Tag: News

  • Stop the Blocks: an East London guided tour with a difference

    Stop the Blocks
    Stop the Blocks

    Look down the road, ladies and gents, see that shabby block of 100 artists studios? That’s due for demolition. See those luxury flats? That used to be a gay pub with the best parties in town.

    Nostalgic East End tours are all the rage these days. But for those left cold by touring gastropubs formerly frequented by murderers like Jack the Ripper, a new outing last month offered the chance to take in similarly sinister sites – the battlegrounds where community campaigns are squaring up to big money.

    There is a joke going around that the “green dress lady” adorning the much-mocked hoardings of the Mettle and Poise development encasing the former children’s hospital next to Hackney City Farm might be holding a bagel (a symbol of gritty “East End authenticity”), but it is actually Shoreditch that she is eating.

    It is this devouring of community spaces that led Stop the Blocks, a campaign that started the mid-2000s, to dust itself off and unite a clutch of disparate campaigns opposing the “devastating effects” overdevelopment is having on local people.

    Flipping the idea of the artist’s open house, its ‘Closed Weekend’ event took participants on a whistle-stop tour of “contested sites” across the borough, highlighting how public space is being “sold off for private profit”.

    It might not sound like everyone’s idea of a fun day out but seasoned campaigner and trade unionist Glyn Robbins, who decided to resurrect the campaign in March and acted as the Closed Weekend tour guide insists this is not about “wallowing in the hopelessness of it all”.

    Robbins, 51, a life-long East End resident, compares the kind of changes seen in Tower Hamlets and Hackney, epitomised by projects like the controversial Bishopsgate Goodsyard development, to the “aggressive land grab” of the Docklands during the 2000s.

    The coalition’s classily-designed map certainly encompasses an alarming number of buildings, pubs and council estates ranging from the Holland Estate, currently under threat of demolition by the housing association that owns it, to artists being kicked out of their studios on Cremer Street and the ‘poor doors’ of One Commercial Street.

    Robbins acknowledges the coalition needs to pick its battles. “We have to think strategically. We can’t chase each development, we need to focus development on key issues.”

    But while not all the blocks can be stopped, it’s about applying pressure where possible, explains Robbins. “We need to lobby politicians, raise awareness and get local councillors involved.”

    Commonality

    Stop the Blocks is for many about a sense of commonality. Appearing together on the same map is encouraging to small campaign groups, as it shows the role their battles play in the bigger war.

    The Joiners’ Arms pub on Hackney Road was a colourful stop-off for the tour. Charlotte Gerada, who is involved in the Friends of the Joiners’ Arms campaign which won a significant battle in obtaining an Asset of Community Value listing from Tower Hamlets Council, greeted walkers with “queer bunting, LED balloons, multi-coloured confetti and pop music”.

    “We invited those on the tour to hear more about the Joiners’, its importance for the queer community and our campaign’s achievements. It was encouraging to meet so many people who were in support of our campaign and our vision for the Joiners’ Arms.”

    Another stop-off was the premises of open artist platform and film laboratory no.w.here, which has been based on Bethnal Green Road for the past nine years. Born out of the ashes of the London Filmmakers’ Co-op, this not-for-profit organisation supports artists, runs multiple workshops and discussions, and hosts events and exhibitions.

    “We were about to sign a nine-year lease”, explains co-founder Karen Mirza, “But it went off the table. Property investment companies are involved. Now we’re on a three month rolling lease and it’s only a matter of time before we are evicted.”

    Spatial justice

    It’s a familiar tale. When leases expire there are a few tenants in a position to match the kind of money offered by property investors. Many artists see their displacement as par for the course. Mirza, who has never run a campaign before, says this constitutes “wimping out”.

    “Artists should do more. It’s not about self-preservation. We’ve got savings and resources. It’s about rights to live in live-able cities that you have grown up in and had a stake in.”

    “The implication of us as artists has got to such a level where we are first, second and third generation gentrifiers. We have to dig deep and ask questions about spatial justice. If you’re not taking the responsibility and not joining the fucking dots you may as well stand with the developers.”

    Mirza mentions Cremer Street studios, where artists facing eviction were told to either agree not to object to the development or get kicked out early, as a particularly pertinent example. Developers Regal Homes rubbed salt in the wound by launching a regeneration-themed sculpture competition for the creation of a ‘public artwork’ sculpture to reflect the creative heart of the area.

    “Only one artist stood up”, said Mirza. “If we stand on our own we’ll all be picked off. That’s the whole point of Stop the Blocks. What is one more artist studio gone in East London? Who gives a fuck? But what about when it’s an artist studios, a queer pub, a hospital, a pub, two or three housing estates – there’s a difference.”

    twitter.com/stoptheblocks

  • Campaigners battle to save Norton Folgate from demolition

    Aerial photograph of Norton Folgate
    Projected image of Norton Folgate. Image: Spitalfields Trust

    Nearly forty years after Sir John Betjemin’s campaign to protect the historic site of Norton Folgate near Spitalfields, campaigners face another battle against developers British Land.

    The developers plan to demolish 75 per cent of buildings on the site, including Blossom Street’s 1886 Victorian warehouses and the former residence of playwright Christopher Marlowe.

    It also plans to increase the commercial use of the site, which lies entirely within the Elder Street Conservation Area, by 65 per cent.

    Tim Whittaker, an administrator for the Spitalfields Trust and a Whitechapel resident, said: “The conservation area appraisal for Elder Street is the only piece of legislation that Tower Hamlets Council have concerning the area. It is therefore of particular importance and weight and should be adhered to.

    “British Land’s proposals clearly flout this in a number of ways but perhaps most importantly in their proposed wholesale redevelopment of the Blossom Street warehouses.

    “The appraisal addresses this in detail, saying that any adaptation of these warehouses for reuse must be kept to an absolute minimum.

    “Therefore it is important that Londoners remind Tower Hamlets Council of their own legislation and their duty to abide by it and treat conservation areas with due care.”

    Tower Hamlets Council has confirmed it will accept emails and letters about the application until April, in advance of hearing British Land’s application. A council spokesperson also confirmed there was no date set for the Strategic Development Committee to hear British Land’s application.

    A spokesperson for British Land told the East End Review: “The scheme preserves the 19th century townscape and refurbishes the warehouses to secure their long term future. The proposal is precisely an example of creative re-use of these unlisted buildings.”

    British Land tried to develop the same patch of land last year, and added that their new 2015 scheme keeps more of the Blossom Street warehouses than the previous one did.

    David Milne, the curator of Dennis Severs’ House museum on Folgate Street, said: “The plans to redevelop the site would not only be a great loss to the historic nature of these beautiful streets but would in fact remove all trace of the human character that brings people in their thousands to this vibrant and diverse community.

    “We do not spend our days wandering around vast office complexes, we visit and cherish the small buildings and houses that continue to evolve as they do so wonderfully not only here within the streets of Spitalfields but all across our city.”

  • Nurse from St Joseph’s Hospice scoops top photography award

    Is it her by Carolyne Barber
    Photography bug: Is She Local by Carolyne Barber

    A Hackney nurse has won an international photography award, fending off competition from more than 20,000 entries.

    Carolyne Barber, an Advancing Practice Nurse at St Joseph’s Hospice in Hackney, won the Best Newcomer Award in the New Shoots category of the International Garden Photographer of the Year Competition.

    Ms Barber, who has only been taking photographs for five years, scooped the prize for a picture called Is she Local, of two damselflies peering over a leaf in Lee Valley Park.

    She said: “I know a little bush where the damsel flies hang out and had to get up in the night in the dark when they are still cold, and wait for sunrise. The timing is really important because as soon as they’re warm they fly off.”

    Bringing the beauty of the natural world into the hospice, Ms Barber’s photographs are displayed on the walls inside St Joseph’s Hospice.

    Her winning picture has been published in the International Garden Photographer of the Year book, and is on display alongside other winning entries, at the Royal Botanic Gardens in Kew until 6 April, and will then tour different venues around the world.

    www.stjh.org.uk @StJoHospice