German government objects to £35m Glasgow flats project
A planning row broke out last month over proposals for Park Quadrant in the west end.
The German government has waded into a controversial plan for a new property development in one of Glasgow's most prestigious areas.
A planning row broke out last month in the west end of the city after a property developer lodged an application for a multimillion-pound flats development.
Park Quadrant, which sits next to Kelvingrove Park, was sold by the council to English-based developer Expresso Property for £6.3m. The firm want to build 98 flats on the site worth around £35m.
The German consul general in Scotland, Jens-Peter Voss, has written to Glasgow City Council on behalf of the German government objecting to the proposal, which he branded "inappropriate" and "clumsy".
Neighbouring Park Circus houses the Goethe Institute, Germany's cultural institute in Scotland, which occupies and manages a building owned by the government in Berlin.
It runs language courses for hundreds of students every year as well as lectures, exhibitions and other cultural functions.
Staff at the institute and at Alliance Francaise, a private higher education establishment teaching French which occupies the same building, are said to be strongly opposed to the plans.
The city council has received more than 200 formal objections to the £35m proposed development.
Mr Voss said the town houses at two and three Park Circus were represented by the German Consulate under international law and he feared their functions would be negatively affected by noise and air pollution from the building project.
He said the scale of the proposed six-storey development would intrude upon the privacy of students, visitors and staff at the Goethe Institute.
A report commissioned by Mr Voss on behalf of the institute said it benefits from a central location in one of the most prestigious conservation areas of Glasgow, chosen because it accords with the institute's "noise sensitive" activities.
The report states: "This peace is likely to be disrupted very significantly during construction, to the point where the Goethe Institute and the Alliance Francaise may not be able to fulfil their functions satisfactorily.
"Increased noise can also be expected from the occupants of the proposed 98 flats, and associated equipment, such as fans, heat pumps, etc.
"The Goethe Institute will also suffer from a reduction in air quality resulting from the mature parkland being removed and replaced by a large underground car park ventilated towards Park Circus Lane, its garden ground and rear elevation."
Councillors are due to decide on the issue at a meeting of the planning committee next month.