Event on Saturday offers family fun and a chance to discuss development plans

The West 12 Shopping Centre is hosting a community event on its first floor on Saturday 14 September, from 1pm till 7pm, where visitors can discuss plans for the centre's revelopment and join in some fun family events.
The highlight of the event, which is being organised by award winning community charity Petit Miracles, will be Drone Taster sessions, offering hands on drone flying opportunities for everyone aged seven and up.
There will also be model building, painting, videos, music and refreshments.
Visitors can also visit Petit Miracles' hub, offering products and services from a number of local traders and find out out the charity's regular worshops, where participants can learn about furniture upcycling, using power tools and upholstering stools.
Find out more about these workshops here.
Landsec, owners of the centre on the south side of Shepherd's Bush Green says this event is part of its wider consultation for the W12 and provides an opportunity for people to discuss its redevelopment plans.
Earlier this year, Landsec revealed radical plans for the site including demolition of half of the building and closure of the businesses within it, including supermarket Lidl and the Vue cinema.
Landsec says: "We are thinking about the site in two halves: the back half containing Vue, Fitness First, Lidl and part of the car park; and the front half containing Aroma, Poundland, Argos, Bush Doctors, Wetherspoons and the Shepherd’s Bush Green frontages.
"When the back half is developed, all retailers there would go e.g. Vue, Fitness First, Lidl. We will definitely bring a supermarket back and are currently in discussions to see who else would want to return.
        
 
      "The plans for the front half the site include proposals to improve and refurbish the frontage facing onto Shepherd's Bush Green. " 
      

In documents unveiled during an earlier public consultation, Landsec said the benefits of its proposals would include:
        
      Reducing anti-social behaviour by remove off-licence and 
        betting shop, removing unused 
elements of the car park 
which operate as a hub for 
anti-social behaviour, 
 
improving character 
and openness to the 
streetscape along Rockley  
Road and improving lighting to all 
spaces 
Creating a new, safer, open air 
        pedestrian route through 
        the site to Shepherd’s Bush 
        Station / Westfield, increasing natural 
        surveillance from new  
        residential and retail 
        elements and adding 
         24/7 CCTV coverage across 
      the site 
Recreating the original feel of the Concorde centre by taking the roof off the main mall to create a more welcoming and open feel with new public spaces at the heart of the scheme providing a welcoming environment to be enjoyed by all including space for pop-ups, local events and performances
Improving the local service offer for all locals – not Westfield, retain the local doctors' surgery and retaining a local supermarket
Providing         700+ new affordable homes which would be high quality, well
        insulated, heated and
        powered homes using 
        renewable energy
Creating a variety of retail jobs, plus workspace for hundreds 
        of new jobs, affordable workspace
        provision for small 
        businesses and 500+ construction jobs
New 
        community 
        hub space such as a community café offering 
        healthy food, new, high quality,
        multifunctional facilities 
        for events and community 
        gatherings and provision of local training,
        volunteering and 
        development opportunities 
        for local people, the
        unemployed and those
        living with disabilities
New street planting, trees 
        and small parks to provide 
        places to sit and breathe,   
        children’s play areas to 
        encourage safe play with 
        better air quality, new enlarged doctors’ 
        surgery, improved air quality through 
        pollution-absorbing 
        planting and materials, limited number of parking 
        spaces for electric and 
        shared vehicles
        
        Explaining the reasons for the proposed redevelopment, 
        Landsec says much has changed within the local area since West 12 was opened in the 1970s, but the centre has remained largely unchanged and has struggled to fill the empty shop units in the last few years.
The company added that in a consultation held in 2018, of the 700 respondents, 72% felt either neutral, negatively or extremely negatively towards the site as it is.
However, Landsec added: " We were also told that there is a unique local convenience offer still enjoyed by many residents."
You can find out more and offer your views on the plans on the West 12 website and you can see more details of its current proposals here.
You can also share your opinions with other local people on our forum.
September 12, 2019