Plans to extend private school to the school mansion may fall foul of restrictions
Further to the recent announcement by Gunnersbury Park Joint Advisory Panel, formed by Ealing and Hounslow councils to manage Gunnersbury Park, that a private school may take over the small mansion at Gunnersbury Park , local resident Maria Cunha has raised the issue of the Rothschild Covenant which protects Gunnersbury Park.
Writing to Alpha Plus Group Ltd and The Falcons School for Girls she asks:
Are you aware that Gunnersbury Park is protected by the Rothschild Covenant of 1925, renewed in 1926, that stipulates that the Park is to be used solely as a public park or sports ground?
As quoted in the above law report, the Councils undertook by deed that:
“they will not use the land and hereditaments for any purpose other than as a 
        public park or sports ground and that the mansion houses and buildings on the said
        land…shall not at any time…be used except for such public purposes as may be 
        ancillary to the use thereof as aforesaid…”
As intended Lessees for 200 years, you are bound by the Restrictive Covenant. All the
        houses bordering the Park along Lionel Road and many of those bordering the Park along
        Popes Lane are legally entitled to the benefit of this covenant.
Your school’s proposals would be in breach of the covenant. I am concerned that a private
        school should set up business in a public Park and likely wish to segregate parts of the
        Park for its own uses such as for access, parents and staff car-parking, delivery areas for
        school suppliers, cleaners, security and maintenance staff as well as fencing off areas for
        exclusive use by your school or any outside bodies using or hiring the school building with
        attendant vehicles and coaches. In future years, your school or some other school that you
        might assign the 200 years Lease to may wish to erect new buildings such as a Concert
        Hall, Swimming-Pool Building, Arts Centre, Classrooms, etc further eroding the use of the
        Park for purely public open space purposes.
      
Local residents have not heard that an Application is being made to the Upper Tribunal
        (Lands Chamber) by the joint Freeholders of the covenanted land and I am writing
        to enquire if it is your intention to proceed with your proposals in breach of the 1926
        Restrictive Covenant burdening the land.
Yvonne Johnson, the Chair of Gunnersbury Park Joint Advisory Panel, has been asked to comment on this matter.
April 18, 2013