Victoria Street

Howland Properties
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Victoria Street
105 Victoria Street, St Albans, AL1 · Howland Properties
Financials
The Property
Drawings
Heritage & Planning
Calendar
105 Victoria Street exterior
Street view · August 2024 — shop front at ground level, flats above
3D aerial view of 105 Victoria Street
Aerial 3D view · Roof, rear yard and neighbouring buildings from above
Ground floor interior
Ground floor interior · December 2015 — previously a picture framing shop
OS map showing 105 Victoria Street
OS Map · No. 105 highlighted — between nos. 103 and 107, backing onto Annables Court

Key Facts

Address 105 Victoria Street, St Albans, AL1
Type Mixed use — retail ground floor, 5 residential units above
Units 7 total — Shop (Jean), Marta, Anastasia, Varsha, Elena, Kasia (x2)
Period 1920s–30s interwar
Heritage Status Locally listed (part of nos. 95–109 group)
Conservation Area Area 7c — Victoria Street
Construction Brick, two/three storey
Council St Albans City & District

Architectural Drawings

Feneley Studio (Job 1701) for City Creative Ltd — Planning drawings for 105 Victoria Street, January 2023.

Ground Floor

Ground floor plan
Ground Floor Plan · Shop 50m² + Flat C3(a) 39m² with kitchen, living, dining, bedroom, shower room and patio

Second Floor & Roof

Second floor and roof plan
Second Floor & Roof Plan · Existing layout
Conservation Area 7c

Victoria Street Conservation Area

Victoria Street is one of the main roads into St Albans city centre, leading uphill from the Midland mainline rail station. The street has earlier origins than its name suggests — records of a route along this line date from the 13th century. The area is in mixed residential and commercial use, predominantly office and retail with some flats above.

The conservation area encompasses most of Victoria Street as far as Marlborough Road. Due to its straight east–west alignment, long views along the street are a key positive characteristic. The street retains strong Victorian and interwar character through its historic buildings.

Locally Listed

105 Victoria Street — Listing Status

No. 105 is part of the locally listed group at nos. 95–109 Victoria Street, described in the conservation area appraisal as "a number of two and three storey brick buildings from the 1920s and '30s." While not statutorily listed, locally listed status means the council considers the building to make a positive contribution to the conservation area's character and appearance.

What locally listed means in practice

  • External alterations visible from the street require planning permission
  • The council will assess proposals against the building's contribution to the conservation area
  • Permitted development rights for windows and external materials are removed in conservation areas
  • Like-for-like repairs (same materials, same design) are generally acceptable
Planning Alert

Window Sills — Timber to Aluminium

Likely outcome: Replacing timber window sills with aluminium would almost certainly require planning permission and is likely to face resistance from the conservation officer. The appraisal repeatedly highlights traditional timber windows as a positive feature and notes the loss of original windows elsewhere as harmful.

Why it's problematic

  • The building is locally listed — external changes are scrutinised
  • Within a conservation area, normal permitted development rights for windows are removed
  • The appraisal specifically values timber sash windows and traditional materials
  • Aluminium is not consistent with the 1920s–30s character of the building
  • The document notes that where "appropriate materials" have been used, character has been retained

Options to consider

  • Like-for-like timber replacement — lowest risk, may not need formal permission
  • Slim-profile timber-effect aluminium — would require planning application, needs strong justification (e.g. energy efficiency, maintenance reduction)
  • Modified timber with aluminium cladding on sills only — a middle ground, but still likely needs permission
Recommended next step: Contact the St Albans conservation team for pre-application advice before committing to any approach. A like-for-like timber replacement is the path of least resistance and avoids the planning process entirely.

Area Character — Key Points

Positive features noted by council

  • Long views along Victoria Street
  • Historic assets and locally listed buildings providing strong sense of history
  • Corner landmark buildings (Victorian public houses)
  • Restrained, traditional signage
  • Victorian and interwar character retained through appropriate materials

Negative features noted

  • Busy roads and traffic signage clutter
  • Some modern buildings out of character (e.g. Telephone Exchange)
  • Loss of traditional paving
  • Some unsympathetic signage

Council's scope for change

  • Some modern buildings would benefit from redevelopment or enhancement
  • Improvements to planting and resurfacing welcomed
  • Signage improvements encouraged
Parking Policy

Parking Standards — St Albans District

105 Victoria Street falls within Zone 2 (St Albans city centre and adjoining areas), where a degree of parking restraint is applied. The standards below are from the council's Revised Parking Policies and Standards (January 2002).

How Zone 2 works

  • Residential: schemes below the standard may be accepted, but the council will still seek sufficient spaces to meet likely parking demand
  • Foodstores: 90–100% of maximum parking standard
  • Other non-residential (retail/office): 50–75% of maximum parking standard

Standards relevant to 105 Victoria Street

Use Max car parking Cycle parking
A1 — Shops (up to 500m²) 1 space per 30m² gfa 1 s/t per 150m² + 1 l/t per 10 staff
C3 — Residential (general) Zone 2: below standard may be accepted 1 l/t per unit (if no garage/shed)
C3(b) — HMO 0.5 spaces per tenancy unit

Key provisions

  • Within 300m of public car parks in St Albans centre, developments under 500m² in A1/A2/A3/B1 classes do not require on-site parking, but a commuted payment may be sought
  • Non-residential standards are maximums (not to be exceeded), not minimums
  • Disabled parking is a minimum standard — must be met regardless of zone and is additional to maximum standards
  • Commuted parking charge: £7,000 per space (2002 figure, rises with RPI)
In practice for 105 Victoria Street: As a mixed-use property in Zone 2 with a ground-floor shop under 500m² and residential flats above, on-site parking may not be required for the retail element. For the residential units, the council may accept provision below standard but will still want to see that likely demand is addressed.

Source Documents

The summaries above are extracted from the full council documents. Download the originals for the complete text:

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Victoria Street