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Avoiding a place where you might have to do physical exercise might be something you choose to do but the Fountains receives 14,000 visits a month so there are lot of people who have a different approach and its future does matter.Anita makes an excellent point about the property sales. The Watermans deal collapsed for two reasons - the private sector developer couldn't make enough on market sales and the housing association couldn't financially support taking on the affordable units.If there is a glut of flats in Brentford with a huge overhang of unsold units, then any feasibility study into the viability of a new leisure centre must take this into account and it shouldn't be taken as read that it won't be concluded that it is unviable.I can understand if people from Brentford would be upset if they lost both an arts centre and a leisure centre in short order but if a property development can't fund the replacement it certainly won't be the council with its £30million deficit which has required it to cut tax support for the poorest households.There is no guarantee that the same realities wouldn't scupper any plan to build a theatre in Chiswick. We don't know how well sales of flats have gone at Empire House and if there are a substantial number of units unsold there - a scheme to fund a theatre with flats on the post office site would probably be a non-starter. However, if it is doable it shouldn't be blocked because a Brentford councillor has made an unwise commitment that any arts facility provided would be in TW8.

Jeremy Parkinson ● 5d

A Chiswick-centric view is perhaps to be expected on a Chiswick-centric forum but, as so often, you are misrepresenting what I and others have said.Firstly, a point of information - Hounslow will not be funding a new arts centre even in Brentford or Chiswick. Whatever is built will be paid for by the developer as a condition of planning approval.Secondly, nobody in Chiswick is demanding an arts centre that they can drive to. People coming from W4 can cycle or take the bus to Brentford. The point is that better public transport links and parking availability would make an arts centre more viable as it would attract an audience from across a wider area of London.The best solution here is that the existing twin scheme can be revived and the plans already approved are implemented. However, how likely is this to happen? Neither the main developer or any housing association partner now appear willing to proceed with the scheme. I don't believe it is possible to just ditch the affordable housing requirement as was done with the stadium development and say that the arts centre meets the developers planning gain obligations so it appears the current proposals are dead in the water and it is unlikely that a revised scheme would get over the obstacles that have thwarted the current one.If this is the case then what should the attitude of the council be if the developer of the Chiswick Post Office site says we will provide you with a 250 seat community theatre in return for a waiver of the requirement to make some of the flats affordable?Are you seriously saying that if Brentford doesn't get an arts centre then Chiswick can't have one either?

Jeremy Parkinson ● 7d