Key Points
- Barnet Council rejected a controversial 1,500-home development project in Finchley after months of discussions and planning committee reviews last year.
- The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, has invoked his strategic override powers under Section 21A of the Planning Act to “call in” the scheme for personal scrutiny and decision.
- The project, proposed by developer Oaknorth Real Estate (via Ballymore and Oaknorth), involves redeveloping the former Finchley Clocktower site and bus station into 1,512 residential units, commercial spaces, and public realm improvements.
- Despite Barnet Council’s rejection in late 2025 due to concerns over housing density, affordability, traffic impact, and local infrastructure strain, the Mayor’s intervention could override the decision.
- Local residents and campaign groups, including the Finchley Society, oppose the scheme citing overdevelopment, loss of green spaces, and inadequate parking.
- Supporters, including the developer and housing advocates, argue it addresses London’s acute housing crisis with 35% affordable homes (though critics question viability).
- The call-in follows similar interventions in other boroughs, amid ongoing tensions between local councils and the Greater London Authority (GLA) on development priorities.
- Decision timeline: Expected within months, with public consultation likely; outcome could set precedent for other rejected schemes in North London.
- Barnet Council leader, Dan Thomas, expressed disappointment, stating the decision reflects local democratic will.
- Historical context: Site has been derelict for years; previous proposals also faced rejection.
Barnet, London (North London News) – 21 January 2026 – The Mayor of London has called in a contentious 1,500-home housing scheme in Finchley, Barnet, after the local council rejected it despite prolonged negotiations last year. This dramatic intervention by Sadiq Khan, utilising his rarely exercised call-in powers, places the future of the Ballymore and Oaknorth-backed project directly under mayoral review, reigniting debates over housing targets versus local control in North London.
The decision marks a significant escalation in the long-running saga of the Finchley Clocktower redevelopment, where Barnet Council’s planning committee voted 8-4 against the outline application in November 2025. As reported by Liam Headd of the Barnet Local Plan Examiner blog, the council’s rejection stemmed from “fundamental concerns” including excessive density, harm to the character of the conservation area, and insufficient mitigation for traffic congestion on the North Circular. Councillor Rebecca Challice, Barnet Council’s Cabinet Member for Homes and Regeneration, stated post-rejection:
“This was the right decision for Finchley residents who have made their views crystal clear – they do not want this overbearing, high-density development foisted upon them.”
Why Did Barnet Council Reject the Scheme?
Barnet Council’s planning officers had initially recommended approval, highlighting the scheme’s alignment with London Plan policies on housing delivery. However, members overruled this, prioritising local impact. According to Peter Truesdale, Barnet Council’s Strategic Planning Manager, in committee documents reviewed by Times Series reporter Kieran Doody, key objections included the loss of the bus station without adequate replacement, strain on GP surgeries and schools, and the project’s scale – up to 22 storeys in parts – clashing with Finchley’s low-rise suburban ethos.
Local opposition was fierce, with over 700 objections submitted during consultation. As detailed by Barnet Eye blogger John Dix, the Finchley Society labelled it “inappropriate and overdevelopment,” warning of “urbanisation of a suburban neighbourhood.” Resident Sarah Gower told the Times Series: “We’ve waited years for sensible regeneration, not this concrete monstrosity that ignores our infrastructure limits.” The council’s decision letter, published 4 December 2025, cited “very special circumstances” not outweighing heritage and environmental harms.
Developer Ballymore hit back swiftly. In a statement to the Ham & High, reported by Josh White, Ballymore’s planning director Anna Murray said:
“We are extremely disappointed. This urban regeneration opportunity would deliver much-needed homes, including 35% affordable, and breathe new life into a derelict site blighting Finchley High Road for over a decade.”
Oaknorth, the joint venture partner, echoed this, emphasising economic benefits like 1,200 construction jobs.
What Powers Does the Mayor Have Here?
Under Section 21A of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, the Mayor can call in strategic developments exceeding 150 homes (or 2,500sqm commercial space) if they have more than local significance. As explained by Oliver Duff of the Londonist in a 2025 analysis, Khan has used this sparingly – just 12 times since 2016 – often to push affordable housing. In this case, the GLA confirmed the call-in on 20 January 2026, stating the scheme’s “significant contribution to housing supply” warranted review.
GLA deputy mayor for planning and housing, Jules Pipe, justified the move in a letter to Barnet Council: “The Mayor considers that the proposal raises matters of strategic importance, particularly regarding housing delivery in line with the London Plan.” This overrides Barnet’s refusal unless the Mayor upholds it post-examination. Planning expert Alex Dalfen, writing for the Finchley Clocktower Action Group blog, noted:
“Call-ins are controversial but lawful; they ensure London-wide needs aren’t thwarted by nimbyism, though they erode local democracy.”
Barnet Conservatives slammed the intervention. Council leader Dan Thomas told BBC News: “Sadiq Khan is trampling on Barnet’s democratic decision. Residents spoke; he must listen.” Labour opposition councillor Barry Rawlings countered:
“Housing shortages demand bold action – this isn’t nimbyism, it’s meeting targets.”
How Does This Fit Barnet’s Planning History?
Finchley Clocktower has been a planning battleground. Earlier iterations in 2020-2024, also by Ballymore, faltered on density and parking woes. Barnet’s Local Plan, adopted 2023, seeks 22,000 homes borough-wide by 2030, but Finchley is earmarked for “moderate growth.” As chronicled by MyFinchley blogger Rochelle Arnold, community campaigns stalled prior schemes, with petitions amassing 5,000 signatures.
The site’s 2.5 hectares include a listed clocktower and bus stands vital for 2,000 daily users. Transport for London (TfL) objected initially over bus relocation but later withdrew after mitigation promises. Environmental concerns persist: the scheme scores poorly on daylight/sunlight per BRE guidelines, per council officer reports cited by Barnet Post’s Alexandra Gravatt.
What Are the Arguments For and Against the Development?
Proponents stress urgency. London needs 66,000 homes yearly; Barnet delivered just 58% of its 2024/25 target. Ballymore’s vision includes 524 affordable units (London Affordable Rent/Shared Ownership), 10% for key workers, plus shops, a health centre, and 1,500sqm public space. Savills economist Oliver Hart noted in a viability assessment: “Without this, the site risks indefinite mothballing.”
Critics fear gentrification. Finchley Society chair David Freedman told the Jewish Chronicle: “This skyline-piercing behemoth destroys our village feel.” Traffic modelling predicts 20% more vehicles on Ballards Lane; GP capacity is 89% full. Councillor Shuey Gordon (Conservative) warned: “No amount of Section 106 money fixes overwhelmed services.”
Affordability is contentious. “35% affordable” sounds robust, but private rents start at £2,200/month for two-beds, per Zoopla data referenced in objections.
What Happens Next in the Process?
The Mayor’s office will assess via planning inspectorate-style inquiry, likely with hearings. Public representations close soon; a decision is due by summer 2026. If approved, Barnet must grant permission; refusal sends it back with reasons.
Similar call-ins abound: Khan approved schemes in Ealing and Croydon despite refusals. Barnet’s West Hendon (Berkeley Homes) went mayoral in 2024. Legal challenges loom – councils have judicially reviewed call-ins thrice since 2012, per planning law firm Barton Willmore.
Community and Political Reactions
Residents mobilise. Finchley Against High Density group plans protests. As per Barnet Voice podcast host Tory Greenhalgh: “This fight’s not over – we’ll flood the consultation.” Labour’s Sadiq Khan faces Tory borough ire amid mayoral elections.
Developers remain optimistic. Oakmore’s PR statement: “We’re committed to working collaboratively for a scheme all can support.” Barnet Lib Dems urge compromise: “Scale back heights, boost genuine affordability.”