Your chance to object to the developers’ plans for Standard Quay – there are just a few days left

This is reposted because the deadline for objecting to the plans to gentrify Standard Quay has been put back – there is still time for intheboatshed.net readers to make a difference!

Standard Quay

How would you feel, if I told you someone wants to plonk a restaurant right in the middle of the site shown in this photo – and that this would likely be the first step in a redevelopment of the area that could include more restos and cafes, and maybe housing?

Wherever this happens, working boats, sailing barges and the people who work on them come under pressure and generally have to leave. It’s been a blight all round our coast, and most of the boaty working folk have felt driven to leave Faversham’s Standard Quay already.

If like me you feel the planning authorities should take steps to save this historic old quay and return it to its old use as a boatyard and busy wharf, we have just a few days to place our objections to the restaurant plan. Read the background here.

To do so, go to the website www.ukplanning.com, search for Swale Borough Council, then go to the  applications and use the search box to hunt down applications  applying to Standard Quay. There are just a few days left to lodge your reasons for objecting to the proposed development.

I guess we’ll all have our own objections, and that they will become obvious from reading the documentation. My guess is that some intheboatshed readers might include the planned changes to Building no 1 itself, and perhaps the undeniable fact that establishing a restaurant at this site will be the end of hopes that Standard Quay will again be bustling with traditional craft – which it was until not long ago, before established marine businesses left in a hurry.

An American in Essex and Suffolk – Thad Danielson hangs out with the Strangers and the OGA

atbrightlingsea

US boat builder Thad Danielson of Redd’s Pond Boatworks fame came to the UK this summer to join a meet of the Albert Strange Association and to attend an Old Gaffer’s Association for a rally – and he took lots of photos.

Read his account and see his photos here. You’ll be glad you did – particularly if you don’t know the coast of Essex and Suffolk

Sailing barge Repertor finds a new role as home for a cinema club

Floating Films website

Well, that’s a surprise. I learn from the The Society for Sailing Barge Research’s weblog that the well known 1920s steel-built sailing barge Repertor has found a new role as home for a cinema club based at St Katherine’s Dock, London.

I think it sounds fun. The information is here.

The not-for-profit film club folks say they intend to show a diverse selection of films with a social conscience, including shorts, features and documentaries, special screenings with live music accompaniment. There will also be talks, and part of the aim is to to help contribute to the survival of the barge fleet by raising the profile of the sailing barges. After each show, club-goers are invited to adjourn to the bar…

The club’s is 40, so the organisers recommend booking early by sending an email.