Pelham From Cheapside A COUNCILLOR lambasted a college for not having included any “affordable” housing in plans to replace Victorian school buildings with more than 100 flats. Labour councillor Nick Childs accused the Greater Brighton Metropolitan College (GB Met) of a “gross neglect of civil duty”. And he said that snubbing the council’s policy of encouraging affordable housing was an outrage and an affront to the people of Brighton and Hove. The college – formerly known as City College and previously Brighton Technical College – is selling two 19th century school buildings and a 1930s addition. They older buildings were among several in Brighton to have been designed by the architect Thomas Simpson and the oldest – the York building – originally housed the York Place Elementary School.