Historic concert hall which once hosted The Beatles to be turned into student flats

A Mecca Bingo and former concert hall which once hosted The Beatles will be turned into student flats after councillors voted for approval.

A 275-bed student block will be built in Fishergate despite concerns from residents and some councillors about access to the site, noise, congestion and the loss of a bingo hall as a place to meet.

The plans were deferred at a previous planning committee after councillors debated whether a bingo hall deserved protection under planning guidelines as a valued cultural facility.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Labour leader Pete Kilbane accused anyone who disagreed of “cultural snobbery.”

How the new site could lookHow the new site could look
How the new site could look

He added: “If we want to have healthy communities, they need a place to meet and people tend to meet in places where they can have fun.”

Councillor Katie Lomas pointed out that historically bingo emerged as an alternative social activity for working class women who were excluded from pubs.

Council officers said the bingo hall, which has been closed for two years, was not viable, but Coun Lomas said many businesses had been similarly affected by the pandemic.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad
Read More
Holiday lodges on site of First World War camp could trigger landslips, warn res...

Committee chairman Tony Fisher said: “What other possible cultural facility could we get on a site like that that would actually fill it and be viable? I can’t think of one.”

The entrance to the new, four-storey development will now be in Blue Bridge Lane after developers updated their plans.

Stepanie Leeman, an architect and representative for Fishergate House and Fishergate Court residents, raised concerns about congestion.

She added: “If it is just for students it’s going to be a completely closed, introverted sort of community that nobody else is going to be invited into.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“To bring 275 students plus their partners and any other friends that they have – the impact is going to be horrific.”

Michelle Davies, representing the applicant, said: “The scheme represents over £38m of investment into the city and it is efficient use of a brownfield site in a sustainable location.”

Coun Mark Warters said it was “a wasted opportunity.”

He added: “A mixed use development, retaining some form of community use and to have housing units for York residents would be a plus that would be supported by the residents and the majority of this committee.”

Coun Michael Pavlovic said: “I would much rather see it as accommodation for families or individuals. But that’s not the world that these developers live in.

“There’s a bigger buck in turning it into student accommodation than there is turning into accommodation for families. I can’t find any planning grounds to refuse this.”

Related topics: