
The db Group has submitted a new application to significantly increase the height of its residential towers currently under construction on the former Institute of Tourism Studies (ITS) site in Pembroke.
According to the application, the company is seeking to add seven storeys to one tower and six to the other, bringing their heights to 23 and 25 storeys respectively. This would represent an increase from the previously approved 17 and 18 storeys.
The site in Pembroke was transferred to the db Group as part of a controversial land deal approved by Parliament in 2017.
This latest request marks the third time the developer has sought to modify the height of the development. Initially, the project was proposed as a 38-storey tower alongside a 17-storey hotel, but the permit for this development was subsequently revoked by the courts due to a conflict of interest involving a member of the Planning Authority’s board. It should be noted that the revocation was not related to the height of the buildings.
Importantly, the site lies within an area where the use of Floor Area Ratio (FAR) is permitted. This planning mechanism determines the allowable number of floors for medium and high-rise developments based on the size of the site.
Construction is currently underway on the db Group project at St George’s Bay, where the former tourism school once stood.
On Wednesday, Momentum stated that after years of legal battles and public resistance, the db Group’s push for additional floors “exposes the relentless greed that fuels some of Malta’s most monstrous developments.”
The party said the company’s claim that the extra floors reflect unused floor area was “an insult to those who fought against the project.”
“Let us be clear: the people of Pembroke and the Maltese public at large have already paid dearly in terms of lost public space, environmental degradation, and a permanent scar on our coastal landscape.” the party said.
Party chairperson Arnold Cassola described the company’s move as “brazen profiteering,” adding that the db Group’s strategy was to chip away at opposition to the project little by little.
Momentum appealed to the Planning Authority to reject the application and urged the public and NGOs to voice their opposition by sending emails to [email protected].
“The future of our towns, skylines, coastlines, beaches and shared environment cannot be determined by the unchecked ambitions of single developers intent only on amassing millions in profit for themselves. Enough is enough.” Cassola concluded.
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