Scarborough art gallery to be converted into private home

It's following the re-submission of a recently refused proposal

Author: Local Democracy Reporter, Anttoni James NumminenPublished 29th Jun 2022

Scarborough Council has granted permission for a local art gallery to be converted into a private dwelling following the re-submission of a recently refused proposal.

The property, located on 100 Castle Road, is in Scarborough’s conservation area and adjoins a Grade II Listed building to the west.

Comprising a three-storey end-of-terrace dwelling located in an established residential area of Scarborough, the application for change of use was submitted by Mr M Zammitt.

The property has undergone various changes and applications for change of use dating back to at least the late 1990s, when the ground floor of the site was first granted permission to be converted into a shop and workshop, with the installation of a new shop front and internal alterations also approved.

In 2015 the council approved plans to erect a new third storey and create a bedroomed flat over the already existing gallery and workshop.

However, in December 2021 the council refused planning permission for a “change of use from gallery to self-contained flat” owing to planned changes to the shop front.

The application was rejected because the council said that the “proposed fenestration alterations to remove the existing shop front … is considered to lack a level of architectural design appropriate to the appearance of the host property and the conservation area”.

The newly approved application, however, only sought a change of use and did not seek any external alterations to the fascia.

A council report states that whilst the previous scheme proposed “several external changes, this proposal would not seek to carry out any material changes to the external surfaces of the dwelling, and would retain the existing commercial fascia to the front.”

No public comments were received during the consultation process and neither the Highway Authority nor the council’s environmental services raised any objections.

Permission was granted subject to a condition that the development is “carried out in strict accordance” with the proposed elevations and ground floor plan “unless any amendment is first approved by the Local Planning Authority”.

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