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The Supreme Court refuses to order the demolition of El Algarrobico

2022-12-13T22:40:56.758Z


The judges rule out that this symbol of the degradation of the coastline can be demolished as long as the City Council does not annul the building permit that it granted almost 20 years ago


The Supreme Court has ruled out this Tuesday ordering the demolition of one of the best-known symbols of the brick fever that devoured an important part of the Spanish coast at the beginning of this century: the hotel built on the beach of El Algarrobico in the Almeria municipality of Carboneras.

The Third Chamber (for contentious-administrative matters) has dismissed the appeal filed by Greenpeace against the decision of the Superior Court of Justice of Andalusia that in July 2021 concluded that this demolition cannot be carried out while the construction —which was never opened to the public— public—continues to have in force the building license that the City Council granted to the promoter almost 20 years ago, in 2003. That municipal permit should have already been reviewed by the consistory, but given its delay,

The environmental organization Greenpeace had demanded that the demolition of this mass be ordered, which is doomed to disappear sooner or later without waiting for that process to be completed.

Sources from the high court have confirmed that the room has dismissed the environmentalists' appeal, although the ruling will not be notified for a few days with the legal arguments that have led to that decision.

The construction of this hotel was paralyzed by a judge in Almería in February 2006, when the works were practically finished.

In the last 16 years, its illegality has been proven after around fifty judicial pronouncements of all kinds: the construction invades 100 meters of the maritime-terrestrial public domain strip, it was built in an area of ​​the Cabo de Gata natural park -Níjar, where it is not possible to build and the land on which it is located is the property of the Junta de Andalucía, which also exercised the right of withdrawal in 2006, after the controversy that arose.

One of the problems in this case is that, in order to specify all these infractions, an endless number of individual cases have been opened in recent years that have ended up creating a complex judicial tangle of sentences and appeals.

Up to 13 rulings accumulates only in the Supreme this hotel, which promoted the promoter Azata with the approval at the time of the Junta de Andalucía and the City Council of Carboneras.

The only legal basis that remains is the building permit and the Superior Court of Justice of Andalusia (TSJA) urged the consistory to review it ex officio last year, given the indications that it may be null and void.

But that court did not order the demolition, understanding that the municipal license granted 20 years ago must first be annulled.

In other words, this is the process that would have to conclude with the demolition file for the construction, but the City Council, governed by the PSOE, has not carried out this review despite the requirements of the courts and environmental groups, which They have already asked the TSJA to sanction the mayor of Carboneras, José Luis Amérigo.

Above, the area of ​​El Algarrobico de Carboneras (Almería) before construction began on the hotel in 2003. Below, that same beach after the building was erected.

Greenpeace/Bernardo Perez

“The numerous court rulings have had no practical effect.

The Carboneras City Council refuses to comply with them ”, lamented Greenpeace in the appeal presented to the Supreme Court.

"The existence of this manifestly illegal building for almost 20 years causes social alarm" and "lack of confidence in the Administration of Justice", indicated the document presented by José Ignacio Domínguez, the lawyer who has been fighting against this construction for different environmental associations since the beginning of this case.

"After four decades of illegality, the 13 sentences of this room have been of no use," the appeal added.

However, the Supreme Court now understands that demolition cannot be ordered until the municipal license is annulled.

The underlying legal debate was whether it is possible to consider a municipal license valid if it is based on planning regulations that have been annulled by the courts in recent years and that make construction illegal.

Following the ruling, Greenpeace has announced that it intends to appeal to the Constitutional Court and that it intends to continue to pressure the Carboneras City Council to annul the building permit.

This environmental group will also continue to ask the TSJA to sanction the mayor.

The TSJA already sent a request to the mayor a month and a half ago in which it orders him to report every 15 days on the steps he is taking to comply with another of his sentences, from 2018, which obliges the Consistory to modify its urban planning to leave Of course, the area where that mass of concrete was built could not be built.

In this last letter, dated October 28 of this year,

The Carboneras City Council, for its part, affirmed this Tuesday that it maintains an attitude of "full collaboration to comply with everything dictated by the courts regarding the hotel and in all legal proceedings that affect it."

The Consistory alleges that last September it issued a decree that explained the modification of municipal urban planning to "adapt its content to the sentences," reports

Javier Martín-Arroyo

.

takedown protocol

When things got really ugly for the El Algarrobico hotel with the different judicial pronouncements that demonstrated its illegality, the central and regional administrations agreed on a joint demolition plan.

It was in 2011, but despite the rulings that kept coming, both governments assured that they could not execute that plan until the entire judicial horizon was cleared, something that environmentalists wanted the Supreme Court to do.

The agreed demolition protocol establishes that the central Administration would be responsible for the demolition costs and the Board for those of the restoration of the area, without prejudice to the actions that are later launched to claim that money from third parties, such as the City Council or the promoter.

And how much does demolition cost?

A 2012 study prepared by Tragsatec, a subsidiary of the public company Tragsa, established that the total cost would be 7,175,000 euros (a decade later that figure should be updated).

After the demolition, 40,000 cubic meters of waste would have to be transferred to landfills, the equivalent of 16 Olympic swimming pools.

In addition, a 65,800-square-meter piece of land must be restored, as indicated in that Tragsatec study, which continues to be the best guide to find out how this brick symbol can be made to disappear, which has been stranded on the beach for more than 16 years. Carobic.

Panoramic view of the hotel on the beach of El Algarrobico, last Wednesday.FRANCISCO BONILLA

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Source: elparis

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