Doric Way Streatery - permanent proposals
Overview
We are seeking your views on proposals to make our trial Streatery for outdoor dining on Doric Way permanent.
We want our streets to have more safe space for everyone to walk and cycle, for children to get to and from school safely and healthily, for you to be breathing cleaner air, and for businesses to be able to flourish. We want our streets to provide a lasting legacy of greener, safer, healthier travel with places for people to spend time in and enjoy, regenerating our local neighbourhood centres and high streets.
To help, we have been making trial changes across Camden as part of our Streateries Programme: Streateries change parking bays in the road to spaces where businesses can place tables and chairs for al fresco dining (subject to securing a tables and chairs licence), protected by barriers. This means pedestrians, wheelchair users and buggy users can pass safely on the pavement.
Camden’s town centres and high streets are at the heart of local communities and community life: they are places where residents, workers and visitors shop, work, socialise, and access culture and services. Camden has developed a Future High Streets vision to support our local high streets so that they continue to add to community life. Streateries are essential for delivering this vision: they help to revitalise streets, create destinations for residents and visitors to meet, socialise and spend time, adding to street life and vibrancy, increasing footfall, and helping to regenerate the wider local economy.
We are now consulting on whether or not to make some of our trial Streateries permanent, including one outside Roti King on Doric Way in Euston. This Streatery was implemented as a temporary measure in May 2021 in response to the pandemic when indoor seating was limited. Parking was removed to create a new space in the road for outdoor dining, protected by wooden planters. In April 2023 the Streatery was extended for a further 18 months as a trial under an Experimental Traffic Order (ETO) until October 2024. We are now consulting on whether or not to make the Streatery space and the wooden planters/barriers outside Roti King permanent at the end of the trial period.
Over the past few years our Streateries Commonplace webpages have allowed residents to provide feedback on all our Streateries across the borough. The majority (77%) of people commenting on our Streateries overall are happy with them, as well as the one on Doric Way.
Why your views matter
This is your opportunity to comment.
We are now proposing to permanently keep the Streatery space and wooden planters/barriers outside Roti King on Doric Way and we want to hear your views. We want to engage our local residents, businesses and stakeholders in changes that are proposed on their streets and what you think about these proposals:
- Permanently keep the Streatery outside Roti King, 40 Doric Way, which replaced 15.4 meters of paid for parking to create an outdoor dining space in the road and wooden planters/ barriers.
To view the plans please click on the link in the Related Section at the bottom of this page.
After the consultation, a decision report will be produced and published online via our website. Local residents and stakeholders will be notified of the outcome. The report will consider a broad range of information including officer observations, consultation responses, feedback received during the trial period, relevant policies, and other data/information.
The report will then outline if at the end of the trial period, the experimental scheme should be made permanent, modified, or allowed to lapse. Subject to the decision to make the scheme permanent, officers will continue to monitor the scheme and will consider additional measures if necessary. These will be progressed and publicly consulted on as part of a separate scheme.
For information on how we will use data collected from this consultation read our privacy statement: Data protection, privacy and cookies - Camden Council
What happens next
After the consultation, a decision report will be produced and published online via our website. Local residents and stakeholders will be notified of the outcome. The report will consider a broad range of information including officer observations, consultation responses, feedback received during the trial period, relevant policies, and other data/information.
The report will then outline if at the end of the trial period, the experimental scheme should be made permanent, modified, or allowed to lapse. Subject to the decision to make the scheme permanent, officers will continue to monitor the scheme and will consider additional measures if necessary. These will be progressed and publicly consulted on as part of a separate scheme.
Areas
- St Pancras and Somers Town
Audiences
- Anyone from any background
Interests
- Transport and streets
Share
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook