M&S given green light by Angela Rayner to demolish historic Oxford Street store after four year row
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00:00M&S has been given the all-clear to demolish its 94-year-old flagship store at Marble Arch,
00:05ending a fierce three-year row over the Art Deco building.
00:09The retailer plans to knock down the historic building on Oxford Street
00:12and replace it with a 10-story development,
00:14housing a smaller M&S store, offices, a cafe and a gym.
00:18Orchard House was built in the late 1920s by catering business J. Lyons & Co.
00:23Marks & Spencer's took space in the building on its completion
00:25and in 1967 took it over completely.
00:28The Deputy PM and Housing Secretary Angela Rayner
00:31gave the demolition plan the go-ahead on Thursday.
00:33The hugely controversial proposals were first submitted to Westminster Council
00:37almost four years ago, highlighting the significant employment
00:40and regeneration benefits of the scheme.
00:42M&S have said the new shop would support 2,000 jobs
00:45and would help rejuvenate the UK's main shopping district.
00:49However, campaigners are not happy with the decision.
00:52The plans have been dogged by court cases and opposition
00:54from heritage and sustainability experts for years.
00:57Former Housing Secretary Michael Gove eventually stepped in
01:00and refused the application in July 2023.
01:03Heritage groups argued that the government should prioritise
01:06reusing old buildings and called the plans indefensible.
01:09But M&S has insisted that the existing store is not fit for purpose
01:13and would be impossible to modernise.