Go away you’re poor
August 16th, 2010
Following the report from the Cambridge Centre for Housing and Planning Research entitled “High Density Housing – The Impact on tenants” I have come to the conclusion, along with other indicators, that the current attitude of developers and some housing associations to their tenants is “go away you’re poor”.
HIGH DENSITY HOUSING – THE IMPACT ON TENANTS:
From Building Design 14/6/13
Cassie O’Keyboard | 12 June 2013 1:54 pm
Another interesting thing about this typology of having maisonettes over flats is that there isn’t any shared circulation space so the residents don’t have to pay a service charge. Particularly for social housing this can make a big difference to how affordable it actually is to live there.
The second article in the series linked below:-
Hope VI – or go away you’re poor II
Maydew House
August 12th, 2010
Museum of London new galleries – C20th Society visit
July 24th, 2010
The comments below do not reflect the views of the C20th Society.
Here are a few photographs from our trip yesterday to the Museum of London new galleries. I hope they are sufficient to whet your appetite to go yourself.
New café downstairs at the Museum of London
Monitoring blogs – RSS feeds
July 20th, 2010
If you regularly follow several blogs and want to know if they have changed lately or updated their posts, there is a much easier way than viewing them from bookmarks. In your email client there will be a section for “News & Blogs” and this will enable you to add what are called RSS feeds which are marked on most blogs with an icon like this:-
Click the image above for a “howto” on RSS
All you have to do to monitor or follow a blog is to click the icon in the address bar and then copy the link to which you are taken into the appropriate place on your mail reader and you will then be automatically advised each time the blog changes.
Or do it the easy way and sign up with https://www.bloglines.com/
DKH – Dog Kennel Hill Apartments – C20th Society walk
July 17th, 2010
Summary: Do I like the flats? No. Would I live there? No. Why not? It’s the general flimsiness of the thing as if it’s been built like an aircraft for a safety factor of 120%, i.e. just strong enough for the job but with very little redundant support.
Go and see for yourself and then write to me and let me know what you think. It’s just my opinion.
‘DKH’ is a new build, private housing development with 19 apartments creating a beacon housing scheme utilising timber louvres, mesh panelling and stone gabions, RIBA Award Winner 2008, John Smart Architects 2007.
From Open House Brochure 2009 p.54 Southwark
SSE elevation from Dog Kennel Hill
All fur coat . . . . .
Dawson’s Heights Estate – C20th Society walk
July 17th, 2010
What follows are my personal opinions and do not necessarily reflect the views of the C20th society

Dawson Heights. Architect Kate Macintosh here seen revisiting the building she designed in the 1960s.
Great lady, great building, . . . today the C20th Society went on a tour of buildings in South London culminating with Dawson Heights
Maria Bethania – Royal Festival Hall
July 17th, 2010
Cathy Come Home – reviewed
July 16th, 2010
“Now I was pregnant again, some would say it was wrong to have another kiddy when you’re overcrowded as it is. But I don’t think so, I think kiddies are God’s gift, you don’t do right to deprive anyone of the chance of life, love’s what’s important in a child’s life, love is more important to a child than nice surroundings, I know, because I lived in what they call a respectable home, and I didn’t have it”.
The New Jerusalem – A home of your own – 1995
July 13th, 2010
UPDATE: Watch it on YouTube -> New Jerusalem
“And I John saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down from God out of heaven, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband” – Revelation 21:2 – King James Bible
This fifty minute documentary covering the period from the end of the Second World War in 1945 until the arrival of Thatcherism in 1979 provides a comprehensive look at both the motives and the actions of the major players in the field of slum clearance and post war reconstruction with a particular emphasis on Birmingham and its problems.
Title shot – click above for larger image – original VHS
So begins this wonderful evocation of the feelings at the time that here was a new world to build.
Homes for Heroes – documentary review
July 12th, 2010
This documentary first broadcast by the BBC in 2005 is a compilation of film clips linked together by a commentary from architectural critics and is an attempt to put together a coherent account of the events following the Second World War when the country was in great need of new housing.
The film lasts one hour and what follows is a list of the main subject headings with reference to the films from which the clips are taken. The film shares many of its clips with High Rise Dreams reviewed earlier in this blog, though that film being half the length.
Homes for heroes opens with a jaunty jazz tune and Oliver Cox, one of the LCC architects of the 1950s saying that “there was a very heady feeling at the time, that we were building a new Britain”.






