Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror – 2017

Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror: On Thursday 23 March 2017 tenants and supporters from the Central Hill estate in Crystal Palace came to a Lambeth Council Cabinet Meeting to protest against the proposed demolition of their estate. Later I went to Trafalgar Square to a vigil following the terrorist attack in Westminster the previous day.


Stop Central Hill Estate Demolition

South Lambeth

Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror - 2017
Jane Nicholl holds a mask of Lambeth Council Leader Liz Peck calling her SCUM

Central Hill is one of the finest council estates in London with around 450 homes built in 1966-74 on a hillside with views of London. I’ve photographed it on several occasions including in 2016, and was astounded when I heard of Lambeth’s plan to demolish it.

This is an estate that should certainly have been listed for its architectural merit but was refused I think on political grounds – as was Robin Hood Gardens in Poplar. Although in need of some refurbishment it is basically a a good condition and would last for many more years.

The council say that by demolishing the estate and working with a private developer they can put around twice as many homes on the site, though most of these would be for sale or market price rents rather than social housing.

Central Hill residents gather outside the community centre where the council are meeting

A report by Architects for Social Housing, Central Hill: A Case Study in Estate Regeneration, includes not only their “designs for the estate’s refurbishment and increase in housing capacity by up to 50 per cent without the demolition of a single existing home, but also our account of why and how these proposals were rejected by Lambeth council, which – despite being opposed by 77 per cent of the residents – in March 2017 announced its intention to demolish Central Hill estate.”

The residents had brought with them to present to the council the survey of 322 households which showed 79% of all residents were against demolition and favoured a programme of refurbishment. The survey completely contradicted the council’s assertions.

Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror - 2017
Sid shows off his T-shirt with an amended Lambeth Council mission statement: ‘We demolish beautiful council estates to make way for ugly homes for the rich – Lambeth’

I left before the meeting, but was told the councillors refused to listen to the arguments put forward by the residents and approved the decision for demolition without any real consideration. Residents and activists say the council seems to have no interest in providing housing for its current residents but is simply hoping to share in the profits of private development – and the financial opportunities this will provide for some councillors and officers.

Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror - 2017
The Revolutionary Communist Group pose with their ‘Housing is A Right’ banner outside

Protests continued and the Central Hill estate is still there eight years later, although some facilities have closed. On Lambeth Council’s web site it states “We are undergoing the Options Appraisal process for your estate from July 2024. The process is now estimated to complete in late 2026.”

Stop Central Hill Estate Demolition


Vigil against Terror fills Trafalgar Square

Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror - 2017
After the speeches people lit candles in the square

Thousands of Londoners including many Muslims had come to the vigil called by London Mayor Sadiq Khan to show their respect for those killed and injured in the terror attack the previous day.

Central Hill & Vigil Against Terror - 2017

Six people including the attacker died, and at least 50 people were injured when a terrorist drove a car into pedestrians on the pavement along the south side of Westminster Bridge and Bridge Street before crashing into the fence around the Houses of Parliament and jumping out to fatally stab a police officer before being himself shot and killed.

There were speeches by police, the Home Secretary and the Mayor and then a minutes silence. Three large candles on the steps were lit and people in the crowd also lit candles, bringing them to place with others as dusk fell.

Vigil against Terror fills Trafalgar Square


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A Slice of London

What do the following have in common?

Crystal Palace
Peckham Rye
Bermondsey
Wapping
Whitechapel
Bethnal Green
Hackney

ANSWER

They all fall on the National Grid in the vertical column TQ34, and there are more pictures from all of them in the albums of colour enprints I put together from 1986 to 1992 as a project with the rather tentative title ‘Cross-section’. TQ34 is just one km wide and I have a row of A4 files covering around 20 such columns across the city, though those at the outer edges have fewer images.

The roughly A4 album pages could each hold four 6″ x 4″ enprints. I started by gluing the prints in place on scrap cartridge paper (unused from A level Art exams and cut down to size) but though that worked well it became tedious, and I moved on to purpose-designed plastic filing sheets, at first transparent and later black.

I tried at first to keep all four prints on any page either landscape or portrait format and from the same kilometre grid square, but as you will see on Flickr there are a few exceptions. The album TQ34 includes just over 70 pages and is shown on Flickr as in the album with most images having four prints.

These enprints were all trade processed and I sent the films off to various cheap consumer labs. The different colour casts they produced for each roll of 35mm film I felt added to the project, and I accepted some packets of pictures where I really should have demanded a reprint. A few of the worst I have done a little colour correction before posting online.

I finished – or rather abandoned – this project around 1992 when I installed a print processing line in my own darkroom and going over to bulk loading and home processing of my colour negative film. Producing enprints was too slow and fiddly, but I was able to make larger prints, and a small selection of these images where exhibited and sold over the years.

We are all stuck inside but you can take a virtual walk through London with me on Flickr.