Headington Headlines #53

Here’s my weekly round-up of local news for 5 – 11 March —

The play area on Sandfield Road will get a space where young children can learn to ride bikes, and a small block for slightly older kids to do tricks on, according to Councillor Ruth Wilkinson.

The Dorset House show flat is now open for viewing, but the QR code on the advertising boards wasn’t working on Friday.

Proposals to build housing in Westlands Drive and Dora Carr Close, Northway have been put back pending further consultation. The developers Haboakus are a joint venture between Green Square Group and Kevin McCloud’s company Hab. The development will also involve replacing Northway Community Centre with new facilities. A third development in Cowley by the same people is also affected by the delay.

Gipsy Lane has been closed over the weekend. Road works continue.

Some Cheney School parents are campaigning to stop the school becoming an academy.

Lazy Gamer is OPEN again.

This map shows the location of some of the places mentioned in this report.

Active topics on the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum this week:

  • Tesco and The Friar
  • EF Academy plans for Cotuit Hall
  • Costa Coffee
  • Nasty looking Shark
  • Bus Users’ Forum 22 March 12
  • Astonishing – Dairy Lodge application approved
  • Electric car charging points in Headington

I try to cover news from the OX3 postcode in Headington and out as far as Barton, Sandhills and Risinghurst (see map). To feed into next week’s summary you can comment on this article, or tweet either with the hashtag #ox3 or @mentioning @TonyOX3.

Headington Headlines #52

Here’s my weekly round-up of local news for 27 February – 4 March —

In a now-you-see-them now-you-don’t story that became known as #yellowlinegate road markings came in for criticism, particularly the double yellow lines across the road at the junctions of Latimer Road/London Road and Bickerton Road/Old Road. The story made the national news in the Mail Online, and was covered on BBC local TV and radio and the @BBCOxford website, as well as being debated on the e-democracy forum (see the "New Lime Walk and All Saints junction ‘improvements’" thread). You can watch the BBC video clip broadcast on Tuesday here. And then on Wednesday, the County Council started to remove them, or rather paint them black.

@LazyGamerUK finally opened to the public on Friday. Their shiny new website is also up and running. The launch is reported to have gone well. Discussion of the operation continues on the e-democracy forum under the “Costa Coffee” thread.

@OxfordCity have started another consultation on the flooding problems in Marston and Northway. Details on the Council’s website; Oxford Mail story. A public exhibition and consultation event is being held on Monday, March 19 from 12pm to 9.30pm in the Northway Community Centre.

EF International Academy, part of the larger EF operation on Pullens Lane (Headington Hill), held a public event on Friday and Saturday to explain their plans for the Cotuit Hall site they bought from Oxford Brookes last year. I wrote a note about it.

Marston local police published their March newsletter.

The City Council has written off business rates owed by The Six Bells and The Butcher’s Arms because “the debtors cannot be traced”.

My favourite Headington-related tweet this week:

I think the number of active topics on the Headington & Marston e-democracy forum this week is a record since I started reporting it:

  • New Lime Walk and All Saints junction “improvements”
  • The Friar Pub Marston and Tesco
  • Headington Ward Focus meeting leads to Headington Cycling Working Group
  • Bus Users UK Oxford Group AGM, Tue 28 Feb 2012
  • BUUK Meeting on 22 Mar
  • Costa Coffee
  • Cycles on the footpath
  • EF Academy plans for Cotuit Hall
  • Nasty looking Shark
  • Dorset House

I try to cover news from the OX3 postcode in Headington and out as far as Barton, Sandhills and Risinghurst (see map). To feed into next week’s summary you can comment on this article, or tweet either with the hashtag #ox3 or @mentioning @TonyOX3.

Cotuit Hall development plans

Cotuit Hall is the Victorian building on the corner of Pullens Lane and Harberton Mead. Although it’s in a Conservation Area Cotuit Hall is not a listed building. Behind the original Hall, which stands on a narrow plot, there are several newer buildings including two three-storey residential blocks. The whole site is well screened by mature trees. The Headington.org.uk website has the building’s history.

In May 2011 Cotuit Hall was sold by Oxford Brookes University to the EF International Academy, who plan to use it for students aged 16–18 taking two-year residential A-level or International Baccalaureate courses. The Academy is one of several operations run by EF on Headington Hill. EF wants to redevelop and refurbish the site and have appointed architects and planning consultants West Waddy ADP of Abingdon to manage the project. Together they held a small-scale open event on Friday 2 and Saturday 3 March to show their plans to the public. I went along to have a look.

EF wants to retain and refurbish the two existing residential blocks and link them with some new buildings. All the buildings will be lower than the Hall itself. They plan to retain the existing trees which form a mature and in places quite thick boundary around the site. They have surveyed the trees and their root spread so as to define the areas of the site on which building is feasible without damaging the trees. They say that because of the screening and relatively low height of the buildings they will not be intrusive in views of Headington Hill from the City. Access and movement between the buildings will be via a footpath to be built along the spine of the site. The existing entrance on Pullens Lane will remain the only access point, though a second gateway with some degree of security will probably be built inside the site behind the Hall.

I have no strong feelings about the development, and as long as EF and West Waddy’s assurances about the lack of visual intrusion are correct I can’t see any reason to oppose it. Local residents understandably may feel different and might have concerns about student numbers (likely to be over 200), noise and the possibility of anti-social behaviour. However, I think EF’s policy of confining these particular students – 16 to 18 year olds – to the School site during the day and having a number of staff resident on site might help avoid such problems. I’m sure there will be more public discussion on this over the coming months.

Aside from the development I took the chance of speaking to someone from EF about the public disquiet over language school students in Oxford in the summer months. This crops up every year: it comes round in the local papers, radio and tv, the e-democracy forum, my blog, and elsewhere. I last wrote about it in August last year. Since then there has been a meeting between the City Council, Police, bus companies and representatives of some language schools including EF. I encouraged EF to do more to keep in touch with the local community. They should, I believe, take the trouble to explain how they operate: that different EF companies offer different ‘products’ to different customers and not all EF students are the same. But they should realise that to the public EF is still a single brand and bad publicity from one part rubs off on the others. The summer ‘Language Travel’ students, here for just a couple of weeks with minimal time commitment and supervision, are almost certainly responsible for most of the complaints attributable to EF but their behaviour tarnishes all the others.

I want to stress that I am not blaming EF students for all the summer student problems. As I wrote last year there are dozens of language schools bringing thousands of young people to Oxford. EF is just one, but they happen to be in Headington and the students tend to be easy to identify with their branded clothing and accessories so they are very visible to Headington residents. I am sure EF would benefit by engaging more with the local community, by speaking with one voice regardless of which branch of the company is involved, and not hiding behind the screen of “no-one available for comment” which has sometimes happened in the past.