Demolition of Stalybridge police station for 'ugly' new flats approved
Plans to demolish Stalybridge’s former police station and replace it with a block of flats slammed as ‘ugly’ by councillors have been approved. Once used by the Cheshire Constabulary, and then later Greater Manchester Police, Stalybridge Police station was built in 1968 and remained in use for 37 years.
However it has lain empty since 2005 and has fallen into a state of ‘disrepair and dereliction’, becoming ‘Stalybridge’s biggest eyesore’ according to local councillors. Previous plans to convert the building into apartments fell by the wayside and have now been replaced with an application by to demolish the police station.
It will now be replaced with a four-storey building featuring 24 one and two-bedroom flats for a specialist supported living scheme, which includes a dedicated care 24 hour care team.
READ MORE:Inside abandoned, rotting police station left to rack and ruin for over a decade
These would be run by a registered provider and rented in consultation with the council’s housing service. A meeting of the planning committee heard that it sits in close proximity to three listed buildings, including the Civic Hall, and is also within the Stalybridge Town Centre Conservation Area.
Development manager Melanie Hale told councillors that the design was ‘relatively simple’ with red-facing brick, but was designed to reflect the style of a mill building, and was acceptable to the planning department.
“It presents an opportunity to redevelop a building that’s detrimental to the character and appearance of the area, to improve the vitality and viability of the town centre, as well as increasing the supply of housing in the borough,” she added.
Conservative Councillor Doreen Dickinson, who represents Stalybridge South,