Wednesday 23 August 2023

In search of grass and green space in Wembley Park

Descending from Barn Hill to Wembley Park

There was a tweet from Brent Council recently boasting of their new green planning guidance - unfortunately it showed what was clearly plastic grass.

Today's sunshine was a good opportunity to have a walk around Quintainland to see how things are going. The trees along Olympic Way are thriving and there are lots of container shrubs. Children were enjoying themselves splashing in the fountains outside the Wembley Arena but still a lot of hot concrete.

Children and families were clearly out and about enjoying the sunshine so I was interested in how they were enjoying the green 'amenity spaces' provided by the developers. I could not find one child playing on the plastic grass - the spaces were deserted.


The spaces are private - for people in the blocks only. Perhaps there are no children because the blocks do not contain families?

 

It resembles all those bicycle parking places provided in new developments that never have a single bicycle in them.

I thought it would be worth checking out Union Park on Engineers Way (Buses 92, 206, and  440 stop next to the park). I started from the stadium and walked down towards Engineer's Way and at first saw  - a deserted  tennis court and a deserted plastic grass playground (some real plants and trees though). 

 

But hey! I could hear people and children giggling.


The paddling pool looked fun and there were some plants but no grass.

Heading north towards Engineer's Way there was a water feature and plenty of natural grass (although there are some drain covers disguised with plastic grass). There's a lot of water works here as this is a SuDs (Sustainable Drainage System) that provide an alternative to the direct channelling of surface water through networks of pipes and sewers to nearby watercourses. (see last image)

Clearly good for the environment and the prevention of  flooding but whether it is enough to mitigate all the non-permeable concrete will only be tested by time as extreme weather contnues to develop.


 

Some thought has gone into planting here and it looks promising for biodiversity. There is even a bug hotel:


There were still only few people here and the nearby cafe reported no increase in customers in the fine weather. Felt a little strange - only a couple of people sunbathing on the grass.

On the west side of the park things were more lively at a small children's playspace. Unfortunately the nearest toilets are at Brent Civic Centre.

 

 

The water cascades  into drainage on Engineer's Way - the hoardings are in fron of the site for the second half of the park - currently called North Park which will have a small lake.



This is how the two parks will combine, with Engineer's Way running between them. The North Park will be surrounded by tall towers which will reduce sunlight but you would not think that from the artist's impression below with its shimmering misty tower blocks. The park is on the site of the former Yellow Car Park.

 

 Bottom right North End Road and Bridge Road Junction

 

Shimmering towers and sunlit grass


I hoped to see some progress had been made on the North Park but was disappointed to see that the site appeared to be mainly used for storage with no work going on to prepare the ground for the park. Quite a contrast from the above image!



Given that the aim was for Wembley Stadium to be a mainly public transport destination I was surpised to see this boast:


 

Recent controversy over densification of the tall buildings reducing light are brought home in streets such as Rutherwood Way. The developer's artist's impression shows it as tree-lined!



If the weather is fine and the kids are bored in the last week or so of the summer holiday it might be worth taking them down to Wembley Park. Union Park is only a short walk from Wembley Park Station. Head down Olympic Way and turn left at Engineer's Way.

 

 

The Union Park SuDs system:

 

The road at the bottom is Engineer's Way



9 comments:

Anonymous said...

These plastic deserts are an abomination and really shouldn't be used in such a new development.

I saw the same sign boasting about the parking yesterday- I was astonished. Grim

Jaine Lunn said...

Quintain have done the absolute minimum in providing any "Green Space" for residents and visitors.

Whilst they boast many of the blocks are "Pet Friendly" they have provided 2 Dog Parks at Ground Level, one near Canada Gardens and the other at the rear of the Civic Centre, both with Artificial Grass, add to that a few other spaces where Artificial Grass makes an appearance.

The "Pros" of Artificial Grass is that it looks good on photo's and is supposedly low maintenance. However the "Cons" are many....

Artificial Grass retains more heat up to 10 degrees more than natural grass along with the air around it makes it feel much hotter.

Blades of grass are upheld by a Silicon base and sand, which provides the ideal environment for Mold and Mildew which is ugly, smelly and unhealthy for Pets and Humans

In Winter, plastic grass becomes hard,stiff, and slippy, again not good for Pets or Humans to walk on. So much so these so called Dog Parks are closed when this happens.

This explains why no one sits on it or exercises their dogs, it's just used as a large dog toilet facility.

Maguire2 said...

I wonder how proud are the participants of this abomination are. GLA, Brent Council, Quainton and all the contractors. I would love to see what plans are in place of the safe eventual demolition of this future ghetto concrete jungle which is part of planning law.

Anonymous said...

What's the point of a bug hotel if there ain't no bugs. Probably no one on the plastic grass because it gets hotter than natural grass by about 20 degrees C, what a stupid solution for a children's play area!

Anonymous said...

Plastic grass??? See here how bad this is for the environment: https://lawnassociation.org.uk/the-horrific-truths-about-artificial-grass/

Why exactly have Brent Council allowed them to use plastic grass when they have declared a climate emergency??

And re promoting parking options - Wembley Stadium is supposed to be public transport destination yet Brent Council has allowed the construction of this massive car park encouraging more traffic which leads to our local buses being diverted on event days inconveniencing us local people?

Anonymous said...

No Birds and No Bee's either around concrete city. Except the one Starling outside Wenzels Bakery and the odd Pidgeon, oops Flying Rat outside the Cafes are very few and far between.
Can Planning Dept confirm that Plastic Grass is acceptable in their Landscape Policy when granting permission?

Anonymous said...

Plastic grass should be banned due to it toxicity alone, let's play on this green plastic carpet and get cancer from the forever chemicals

Anonymous said...

Agreed

Brent Parks Forum said...

Birds, Bees, need soil, camomile lawns are hard wearing and require little mowing - Plastic grass will harbor molds and diseases from dog waste that can A. Affect lungs (molds) B. Affect eyesight (Dog waste). All that concrete is easy to not have to maintain but Brent have declared and Climate and Ecological Emergency - this is very counter in key areas of these new builds. Very concerning. Hope that this can be dug up and put to soil and trees, grasses, mixed perennials eventually but what a waste in the meantime. Tree Officer must be very disappointed. It does not comply with Brent's own newly adopted SPDs for large developments. This needs to be dug up to be compliant. Hoping they will do this - such a waste of potential here. Sad really.