July 19th 1955 – December 15th 1976


I was her neighbour and attended the cremation.  I would like to be reminded of her appearance.  If you have a  photograph please get in touch via the Author page.

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HT @PaulWellman_EG via @michaellondonsf

Since I found out about this the other day and this happened in Islington, I’ve been wondering, how would it be if you’re asleep in your bed fifty feet underground and a water main bursts in the street above? The former car park basement would fill with water, there would be no warning other than the occupants getting wet and then drowning. The basement would have no bilge pumps to clear the water.

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Buy to let – Guardian

December 10th, 2016

This isn’t an article it’s a brief reaction to the Guardian article.

“There’s a housing shortage, and landlords help this by providing accommodation …”

No you don’t. You exploit properties that would otherwise be owned by singles, young couples and families.

The only people who ought to own properties for rent are the state. It used to be called council housing. We need it back restored and expanded. Anything else is exploitation by rentiers.

“I think a decision like this lets down the whole of the West End. We are supposed to be a world-class city, which means showing the lead to others.” She added that visitors would be treated, “like a bunch of troglodytes in an underground cave”.

This is a joke right? I’ve parked in that car park, way underground back in the 1970s. Not in a million years would I have imagined somebody planning to park people underground and make them pay for the privilege. Is it April 1st yet?

An underground hotel for Bloomsbury

FEAR OF NON-STREET HOUSING
October 23, 2014, 19:00 20:15

The edited version free of uumms, aahhs, and extended pauses.

BF_Edit.mp3

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Zeilenbau orientation

December 8th, 2016

Churchill Gardens Pimlico – Powell and Moya

On reading Lewisham, the Notopian future of London by Owen Hatherley the other day, I was struck by this sentence.

“This particular part of the development is darkened by the canyon-like effect of tall blocks looming over a narrow service road, something avoided by postwar council estates, what with their green space and carefully arranged orientation to the sun.”

[…]

“Third, the new vernacular, so long as it coexists with a developer-driven urbanism which sees spaciousness as so much wasted, unrentable space, means little more than politesse curtain-walled over plutocracy.” [Owen !!!]

Moving on, the estate that comes most quickly to mind and probably to any member of the C20th Society or DocomomoUK is Churchill Gardens by Powell and Moya.

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UPDATE Read the report on overheated flats from 2017


“…the space has been divided to ensure that each apartment is substantial in size.” [boggle] -> Award

l-59th

Google Leeds tower blocks The Parade – images

A few years ago Urban Splash bought two derelict council housing blocks which were due for demolition, at Richmond Hill in Leeds. During the “deep retrofit” (partial demolition) the project stalled and Kickstart funding was required to restart it.

Urban Splash stripped the blocks back to the concrete skeleton retaining the lift and staircase cores, then doubled the density by refitting the blocks with over 400 single aspect flats disregarding the original layout of over 200 dual aspect flats.

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