Skip to content

Wimbledon chiefs hope Wandsworth council will dismiss planning officers' advice and back extension plans

Merton Council’s planning committee had recently agreed to the project; planning officers at Wandsworth Council have since recommended the refusal over plans of expansion.

Merton Council have given the go-ahead for Wimbledon, as we know it, to be reconstructed to feature an 8,000-seater show room, and 38 new courts.
Image: Merton Council had given the go-ahead for Wimbledon extension plans, but officers at counterparts Wandsworth Council have since advised against it.

Wimbledon chiefs hope Wandsworth councillors will reject the recommendations of planning officers and back their expansion plans at next week's meeting.

The project, which involves the construction of 38 new courts in neighbouring Wimbledon Park including an 8,000-seat show court, has met with significant protest from some local residents.

The All England Club achieved a major victory last month when Merton Council decided to approve the plans but a smaller section of the site lies within Wandsworth and its planning officers have recommended councillors reject it.

The Wimbledon Golf Course is set to replaced by 38 courts
Image: The Wimbledon Golf Course is set to replaced by an 8,000-seater stadium and 38 outside courts.

They will meet next Tuesday to make their decision, and an All England Club spokesperson said in a statement: "We are surprised that planning officers at the London Borough of Wandsworth have recommended refusal of the AELTC Wimbledon Park Project, particularly after the London Borough of Merton resolved to approve the application following extensive analysis and debate both in their officers' report and at the planning committee.

"We regret that Wandsworth's officers have taken a different view but it is for councillors on the Planning Applications Committee to make their own considered decision at the meeting on November 21.

"We firmly believe the AELTC Wimbledon Park Project will deliver substantial social, economic and environmental benefits, including 23 acres of newly accessible green space, alongside hundreds of jobs and tens of millions of
pounds in economic benefits for our neighbours in Wandsworth, Merton and across London."

The new show court drew the most concern from planning officers, who concluded that there were not the necessary very special circumstances to outweigh the harm and loss of open land.

Also See:

Irrespective of the Wandsworth decision, the project will be referred to the Greater London Authority, which could lead to its fate being decided by the government.