JERICHO WHARF NEWS ITEM
This site has be unused for 20 years. High time for the City to move in.
Posted - Dec 03, 2024
Enough is enough. After 20 wasted years of developer greed and incompetence, the JWT has asked the City Council to step in and secure the Jericho Wharf site for Oxford. A compulsory purchase order can be followed by a matching sale to a chosen developer who will commit to deliver a boatyard, a community centre, and a public square along with much needed housing.
Please sign our petition at www.change.org/jerichowharf
The faded and tattered banners alongside the canal in Jericho are a shameful testimony to planning failure. The opportunity presented by one of the city’s most iconic locations has been squandered by a sequence of speculative developers. SIAHAF, whose name adorns the fading billboards, has been put into compulsory liquidation by Court Order, following a petition from His Majesty’s Revenue & Customs. And the current developer, Cornerstone Land, which received planning permission in 2022, has subsequently gone quiet and removed the site from its public portfolio. Now it seems that the site is being hawked around to yet more speculative developers, and so the cycle is at high risk of further repeats.
These delays have been deeply damaging. As the weeds have flourished in Jericho, boats have been sinking along the Oxford Canal and hundreds of others are at risk of serious deterioration, deprived of the working boatyard that can help keep them afloat – and threatening one of Oxford’s most affordable forms of housing. At the same time, the Jericho Community Centre, a valiant but vulnerable Victorian building, has been creaking and crumbling, depriving Jericho residents of the 21st Century facilities they deserve and leaving many disabled users out in the cold.
JWT Chair Phyllis Starkey says: “After 20 years, the Jericho Canalside site remains derelict, and the City Council and the community continue to be held to ransom. Without Council intervention we shall see even more speculative planning applications. It is time to bring this dismal cycle to a decisive stop.”
The Jericho Wharf Trust is therefore calling on Oxford City Council to make a compulsory purchase order (CPO) for the site. This request might seem quixotic when the Council's finances are tight. But as the JWT demonstrates in its letter to councillors, this is entirely feasible financially – as well as bringing to an end the steady drain on City budgets caused by speculative planning applications, refusals and appeals.
The Wharf site is currently owned by the Hong Kong-based Cheer Team Corporation which in 2013 bought it for £2.6 million – outbidding the more realistic £2.0 million offered by the Jericho Wharf Trust. Developers have pleaded that the site is financially unviable – not least because they overpaid for the land. In 2022, the Government Planning Inspectorate concluded that the current value of the land was just £1 million.
The City should now buy the site for current market value, and make a back-to-back arrangement with a selected developer who will commit to build urgently needed housing as well as delivering what the community needs - implementing architects Howarth Tompkins scheme which was approved nearly a decade ago.
30 years ago the Jericho Wharf site was owned by what is now the Canal and Rivers Trust, a public corporation which leased the land to a working boatyard. Time to again exert public control over this critical site, in the interests of Oxford and of Jericho and its surrounding communities.
For a Q&A on the proposed CPO, please CLICK HERE
Please urge your City councillors to support a compulsory purchase:
Carfax and Jericho
cllrahollingsworth@oxford.gov.uk
cllrldiggins@oxford.gov.uk
Walton Manor
cllrjfry@oxford.gov.uk
cllrlupton@oxford.gov.uk
Please sign our petition at www.change.org/jerichowharf
Media coverage of the campaign
BBC
Why do residents want to save a derelict wharf?
Oxford Clarion
“Enough is enough”: Jericho community loses patience with wharf saga
Oxford Mail
Developer 'abandons' Jericho piazza redevelopment plans
The chosen developer should implement the scheme designed by architects Haworth Tompkins. This was approved nearly a decade ago, was confirmed as viable, and had widespread support. This offered a fitting setting for St Barnabas Church, a public open space, and a vibrant canal side and canal corridor,with pedestrian and cycle links with a potential bridge across the canal.
Why a public space and a bridge |
Why a new Community Centre
The canalside site offers a wonderful opportunity to create a new and vibrant hub on the Wharf site |
Landowner’s bid to bypass community centre and boatyard requirements with a student flats development
Banners protest about narrow developer objectives for the site |
Why a community boatyard
The CPO can be based on an approved planning designs, such as this one from 2015. |
Residents angry at ‘shameful’ derelict Wharf site
David Edwards, Maggie Black and David Feeny |
The Jericho Wharf Trust is responsible for all aspects of the campaign to develop the Jericho Wharf canalside site in Oxford on behalf of the community
For a visual history of the Jericho Wharf project, please click HERE for our image gallery