A defunct office building is set to be converted into apartments next to a neighbourhood pub in Slough.
A closed estate agents and adjacent buildings next to a pub in the Upton area are set to become apartments.
Elsewhere, a new home is set to be built on the grounds of an old pub in a busy village.
In the Royal Borough, progress is being made on a development that adds to the growth of Windsor, and a developer has failed to make changes to its project that adds flats to a converted office in Maidenhead.
You can view each decided application by typing the reference in brackets into the relevant council’s planning portal.
Replacement of estate agents with flats ( Slough app P/04393/015)
A defunct estate agents at the end of a terrace that includes a pub is set to be replaced and turned into housing.
The Albert Street terrace comprises of The Wheatsheaf pub, a home, a convenience store and a closed Hunters estate agent.
Hunters, located at the end of the terrace and adjacent buildings are now set to be replaced with seven one-bedroom flats contained in a new two-storey building, with a new shopfront facing Alfred Street.
Each flat will come with a double bed, a bath and an open plan kitchen living room.
New home on old village pub site approved (P/09960/018)
A developer has won approval to build a four-bedroom home on the site of an old pub in the busy village of Colnbrook.
The house will be built on the grounds of Ye Olde George Inn, which although closed serves as a bus stop on the route between Slough and Heathrow Airport.
It will be located along Vicarage Way, and come with an open plan living and dining room, a separate lounge, kitchen and breakfast bar with three parking spaces.
Details for house project that expands Windsor approved (RBWM app 24/00583/CONDIT)
More details for a housing project that expands Windsor to the west have been approved.
Crest Nicholson is moving ahead with its project to build 135 homes in Water Oakley, a hamlet immediately south of Windsor Marina.
The Royal Borough’s planning department approved details of the external materials that will be used for the homes on April 30.
Changes to addition of flats to converted office rejected (RBWM app 20/03524/VAR)
Development company Montreaux has failed in its plan to change car park arrangements at Marlborough House, previously called Marandaz House, a converted office in Clivemont Road, Maidenhead.
The changes involved revisions to a refuse store in the front car park and the removal of a smaller refuse store next to a cycle store in the rear car park.
However, the car park changes were refused by the council on April 30 out of concerns that the change will lead to an increase in on-street parking.
That was because Montreaux had not secured a ‘deed of variation’ needed for 12 parking spaces provided off site.
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