
This event is part of Charlton Athletic’s All Together, All Different, All Charlton project, supported by the Premier League Charitable Fund.
Six weeks or so ago I wrote an article here about the earliest gas works in Woolwich, which was built by a Thomas Livesey in 1817. I ended up that article with a long description of how that works was taken over by a new local gas company to try and sort out complaints from residents. Thomas Livesey had originally built the early works along with a Woolwich coal merchant, Mr Hardy, who by the 1820s had been replaced by a Mr Ainger – another coal merchant. They had been trying to sell the gas works since the early 1820s. Livesey was Deputy Director of the big Westminster based Gas Light and Coke Co. and he had lied to them that he had no longer anything to do with the works in Woolwich.
Local activists, hoping for a better supplier of gas for lighting, set up the Woolwich Equitable Gas Co. in 1832. It’s quite difficult to say exactly who they were. A lot of names are given in press stories and Vincent’s History of Woolwich does a very good job with mini-biographies of various locals, but very little about their actual political affiliations. The first Company meeting was chaired by a William Strother whose family were coal merchants based on Roffs Yard - which of course is where the original gas works was located. Other directors seem to be Powis Street shopkeepers and other local business men. Their first resolution was to buy the works at Roff’s Yard which was ‘very dilapidated. Thus their first decision was to buy a properly apparently owned by the family of the man who was chairing the meeting - that really is a bit much even by the ethical standards of the early 19th century.
However they continued to negotiate with Livesey and Ainger and a settlement was reached in July 1832. In the following January a list was produced of Livesey and Ainger’s
various misdeeds and Woolwich Equitable Directors learnt that £245 of the purchase money had found its way into Mr. Livesey’s private pocket.
Roff’s Yard was a small piece of ground east of what is now the approach to the Woolwich Ferry. In 1832 new Equitable Company commissioned a valuation of the gas works there from John Barlow. The Barlow family were involved in gas works in many localities. John, the father, was an iron founder from Sheffield who had eight sons all involved in building and fitting out gas works - which they would pass on, readymade, for a local management to take and run. His report on the old Woolwich works was very long and very damning – it was ‘very dilapidated’ to say the least. They also commissioned some work from George Holworthy Palmer - I only mention this because a couple of years ago I published a long academic style article about Palmer, who was a complete disaster areasacked from more gas companies than you knew existed. Although in 1832 his worst disasters were in the future and he was still a rising young gas engineer.
It was reported that Barlow was ‘against octagonal retort houses’ – which must refer to what Palmer was doing at Old Kent Road gasworks and which was to leave that works in ruins in 1836.
However the new Equitable Company - despite the damning report - soon reduced the price of gas - which is what they had been set up to do. It was also said that by canvassing in Woolwich they had obtained ‘signatures for upwards for 800 burners’ and had sold gas appliances ‘to 8 out of 10 people they asked’. They were also making plans to build a new gas works in Harding (or Hardens) Lane.
However four years after the new Equitable Company was set up there was another public meeting of ‘gas consumers’ to condemn them and make charges against the directors. This was obviously a different bunch of agitators from the ones who had originally set up the Equitable Company. As I said earlier I don’t have a way to find out the ‘politics’ of it. This Meeting said much the same things about the Equitable Company as has been said about its predecessor
– they were extravagant and were charging too much for their gas. The Company was ‘supplying the Dockyard with gas at nine shillings per thousand cubic feet, whereas the ordinary consumers were called upon to pay eleven shillings’. ... ‘We beg to assure them we do not any longer consider them entitled to the name of ‘Equitable’.
The protestors went off and decided to set up another gas company which would do what they wanted. Now that is another story and I’m not going to the details of it here because I said I would do an article about all of the Woolwich gas companies - so I’ll were it up in a week or two. It was to be called ‘The Woolwich Consumers Gas Co.’.
So the Equitable Company moved to a wharf, said to be the site of a large eighteenth-century house, at the end of Harding (or Hardens) Lane. This lane ran from Woolwich High Street to the river and was right up against the east wall of the Arsenal. It was more recently known as Ship and Half Moon Lane but is now undiscoverable under a massive new development and blocks of new flats. In 1841 John Barlow built the Equitable gas works there with ‘two small gasholders and a retort house’. The company also advertised for ‘tenders for brick erections and for machinery, utensils and iron work’ and ‘for the building of a wharf wall’.
Protests however did not cease. I would like to quote one letter in the local press but it’s very long. To quote a tiny extract: ‘that little, miserable, empty nut-shell, the Kentish Mercury; and the self-styled Equitable Gas
Company ... having a glorious monopoly of the supply of gas ... which with characteristic hauteur and indifference .... was lamentably deficient.’ And so on.
However once in business the two gas companies ’very quickly fraternised, and they have worked together...as friendly and as quietly as mice.’ Whenever the price of gas rose or was lowered, the fact was announced by the two companies in the self same words, and on the same day.” ...’For many years the two companies have earned so much money that the directors have had to contrive how to divide it
so as to keep within the law’. The two companies had also ‘the advantages of having nearly all their directors on the Woolwich Local Board of Health’. I see.
What meanwhile was actually going on in the works? There is a newspaper report about a badly injured workman, apparently the result of a fight. However the doctor’s report said that the injuries were the result of a fall and not the fight so everybody was discharged - no more court case. Then, in 1856, the workmen ‘presented as a mark of esteem ...a handsome silver snuff-box to Mr. Macpherson, the Superintendent
of the Company’. Later ‘in 1860 there was a report on the stokers ‘demand for more wages ... reports are that this is practically a strike’. And – as ever Thomas Glover, coffee house keeper was charged with ‘fraudulently burning gas, the property of the Woolwich Equitable Gas Company’. He had arrears of three or four pounds, which he refused to pay. It had since been found that he had connected two pipes and ‘used the gas after midnight at least for three weeks past’.
Rather more positively in 1882 ‘a good specimen of improved gas
lighting is to be seen in the new lamp which has just been put up by the Woolwich Equitable Gas Company in the centre of Beresford Square’.
In the 1880s Robert Morton was appointed engineer at Woolwich in his first gasworks job. He was to become a leading gas innovator working closely with George Livesey, becoming a director of South Met, following Livesey’s death in 1908. Years later he described the original engine and exhauster in the Equitable Works ‘it was the engine of an old paddle steamer, one half (high pressure) being used as the engine, and the other half (low pressure) was the exhauster. In those times many people thought anything was good enough for a gas works’.
In 1885 Livesey’s South Met. Gas Co. got parliamentary powers to extend their area of supply through Woolwich into Kent. They then took over the two Woolwich gas companies presumably to tidy the area up a bit. In 1887 advertisements came out for the sale of ‘Lot 1. The Freehold Property, situate in Harden’s Lane, Woolwich, comprising the site of the works of the late Woolwich Equitable Gas Company, with a frontage on the river Thames and covering area of 38,370 feet’.
From then on Woolwich was supplied with gas from East Greenwich where steam engines were never converted from old paddle steamers and any protest meetings would mean either confronting George Livesey or realising that they were actually beneath his notice. It was a different world.
Royal Borough of Greenwich
Town & Country Planning Act 1990 (AS AMENDED)
Town & Country Planning (Development Management Procedure)(England) Order 2015 Planning (Listed Buildings & Conservation Areas) Act 1990 (AS AMENDED) Planning (Listed Buildings & Conservation Areas) Regulations 1990 (AS AMENDED)
Town & Country Planning (Control of Advertisements) Regulations 2007 (AS AMENDED)
Notice is hereby given that application(s) have been made to The Royal Borough of Greenwich in respect of the under mentioned premises/sites. You can see the submissions and any plans at http://www.royalgreenwich.gov.uk/planning.
If development proposals affect Conservation Areas and/or Statutorily Listed Buildings under the Planning (Listed Building and Conservation Area) Act 1990 (As Amended) this will be shown within the item below.
Anyone who wishes to comment on these applications should be made in writing to Development Planning within 21 days of the date of this notice.
Please quote the appropriate reference number.
Date: 08/07/2024
Victoria Geoghegan
Assistant Director - Planning and Building Control
List of Press Advertisements - 08/07/2024
Publicity for Planning Applications
Applicant: Gary Squires 24/1007/F
Site Address: FLAT 7, MAZE HILL LODGE, PARK VISTA, GREENWICH, LONDON, SE10 9LY
Development: Replacement the original 1974 windows with new modern windows on a like or like basis to improve thermal efficiency, reduce condensation and replace rotten cills. (Retrospective)
Conservation Area: GREENWICH PARK
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1326/F
Site Address: 17 ADMIRAL SEYMOUR ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1SN
Development: Replacement of existing upvc windows with new upvc windows like-for-like.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: Sainsbury's Supermarkets Limited 24/1514/F
Site Address: SAINSBURY'S, 50 LOMBARD WALL, LOMBARD TRADING ESTATE, CHARLTON, SE7 7SW
Development: Alterations to the existing HGV parking area and erection of a Vehicle Maintenance Unit (VMU) comprising a warehouse, portacabin, armco barrier, walkway, bollards and gas bottle storage.
Conservation Area: Adjacent to Charlton Riverside
Applicant: Mr Simon & Ms Belinda Carpenter & Harris 24/1517/F
Site Address: 67D SHOOTERS HILL ROAD, BLACKHEATH, SE3 7HU
Development: Construction of a single storey rear extension and side dormer roof extension. Reposition of ground floor side elevation window openings and installation of a new door opening. Formation of a roof terrace, installation of solar panels to the side roof slope, and subdivision of the existing dwelling to two self-contained dwellings, with associated works.
Conservation Area: BLACKHEATH
Applicant: BML Group Ltd 24/1562/F
Site Address: 43 BLISSETT STREET, GREENWICH, LONDON, SE10 8UP
Development: Alteration and enlargement of existing basement as well as creation of front and rear light wells so as to create a self-contained residential unit.
Conservation Area: WEST GREENWICH
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1568/F
Site Address: 64 AND 64A GRANBY ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1EN
Development: Replacement of existing windows and doors.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Greenwich Enterprise Board 24/1678/F
Site Address: 70 ROYAL HILL, GREENWICH, LONDON, SE10 8RF
Development: Installation of two air source heat pumps and the erection of an associated 1.8m high boarded fence and gate.
Conservation Area: WEST GREENWICH
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1710/F
Site Address: 90-90A GRANBY ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1EL
Development: Replacement of existing windows and doors on the application building and associated external works.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1751/F
Site Address: 9 & 11 GRANBY ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1EH
Development: Window and door replacements.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1752/F
Site Address: 72 AND 74 ARSENAL ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1JY
Development: Installation of replacement windows and doors throughout the properties and associated external works.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: Ms Hannah Parkinson 24/1797/F
Site Address: 33A BENNETT PARK, LONDON, SE3 9RA
Development: Replacement of the sashes of the windows on the second floor flat with timber double glazed replacements.
Conservation Area: BLACKHEATH PARK
Applicant: Mr Kandel 24/1884/HD
Site Address: 67 COURT ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 5AF
Development: Installation of a new dormer with associated roof alterations at the rear of property replacing two smaller existing dormers.
Conservation Area: ELTHAM PALACE
Applicant: Mrs Sun-mee Ban 24/1909/HD
Site Address: 316 WELL HALL ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 6UE
Development: Replacement of 6 external windows, 4 on ground floor and 2 on 1st floor.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde group 24/1916/F
Site Address: 109 and 109a GRANBY ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1EJ
Development: Installation of replacement windows and doors
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: Mr Twining 24/1922/HD
Site Address: 41 CARADOC STREET, GREENWICH, LONDON, SE10 9AG
Development: Replacement windows and doors.
Conservation Area: EAST GREENWICH
Applicant: Mr Robert Gratwicke 24/1923/HD
Site Address: 73 COLERAINE ROAD, BLACKHEATH, LONDON, SE3 7PF
Development: Construction of a single storey rear extension and associated external works.
Conservation Area: WESTCOMBE PARK
Applicant: Ms Cecilia Campbell-Westlind 24/1925/HD
Site Address: 88 TORMOUNT ROAD, PLUMSTEAD, LONDON, SE18 1QB
Development: Removal of deteriorated existing asphalt flat roof and replacement with a new timber frame mono pitch roof with clay tile finish to match existing local character. UPVC top opening rear bathroom window to be removed and replaced with a new metal frame top hung casement window with obscure glazed finish to prevent overlooking. New metal frame roof light with obscured glazed finish to prevent overlooking. Existing UPVC rainwater pipework drainage removed and replaced with new pipework to match existing. Internal timber stud wall reconfiguration to gain more useable space in bathroom. External façade to be infilled with new blockwork and refinished to match existing render finish.
Conservation Area: PLUMSTEAD COMMON
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1963/HD
Site Address: 51 MAUDSLAY ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 1LH
Development: Replacement of window and doors to original design.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1964/HD
Site Address: 133 Granby Road Eltham SE9 1EJ
Development: Installation of replacement windows and doors.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1965/F
Site Address: 63 and 65 ARSENAL ROAD ELTHAM SE9 1JT
Development: Installation of replacement windows and doors.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1969/HD
Site Address: 6 PHINEAS PETT ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 6RH
Development: This proposal is for the replacement of the existing windows and all external doors. The proposed windows are to be double glazed PVCu casement windows with Astragal Bars. The doors are to be designed to the original doors from when the properties were built - A double glazed Georgian Door in PVCu for the front and white double glazed PVCu French Doors for the rear.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1970/HD
Site Address: 20 PHINEAS PETT ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 6RH
Development: This proposal is for the replacement of the existing windows and all external doors. The proposed windows are to be double glazed PVCu casement windows with Astragal Bars. The doors are to be designed to the original doors from when the properties were built - A double glazed Georgian Door in PVCu for the front and white double glazed PVCu single door for the rear.
Conservation Area: PROGRESS ESTATE
Applicant: The Hyde Group 24/1971/HD
Site Address: 40 PHINEAS PETT ROAD, ELTHAM, LONDON, SE9 6RH
Development: The replacement of all windows with a white PVCu double glazed units and astral glazing bars, replacement of front door with a like for like design and replacement of the rear door to PVCu and to match existing.
Applicant:
Applicant:
Publicity for Advertisements
Applicant: Infinity Outdoor Limited 24/1657/A
Applicant: Artillery Kai 24/1788/A
Site Address: STUDIO 7, GUNNERY TERRACE, CORNWALLIS ROAD, LONDON, SE18 6SW Development: Proposed internally illuminated fascia signage is to be displayed on the front elevation of the gym 'Diesel Gym'. The sign displays the company name and logo.
Conservation Area: ROYAL ARSENAL WOOLWICH
4.
5. Nothing in this Notice will apply to anything done with the permission or at the direction of a police constable in uniform or traffic warden, to emergency service vehicles, or to vehicles being used in connection with the works.
6. The restrictions described above will apply only during such times and to such extent as shall be indicated by traffic signs as prescribed by the Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2016.
7. Queries concerning these works should be directed to the Royal Borough of Greenwich’s Directorate of Regeneration, Enterprise & Skills on 020 8921 6340.
Ryan Nibbs Assistant Director, Transport.
The Woolwich Centre, 35 Wellington Street, SE18 6HQ
Dated 17 June 2024
INTERNAL REF - PL / LA472696 FN680 / Lic. No: 71301
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR A PREMISES LICENCE - LICENSING ACT 2003
Notice is given that: Davy & Co Ltd, 161-165
Greenwich High Road, SE10 8JA has applied for the Grant of a new Premises Licence for the following premises:
Rear 161-165 Greenwich High Road, London SE10 8JA
A record of this application may be inspected by appointment.
Other persons may make representations to the Council on this application by no later than 6th August 2024.
Representations can be made in writing, by email or fax using the contact details above. Representations can only be made on the grounds of one of the four licensing objectives, namely:
• Prevention of Crime and Disorder
• Prevention of Public Nuisance
• Public Safety
• Protection of Children from Harm
Any person who makes a false statement in connection with an application is liable on summary conviction to a maximum fine of £5,000.
Premises Licence (Licensing Act 2003)
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR NEW PREMISES LICENCE
NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR A PREMISES LICENCE - LICENSING ACT 2003
DATE: 27/06/2024
Notice is given that: Davy & Co Ltd, 161-165 Greenwich High Road, SE10 8JA, has applied for the Grant of a new Premises Licence for the following premises:
NOTICE IS GIVEN THAT: DIMITRI BURGERS LTD has applied to the London Borough of Lewisham for New Premises licence in respect of the following premises AYAM 062, 379 – 383 NEW CROSS ROAD, NEW CROSS LONDON SE14 6LA
For the Licensable Activities:
• Provision of Live Music & Recorded Music: Fri & Sat: 23:00 – 00:30 Hours
Rear 161-165 Greenwich High Road, London SE10 8JA
A record of this application may be inspected by appointment.
Other persons may make representations to the Council on this application by no later than 6th August 2024.
• Provision of Performance of Dance & Provision of Anything of a Similar description to Live Music, Recorded Music or Performance of Dance: Fri & Sat: 23:00 – 00:30 Hours
• Late Night Refreshment: Fri & Sat: 23:00 –00:30 Hours
Representations can be made in writing, by email or fax using the contact details above. Representations can only be made on the grounds of one of the four licensing objectives, namely:
• Supply of Alcohol: Sund – Thurs: 08:00 – 23:30 Hours Fri & Sat: 08:00 – 00:30 Hours
• Prevention of Crime and Disorder
• Prevention of Public Nuisance
• Public Safety • Protection of Children from Harm
ANYONE WISHING TO OPPOSE THE APPLICATION MUST GIVE NOTICE IN WRITING TO LICENSING SERVICES, LONDON BOROUGH OF LEWISHAM, LICENSING AUTHORITY, HOLBEACH OFFICE, 9 HOLBEACH ROAD, SE6 4TW OR Email licensing@lewisham.gov.uk WITHIN FOUR WEEKS OF THE DATE OF THIS NOTICE, SPECIFYING THE GROUNDS OF OPPOSITION. THE APPLICATION
CAN BE VIEWED AT THE ABOVE ADDRESS DURING OFFICE HOURS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Any person who makes a false statement in connection with an application is liable on summary conviction to a maximum fine of £5,000.
at the premises:
It is proposed that the following licensable activities will take place at the premises:
Alcohol licence for business: Vintners Lanes
Alcohol licence for business: Vintners Lanes
IT IS AN OFFENCE LIABLE ON CONVICTION TO A FINE UP TO LEVEL 5 ON THE STANDARD SCALE (UNLIMITED) UNDER SECTION 158 OF THE LICENSING ACT 2003 TO KNOWINGLY OR RECKLESSLY MAKE A FALSE STATEMENT IN CONNECTION WITH AN APPLICATION. SHOULD REPRESENTATION BE RECEIVED A PUBLIC HEARING WILL BE HELD
It is proposed that the following licensable activities will take place at the premises:
Alcohol licence for business: Vintners Lanes
GOODS VEHICLE OPERATOR’S LICENCE
Golden Haulage Ltd of 64 Tavistock Gardens, Ilford, IG3 9BD is applying to change an existing licence as follows:
To add an operating center to keep 1 goods vehicle and 0 trailers at Tarmac Ltd, Lombard Wall, Charlton, London SE7 7SH.
Owner or occupiers of land (including buildings) near the operating centre(s) who believed who believe that their use or enjoyment of that land would be affected, should make written representations to the Traffic Commissioner at: Hillcrest House, 386 Harehills Lane, Leeds, LS9 6MF, stating their reasons, within 21 days of this notice. Representors must at the same time send a copy of their representations to the applicant at the address given at the top of this notice. A Guide to Making Representations is available from the Traffic Commissioner’s office.
Saturday, 29 June marked Armed Forces Day. To celebrate, the Mayor of Royal Greenwich Councillor Jit Ranabhat, the Mayoress Gaumaya Gurung Ranabhat, along with representatives from the Armed Forces community raised the Armed Forces Day flag above the Woolwich Town Hall, before attending a special parade in Woolwich on Saturday, complete with a marching band.
The Royal Borough of Greenwich would like to say thank you to all our armed forces community, from those currently serving and their families, to veterans and cadets.
Find out more about the services available to the Armed Forces Community in Royal Greenwich: royalgreenwich.gov.uk/armed-forces
The Council is asking local people, businesses and developers to suggest suitable sites around the borough for new housing, offices, retail and other uses.
As part of our work to produce a new Local Plan, we’re inviting you to tell us about sites which have potential for development in the future. Our survey will be open until 11.59pm, 31 July 2024.
We’re committed to making our consultation process as accessible and inclusive as possible. If the online survey doesn’t suit your needs, you can email the planning team at planning.policy@royalgreenwich. gov.uk or call 020 8921 6235.
Suggest a site: royalgreenwichnewlocalplan.commonplace.is
2 3 4
Get on the list
First, you’ve got to be on the housing waiting list to join the scheme. If you’re not, register an application online at royalgreenwich.gov.uk/homes
Find your applicant number It will be on the letter you’ve already had from the Royal Borough of Greenwich about the new scheme. You’ll need that number and the reference number of the property you’re after, which will be on the advert.
Pick out your ideal property by looking in Greenwich Info or regularly checking the website: royalgreenwich. gov.uk/homes. Click on your preference on the website. If you don’t have a computer, you can always use one for free at either The Eltham or Woolwich Centre or a local library.
Apply in one of three ways
• Text bidding is now available and the number to use is 07786207913. For further information please see page 2, or
• Via the Royal Borough of Greenwich’s website royalgreenwich.gov.uk/homes or
• Phone the 24-hour hotline 020 8921 4340. It’s an automatic push-button system and calls will be charged at the normal local ratell be charged at the normal local rate
For information or assistance Contact our Allocations Team on: 020 8921 2941 or email: housing-allocations@ royalgreenwich.gov.uk
If you are unable to bid for advertised properties and have no one that can do so for you please contact the Allocations team on 020 8921 2941 and we will help you with bidding or will bid on your behalf. If you are in temporary accommodation, then please contact your Temporary Accommodation Officer for help with this.
Please be aware that users must now enter the date of birth of the main applicant when logging into this site. royalgreenwich. gov.uk/homes
the Under Occupation scheme
If you are living in a Council property that is too big for you, we can help you to move to somewhere smaller. The Council will pay your removal costs, and £350 for each bedroom gained. To join the scheme you must be willing to move to a home with two bedrooms less than you have now:
3 bedroom to a 1 bedroom home
3 bedroom parlour / 4 bedroom to a 1 or 2 bedroom home
5 bedroom to a 3 bedroom (or smaller) home
For more information contact the Project Team on: 020 8921 2671
1
If you would like to bid by text, please use the following Text Bidding Number: 0778 620 7913 and type:
CBL, the property reference number and your applicant number.
The property reference will be on the advert and your applicant number is on the letter we sent to you when you registered for housing.
A successful bid will look like this: CBL 179104 12191
You will need to do a separate text for each property you wish to bid for and the text is charged at your mobile provider’s standard rate. You will receive a text response to confirm your bid within 5 minutes.
If you are unable to bid for advertised properties and have no one that can do so for you please contact the Allocations team on 020 8921 2941 and we will help you with bidding or will bid on your behalf. If you are in temporary accommodation, then please contact your Temporary Accommodation Officer for help with this.
People on the Housing register are able to bid for all properties, regardless of their banding.
You must be eligible for the size of property and bids will be considered in the following order:
First Band A, followed by Band B1/B2 both in priority date order. Those in Band C will then be considered in registration date order.
Please note that there will still be some properties with age restrictions so only people of this age group can apply for these.
is for applicants in unsatisfactory housing, including people moving due to demolition and those under occupying their homes.
B1 or B2 is for applicants the Royal Borough of Greenwich must prioritise according to the law, particularly homeless people, and others with an urgent need to move for medical or welfare reasons. C is for all applicants on the housing register, including those that are in priority bands A and B1/B2.
10,000 swaps
HomeSwapper is free for our tenants to use and is available 24 hours a day, every day of the year. With easy registration and search tools, instant messaging and the unique Multiswap tool, it will help you find the swap that’s right for you.
If you want to end your tenancy and leave your property, you must contact the Royal Borough of Greenwich and sign a termination giving us four weeks’ notice returning keys to either the Woolwich Centre or the Eltham Centre. In the case of joint tenants, notice from one tenant will end the tenancy for everyone.
Under the terms of your tenancy agreement, you have a responsibility to leave your property in an acceptable state of repair. If you leave your home in an unacceptable condition, we will charge you for any work we have to do; arrangements will be made to visit your home to check this.
To avoid getting an unwelcome bill, follow these rules:
• Repair any damage caused to the property by you, your family or visitors to your home.
• Clear all your items from the inside and the outside of the property. This includes any loft space, external cupboards or sheds.
• Return all keys including fobs or other keys supplied for door entry systems. If keys are not handed in by 12 noon on Monday (or Tuesday, if Monday is a bank holiday), you will be charged another weeks rent.
• Estate parking permits should be returned with your keys.
When you attend to sign up for a property you have accepted, YOU MUST provide proof of identity and proof of address. Failure to do so, could lead to the property being withdrawn and no further consideration will be given. The following information lists what you will need to provide.
Adults
Two proofs of identity for each adult applicant (one of which should confirm immigration status):
• Passpor ts
• Full birth cer tificates
• Immigration documents from the Home Office confirming status
• Full or Provisional Driving Licence
• National insurance card
Two proofs of address which must be current within the last 3 months:
• Tenancy Agreement (must be provided if you are a private tenant)
• Utility Bills e.g. Gas, Electric , Water (mobile phone bills are excluded)
• Bank/Building society statements
• Proof of Benefits e.g. Benefit book, Job Seekers
Allowance or relevant documentation
• Letters from official bodies e.g. Council Tax, Housing Benefit, Schools, Hospitals etc
Dependent Children (One proof from each section)
• Full birth Certificates
Visit www.homeswapper.co.uk and click register. You can register with Facebook if you like.
Tell us about the home you want, and the home you’ve got - make sure you upload photos!
We’ll find matches for you, or you can run your own search to find exactly what you’re looking for.
Contact your matches and chat to the current tenant using the in-system messaging.
Once you’ve agreed a swap, ask your landlord for the paperwork.
• Rent account should be paid in full before you move out. We will take legal action to recover any outstanding rent that you owe.
Removal of rubbish and unwanted furniture
If you have any bulky items of rubbish or unwanted furniture that you wish to dispose of please contact Waste Services on 0208 921 4661 at least 2 weeks prior to your move so a suitable appointment can be made for their removal.
• Custody papers/parental responsibility documents
• Proof of full Child Benefit or Family Tax Credit showing the child/children’s name
• Proof of pregnancy
• Evidence of schooling if appropriate e.g. Headed letter with the child’s name on it.
EEA (European Economic Area) Nations
• Wage slips within the last 12 months
This scheme offers one and two bedroom flats and bungalows on the Coast and in the countryside, in the South East and West of England. In order to be considered you must be:
• A Council or Housing Association tenant
• At least 55 years old. If you intend to add a household member under the age of 55 they must be either your spouse, current joint tenant, registered carer or dependent adult child.
Your removal costs will be met if you are a Council tenant and you do move to a Seaside and Country home.
To register, or find out more about the scheme, contact the Access and Allocation section on: 020 8921 2941
If you are a Housing Association tenant you need to contact your landlord to register. Further information is available from the scheme management organisation at housingmoves.org
Greenwich Council (in foyer)
6 Mitre Passage, Greenwich Peninsula, London SE10 0ER
Greenwich Theatre
Crooms Hill, London SE10 8ES
West Greenwich House
141 Greenwich High Road London SE10 8JA
West Greenwich Library
146 Greenwich High Road, London SE10 8NN
Royal Standard
67 Pelton Road, London SE10 9AH
Forum@Greenwich Trafalgar Road, London SE10 9EQ
Greenwich University
Cooper Building, Students Union, King William Walk, London SE10 9JH
Greenwich Communications Centre
164 Trafalgar Road Greenwich, London SE10 9TZ
Maze Hill Station
Tom Smith Close, London SE10 9XG
Blackheath Library
Old Dover Road, Blackheath SE3 7BT
Westcombe Park Station
Station Crescent, Westcombe Park, London SE3 7EQ
Blackheath Newbridge Working Mens Club
22 Charlton Road, Blackheath SE3 7HG
Waitrose
Dreadnought Wharf, Victoria Parade, 1 Thames Street, Greenwich, London SE10 9FR
Greenwich Square Health Centre
12 Lambarde Square SE10 9GB
Woodland Surgery
Woodland Walk SE10 9UB
Vanbrugh Dental Centre
Vanbrugh Hill SE10 9HQ
Greenwich Launderette
174 Trafalgar Road SE10 9TZ
Slade Library
Erindale SE18 2QQ
Woolwich Community Centre
Leslie Smith Square SE18 4DW
Queen Elizabeth Hospital
Station Road, London SE18 4QH
Clockhouse Community Centre
Defiance Walk, Woolwich Dockyard Estate SE18 5QL
Waterfront Leisure Centre
Woolwich High Street SE18 6DL
McDonald’s
56-58 Powis Street SE18 6LQ
Greenwich University 54-58 Powis Street SE18 6NL
Woolwich Centre 35 Wellington Street SE18 6PW
Post Room Woolwich Service Centre
Wellington Street SE18 6PW
Town Hall
Wellington Street SE18 6PW
Woolwich Centre Library 21 Love Lane SE18 6QT
Brookhill Children’s Centre
130 Brookhill Road SE18 6UZ
Charlton Athletic Football Club
Reception The Valley, Floyd Road SE7 8BL
Time Court
Woodland Terrace SE7 8DD
Charlton Library
Charlton House, Charlton Road SE7 8RE
Gllab Work and Learn Centre
Old library Calderwood Street SE18 6QW
The Point
47 Woolwich New Road, SE18 6EW
Smile With Pride Dental Care Ltd 81A Powis Street SE18 6JB
Equitable House
General Gordon Place SE18 6AB
St.Marks Medical Centre 24 Wrottesley Road SE18 3EP
Plumstead Library
Plumstead High Street SE18 1JL
Greenwich Community College 95 Plumstead Road SE18 7DQ
Glyndon Community Centre 75 Raglan Road SE18 7LB
Abbey Wood Community Group 4 Knee Hill, SE2 0YS
Abbey Wood Library Eynsham Drive SE2 9PT
Thamesmead Leisure Centre
Thamesmere Drive SE28 8RE
Gallions Housing Association 90 Titmuss Avenue SE28 8HL
Conway Medical Centre
44 Conway Road SE18 1AH
Basildon Road Surgery
111 Basildon Road SE2 0ER
Heronsgate Medical Centre
Goosander Way SE28 0ER
Middle Park Community Centre
150 Middle Park Avenue SE9 5SD
Vista Childrens Centre
Middle Park Avenue SE9 5SD
City Point Concierge Suite
Campbell Court, Meadowside, Kidbrooke SE3 9XT
Kidbrooke Dental Centre
Telemann Square SE3 9YR
Briset Corner Surgery 591 Westhorne Avenue SE9 6JX
Eltham Centre & Eltham Library
2 Archery Road SE9 1HA
Cold Harbour Library
Wiliam Barefoot Drive SE9 3AY
Cold Harbour Leisure Centre
Chapel Farm Road SE9 3LX
New Eltham Library
Southwood Road SE9 3QT
Eltham Community Hospital
30 Passey Place SE9 5DQ
52 Well Hall Road
52 Well Hall Road SE9 6SH