Westminster to drive out pigeons - News - Evening Standard
       

Westminster to drive out pigeons

Farmers' markets and antique stalls could be established around Westminster Cathedral as part of a £2.5million plan to rejuvenate the "tired and unattractive" space.

Westminster has hired architects to "design out" homeless people and pigeons amid fears that the piazza in front of the cathedral and nearby Wilcox Place has become a no-go area for residents and commuters.

A report on the plan complains about the large numbers of rough sleepers attracted to the area by the proximity of Victoria Coach Station and soup kitchen, The Passage.

It states: "Since the UK opened its borders to EU migrant workers, there has been an influx of transient workersa large proportion of these arrive at Victoria Coach Station. Some of these new arrivals have no money and no accommodation."

The council said it had "worked hard" to persuade the soup kitchen to leave the area and claimed "local stakeholders" believed the charity was attracting anti-social behaviour and crime.

The brief for the new design will include attempts to make the piazza less attractive to rough sleepers. Over the next year the council will invest £185,000 on a design for both spaces. Over the next five years it will spend another £2.4million on reinventing the area, and may set up an antiques market or farmers' market.

Alison Gelder, chief executive of Housing Justice, which runs the London Soup Run Forum, said she was deeply concerned about Westminster's intentions.

She admitted the piazza is popular among rough sleepers because of its abundance of nooks next to warm air vents, but added: "We are concerned Westminster might use aggressive tactics. One of the things we are worried about is that in the City they have been using street cleaning teams to wet places where rough sleepers lie - and in some cases their possessions and even the people themselves.

"Other councils wake people up and engage them in conversation to deter them. Our preference would be working to make sure they have somewhere to sleep. They are human beings. And if you do not find them somewhere to stay they will only move elsewhere."

Rosemary Westbrook, Westminster's director of housing, said: "Westminster works very hard to get rough sleepers' lives back on track, and with our network of hostels and centres, in the last year we helped more than 750 off the street.

"We have no plans to target rough sleepers in an aggressive way. Any work we undertake to clean the streets where they may have been congregating is done sensitively."

Don't Miss
Rock star: Erin Wasson

Rock star

Erin Wasson is the ultimate anti-supermodel
Maybe it’s because she’s a Londoner … Happy anniversary, Ma’am

Happy anniversary

The monarchy has become stronger and more respected in the past 60 years
Victoria Coren: My obsession with children, five proposals a week and why David and I are no power couple

Victoria Coren

David Mitchell and I are no power couple
The Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition preview party

Summer party

Stars at the The Royal Academy of Arts
London gets ready for the Diamond Jubilee - in pictures

Diamond Jubilee

London gets ready - in pictures
The Glamour Awards - stars turn on the style

Glamour Awards

Stars turn on the style
Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink at her first Buckingham Palace garden party

Garden party

Duchess of Cambridge is pretty in pink
FIRST review of Ridley Scott's latest sci-fi blockbuster Prometheus

First review

Is Ridley Scott's Prometheus any good?
Fair-weather goths

Fair-weather goths

The sultry shades of summer darks are coming out of the shadows
Dog save the Queen: Corgis surge in popularity

Dog save the Queen

Corgis surge in popularity