Preston car park set to be replaced with student accommodation at former city police headquarters

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More than 200 student flats are set to be built on part of Preston's former divisional police headquarters.

Preston City Council planning officers have recommended that councillors give the go-ahead to the scheme - at the junction of Walker Street and Lawson Street, to the rear of the magistrates’ and crown courts. - at a planning committee meeting next Thursday. If they do, it would mark the final stage in the redevelopment of the city’s old police base, 15 years after it was shut down.

The main building that used to house the custody suite and offices was converted into other student accommodation - known as Lawson Halls - after permission was granted back in 2013.

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The part of the plot where the new 'studio apartments' would be erected - 227 in total - is currently occupied by a multi-level public car park, accessed from Saul Street, which has been operated as a pay and display facility by Chorley-based Parking Eye for the last nine years.

The proposed new student accommodation blocks in the foreground, wrapped in an L-shape around the existing Lawson Halls flats (image: Falconer Chester Hall, via Preston City Council planning portal)The proposed new student accommodation blocks in the foreground, wrapped in an L-shape around the existing Lawson Halls flats (image: Falconer Chester Hall, via Preston City Council planning portal)
The proposed new student accommodation blocks in the foreground, wrapped in an L-shape around the existing Lawson Halls flats (image: Falconer Chester Hall, via Preston City Council planning portal)
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The application - from Caro Developments Ltd - proposes the creation of an L-shaped building, with seven storeys fronting Walker Street, rising to nine levels close to the corner of Sizehouse Street, before returning to seven floors along its remaining boundary.

A report to be presented to committee members notes that the 2013 permission actually gave approval not only for the conversion of the former police building, but the erection of a new block on the car park. While that has never been implemented, it remains a live permission that the applicant could take advantage of at any time.

Although the latest proposed new-build is slightly different in terms of its design and layout, the scale of the planned development is described as “similar”.

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The site at the junction of Walker Street and Lawson Street, as it appears today (image: Google)The site at the junction of Walker Street and Lawson Street, as it appears today (image: Google)
The site at the junction of Walker Street and Lawson Street, as it appears today (image: Google)

The new blueprint for the accommodation includes a gym, cinema room, landscaped roof terrace and communal and study spaces, while there would also be parking provided for 150 bicycles.

The majority of the trees surrounding the site - along Lawson Street and Walker Street - would be retained, although two would have to be removed on the latter in order to make way for a new pedestrian entrance.

New landscape planting is proposed around the front of the plot and a “rain garden” is planned at the shared boundary with Lawson Halls, which would include wetland grasses and wildflowers

For objections have been lodged - including one which warns that the scheme could jeopardise the future development of a temporary surface-level car park at the junction of Walker Street and Sizehouse Street and another claiming that the proposed new buildings would interfere with the TV signal of residential properties in the area.