The owner of a former bank building which was bought for nearly double the asking price has appealed to East Lothian councillors for a third time to let them turn it into a home after claiming its planning history has made it "unsellable".
Previous bids to turn the former Royal Bank of Scotland building, on North Berwick's Westgate, into a house failed after planners ruled it an unnecessary loss of a commercial unit.
And after two attempts to win planning permission failed, the owner put it up for sale with an asking price of £595,000.
READ MORE: East Lothian law firm to expand into North Berwick shop next door
When no sale was made the owner applied again for planning permission to change it from commercial use to residential but was once again turned down by planners.
Now a new appeal has been lodged with councillors after agents for applicant Patricia Sharp said no "sensible offers" had been made to buy the property adding the rejection of previous applications had "blighted" the building.
A report by planning officers who rejected the third planning application earlier this year said the applicant had told officers "It appears to us that the bank (is) blighted by the planning history. To put it bluntly we cannot sell it to anyone."
The single storey bank hall, which is attached to a Category-B listed building, was sold after the bank moved out of the seaside town in 2018.
Its new owners originally wanted to convert it into a three-storey, two bedroom property with a wine cellar and rumpus room in the basement, office and living space on the ground floor and a spectacular living area and additional bedroom on the first floor which would have had beach front views.
The proposals met a wall of objections from the local community however, who argued it would affect the character of the town centre while East Lothian councillors refused to change the use of the building from business use to residential.
Councillors insisted that there was demand for office space in North Berwick and no reason to convert the valuable commercial premises into a house.
In 2019 it was revealed that East Lothian Lands (ELL), the council’s arms length property company which looks at transferring employment land for use, had tried to buy the bank hall.
At a meeting of the council’s audit and governance committee, Richard Baty, ELL business development manager, said efforts to buy the site were frustrated.
He said: “RBS was extremely frustrating. When we visited there were five or six couples being shown around as residential use.”
Mr Baty said that ELL had initially offered to buy the former bank hall, which could have been converted to four small offices, for £199,000 but that was rejected, with the asking price over £225,000.
The company returned with a new offer of £230,000 but was rejected a second time.
In the end it sold for £555,555 to the current owner who told the council their bid was only marginally above other competitive bids for the bank.
But the council refused to approve plans for it to be used as a residential property.
The most recent application would see the outside of the bank building retained and change of use for the current footprint sought.
Planners rejected the application earlier this year saying again it was an unacceptable loss of a commercial unit.
The appeal will be heard by the council's Local Review Body next month.
READ NEXT:
East Lothian Council could force entry into hundreds of homes over fire safety
East Lothian nursery funding withdrawn over 'approach to inclusion'
Rent arrears in East Lothian fall below £1 million for first time in over a decade
Plea for new East Lothian GP surgery as more houses get go ahead
East Lothian October break extended for school pupils to mark Queen's funeral