George Town: The Penang state government has cancelled a plan to allow
Boustead Holdings Bhd (BHB) to reclaim up to 0.16 hectares of land off
the Penang Bridge.
Boustead was initially given the rights as
part of compensation package for agreeing to scale down a hotel
development project in the state's heritage zone.
A statement
from Chief Minister Lim Guan Eng's office, obtained by Business Times
yesterday, noted the decision was made following public consultation and
a legal notice sent by Boustead to a state assemblyman who was
defending his constituents in the affected area.
"After much
public consultation, the Penang State Government has taken cognisance of
the views of the residents of Putra Marine, Gold Coast and Bay Garden
and decided not to pursue the land reclamation at Bayan Bay to Boustead.
"To
pursue the land reclamation deal with Boustead under the shadow of the
legal notice of defamation sent by Boustead to (Pantai Jerejak)
assemblyman Sim Tze Sin is wholly inappro-priate," Lim said in the
statement.
"Boustead will still be required to comply with the
World Heritage building height control of 18 metres within the heritage
core zone of George Town.
"The form of compensation to be paid
and whether it should be paid," Lim added, "is still subject to further
negotiations with Boustead".
Boustead was in the midst of
constructing a one-block 300-room Royale Bintang Hotel in George Town's
heritage zone in 2009, when works were halted following reports the
development could place George Town's heritage status in jeopardy.
Boustead
is one of four developers who have been singled out for undertaking
projects exceeding the height restriction in the heritage city's buffer
and core zone.
The others are Asian Global Business (AGB) Sdn Bhd, Eastern & Oriental Sdn Bhd and the Low Yat Group.
All
the firms had approval from the Penang Island Municipal Council for
projects exceeding the 18m limit, well before George Town was placed on
the World Heritage List in July 2008.
Last year, Boustead said it
was seeking compensation from the Penang state government for agreeing
to reduce the height of its proposed hotel. It is learnt that the
company had sought RM20.8 million as compensation.
A Boustead spokesman, meanwhile, said the company was waiting for the state government to make a decision on the compensation.
"They
have to pay us either in the form of land reclamation or cash
reimbursement. They have to make a decision as to how to pay us, so we
can recover the money we have spent," the Boustead official said.
The
spokesman did not divulge the amount spent by Boustead on its hotel
project, except to say that they had completed between 10 and 15 per
cent of work so far.
By Business Times
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