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Bevis Marks Synagogue fights nearby skyscrapers plan
Bevis Marks Synagogue fights nearby skyscrapers plan

BBC News

timea day ago

  • General
  • BBC News

Bevis Marks Synagogue fights nearby skyscrapers plan

The UK's oldest continuously-run synagogue in the City of London has said it is at risk due to plans for nearby City of London Corporation's draft City Plan 2040 includes plans to add more than a million square metres of office floorspace to the area. Bevis Marks Synagogue, which was built in 1701, argues that a clear view of the night sky and the moon is necessary for Jewish corporation said it believed there were adequate protections in place for the synagogue and that it recognised the place of worship had a "general affinity for the sky". Planning adviser Roger Hepher, representing the synagogue, said: "The sky view is very important to the significance of the synagogue. As a place of worship it is fundamentally important." The synagogue was the first to be built following the re-settlement of Jews in England in the second half of the 17th Shalom Morris described the Grade I listed building as a "national treasure" which would be compromised if its view of the sky was crowded out by nearby England said the corporation's drive for more office space "would lead to significant levels of harm to the historic environment".Mr Hepher added: "There's not a proper understanding of the importance, the matter of setting and the context of the synagogue particularly, and the importance of maintaining what remains of the open view of the sky." World Heritage application Rabbi Morris also revealed the synagogue was intending on applying for "intangible world heritage status" later this effectively means traditions and events, as well as buildings and built environments, can be afforded levels of protection usually reserved for "tangible" pieces of history and is not the first time the synagogue has fought off plans that it said would obscure the surrounding sky view. Last December plans for a 43-storey skyscraper beside Bevis Marks Synagogue were refused by the City of London Corporation, due to its expected impact on the synagogue.

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