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#681 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: london
Posts: 168
Likes (Received): 0
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lend lease's masterplan now has outline planning permission n the demolition also has official permission to begin...when i don't know
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#682 |
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South East Nine
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: South London
Posts: 16,939
Likes (Received): 895
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Perhaps the thread title can be changed to Elephant & Castle £1.5bn Redevelopment | Southwark | Approved ...
Bloomberg - Lend Lease Wins Approval for $2.4 Billion London Project Building Design - Make's Heygate estate plans approved by Southwark Evening Standard - New Heygate: ‘It looks nice, but where’s the affordable housing?’ |
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#683 | |
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CEO, Dingly Dell Corp.
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: London
Posts: 694
Likes (Received): 109
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London is not a city. It is more like a country, and living in it is like living in Holland or Belgium. Its completeness makes it deceptive - there are sidewalks from one frontier to the other - and its hugeness makes it possible for everyone to invent his own city. My London is not your London, though everyone's Washington, DC is pretty much the same. The London Embassy - Paul Theroux
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#684 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 55
Likes (Received): 3
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London 360 tower update:
http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/6603
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#685 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 55
Likes (Received): 3
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Guardian piece : E/C Regeneration - what are the rights and wrongs?
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/davehillblog |
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#686 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Slough
Posts: 2,786
Likes (Received): 52
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http://www.costar.co.uk/en/assets/ne...housing-hitch/
Quote:
That's about as high as they could realistically aim |
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#687 |
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cartoon policeman
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Londres
Posts: 2,967
Likes (Received): 46
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I don't see why. E&C is set to become a smart residential area in zone 1; it should be able to attract a John Lewis or Selfridges or whatever.
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dibble music |
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#688 | ||
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cartoon policeman
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Londres
Posts: 2,967
Likes (Received): 46
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Quote:
Quote:
2. Strange question. Usually the poorest benefit most. 3. Strange question. Always. 4. Probably, but there isn't necessarily a need to 'break up' the old community, just add some new elements to it. 5. Yes, though comprehensive regeneration is not a bad start with respect to homes and amenities. But to create more homes I'd sweep away "affordable" homes targets, most building regs and much of the planning system and let supply respond to demand in the housing market. That wouldn't hurt the job market either. 6. Strange question. No. They're often very good. 7. Strange question. No, in a city it's almost always good. 8. My view is that they should always be solicited and considered, but that they need not necessarily be decisive: as in any planning process there's a balance to be struck between competing interests. 9. It depends - there may obviously be a waste of potential revenue for the local authority. It may also be a sign that they're letting the area down by not allowing it to achieve its potential. 10. Reform the planning system such that housing supply responds to demand, both in terms of quantity (so that house prices come down to affordable levels) and quality (so that new homes are attractive to their residents).
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dibble music |
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#689 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Slough
Posts: 2,786
Likes (Received): 52
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Quote:
Elephant & Castle will never be a 'Smart' address. There are too many council estates and too much post war development. It will certainly gentrify, but how far remains to be seen. |
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#690 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 28
Likes (Received): 3
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Quote:
However, with regards to your supply and demand point: Is that market not completely unbalanced by the volume of non-London residents buying up new homes in zones 1 and 2 as part of a property portfolio? And subsequently are affordable home targets not designed to increase social mobility instead of driving the poorest further out of town? I'm all for the greater integration of classes. I think that controls are needed to put right the massive errors created when huge 60s/70s council estates further exacerbated London's problems of class segregation. |
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#691 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: London
Posts: 13,498
Likes (Received): 250
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It could have been before the plans were watered down by the various developers haggling over it
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#692 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: London
Posts: 13,498
Likes (Received): 250
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Also most estates were less dense than the urban topography they replaced and certainly turn large areas of land into inflexible places akin to a conservation area thereby exasperating the current housing crisis.
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#693 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: NW London
Posts: 2,251
Likes (Received): 66
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Towards the north and west I can see the place improving drastically. There is a decent supply of Victorian and Edwardian housing stock, it's next to Kennington and Lambeth (the small area, not borough), nearer to central London and transport options are better. St. George's road and streets off it are showing signs of smartening up now. I can see many of those low-rise developments built during the 1990s washed away over time
East of the rail viaduct is a bit different, especially south of Heygate - i.e. Walworth proper. Although Walworth Road isn't the worst street in London it still looks pretty tatty. You're also getting closer to the transport 'black hole' around Camberwell and Burgess Park. |
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#694 |
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cartoon policeman
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Londres
Posts: 2,967
Likes (Received): 46
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I don't buy it. The same was frequently said 50 or 60 years ago of Notting Hill, Pimlico and Islington.
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dibble music |
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#695 | ||
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Registered User
Join Date: Feb 2011
Posts: 55
Likes (Received): 3
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Quote:
Elephant/Kennington has 5 or more squares that rival anything north of the river - Cleaver square, Chester way, Saint marys gardens, Walcott square, West square, Sutherland square as some examples. It has a broad framework of excellent pre-war architecture - many still unoccupied which could be or are in the process of being reconditioned - see Safe-Stay conversion of former Labour party headquarters, Cinema Museum conversion of former Lambeth workhouse as recent examples. Add to this the interesting and fresh new architecture being nurtured by Southwark council - see Faraday School, Brandon St housing and Archway Studios as some examples. If you look outside the Heygate estate itself, there are many smart and charming neighborhoods. In terms of the regeneration plans, top down planning is being well thought out (given the amount of time for the ideas to mature) and challenged by grass root opposition who are striking a good balance between existing and new. Take a walk around, you might be surprised whats already there. Attend a community forum, you might be surprised by projects taking place on the ground.
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#696 | |
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Slough
Posts: 2,786
Likes (Received): 52
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Quote:
I suspect that independent stores are more likely to grow in the new heygate estate rather than the expanded shopping centre. |
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#697 | |
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North Greenwich Express
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: London
Posts: 163
Likes (Received): 10
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Quote:
If Woolwich town centre can be transformed into a desirable location to work and live, anything can, so nothing is off limits.
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For the first time in human history, 300 languages are spoken in one place. That place is London, the 'New Babylon'. |
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#698 |
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Goats are overrated
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Hertfordshire/London
Posts: 4,277
Likes (Received): 89
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If you take a walk down Walworth road then you will notice many modern developments and plenty of colourful buildings. If you go past the markets there is a lovely row of Georgian/Victorian frontages.
Haygate and the shopping centre ruin the area obviously, but when they are redeveloped I can see E&C becoming a very desirable area for young professionals.
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Citius, Altius, Fortius. LONDON 2012 http://www.shardldn.com - A guide to the Shard |
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#699 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Londonshire
Posts: 206
Likes (Received): 2
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There's a surprising amount of nice houses just off the Walworth Road (to the west of the rail viaduct) with nice quiet little squares/streets. There's also some nice pre-war social blocks of flats to the east of Walworth Road (probably Peabody housing). The street itself is very shabby but there are signs it's changing.
Another area to watch will be Coldharbour Lane in Brixton. Lots of nice old houses between Brixton and Loughborough Junction. Some still appear to be divided into flats (and in need of some care) but I can see this changing in a few years when Brixton gentrifies even more (especially if they ever decide to re-open East Brixton station). |
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#700 |
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2002
Posts: 318
Likes (Received): 1
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That remains to be seen, surely?
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