£89 Million King Street Regeneration Budget Approved


Council plans to borrow to fund part of town hall redevelopment


Artist's impression of Hammersmith Town Hall, with offices, cinema and new homes

Plans for a new cinema, offices, restaurant and shops along King Street have been pushed another step forward by Hammersmith & Fulham Council.

On Monday, 2 December, the Labour-run council’s cabinet members approved an £89 million budget that will form part of the regeneration of Hammersmith’s 1970s Town Hall extension and surrounding streets.

A report produced ahead of the cabinet meeting said the scheme, which was given planning permission in February, will be about “transforming King Street into a new civic and cultural destination”.

Here’s the full list of what’s in the works for the Town Hall and King Street:

• The original 1930s, Grade II-listed Town Hall will be refurbished and its heritage elements restored
• A four-screen, 350-seat cinema to replace the demolished Cineworld on the Town Hall site, with room for cafes, shops and restaurants
• Public rooftop bar and restaurant, community arts and events spaces
• 204 new homes, half of which will be available at discounted “affordable” rents
• Public space in front of the Town Hall will be freshened up so it can be used for performances and events.
• Corporate office spaces, including affordable spaces set aside for start-up companies
• Homework areas for children and students
• An “eco-friendly” design to cut the council’s fuel bills
• Changes after public consultation included a reduction in the height of the new roof extension by one storey
• To deliver the cinema and commercial parts of the scheme, the council has entered into a 50/50 joint venture with housing association A2Dominion.

Included in the £89 million overall cost is a £64 million budget to purchase the current buildings on site.

And £25 million to buy the 50 per cent stake in the joint venture with A2Dominion, which owns 38,000 properties in the South East of England.

The council will use borrowed money to pay for the scheme, as well as millions sourced from fees paid by private developers in return for planning permission over recent years.

The report added: “The Council expects to generate an income stream from leasing units on a commercial basis to cover these costs.”

The council has been working on plans to transform the Town Hall and the surrounding streets since early last year.

But discussion of how to redevelop it have faced delays for a number of years.

A cabinet report from January this year said: “This decision followed the failure of the previous scheme approved in 2013 and a series of unsatisfactory proposals from the [previous] developer, made up until 2016.”

Owen Sheppard - Local Democracy Reporter

December 6, 2019