Friday, 6 February 2026

Shock on St Raph's as community shut out of their Community Centre without notice

 

Amazing things go on inside this nondescript building

 

St Raph's Voice has sent Wembley Matters this description of recent events at their community centre that have caused disquiet in the community,

 

Children with nowhere to go after school. Vulnerable adults suddenly cut off from support. Mothers left without a safe, familiar space to meet, share advice, or ask for help. All of this has happened earlier this week on the St Raphael’s estate, where the resident association community centre locks were changed without notice.

 

Overnight, this vital hub was closed in a place with a lack of community spaces and provisions. Homework clubs stopped in an area with low educational attainment levels. Support sessions for vulnerable people ended abruptly. Essential community activity ceased with no notice. In an estate with very limited communal facilities, residents have been left with nothing to replace it.

 

The Chair of the Resident Association, Hinda Sharif was kicked out mid-community session by a contractor sent by the council with no communication or explanation. The justification given was fire safety.

 

Residents understand the importance of safety and would never argue against urgent action where there is genuine risk. However, at the time the locks were changed, no fire safety checks had been carried out to ascertain risk, and no evidence or documentation of completed inspections was shared with residents or the Resident Association. No findings were presented and no timeline for inspections or reopening have been communicated.

 

Despite repeated requests for information and clarity on when the doors might reopen, Labour-led Brent Council has not been forthcoming. This lack of transparency has compounded distress in a community already dealing with the sudden loss of essential support.

 

The St Raphael’s community room is not just a venue. It is a lifeline for children who rely on educational support and homework clubs, for vulnerable adults experiencing isolation, and for mothers navigating financial and emotional pressures. The Resident Association provides community-led support that is local, trusted, and accessible - exactly the kind of grassroots infrastructure councils often claim to value.

 

St Raphael’s is also an estate with a proud history of resilience and achievement. It is the former home of George the Poet, Raheem Sterling, and content creator Chunkz, clear examples of what can emerge when communities are supported rather than sidelined. Closing one of the few remaining shared spaces on the estate without notice sends a stark message about how today’s residents are valued, and what investment in future potential really looks like in practice.

 

Brent frequently speaks about community power, participation, and wealth-building. Yet this action exposes a troubling gap between rhetoric and reality. Community power cannot exist where communities are locked out of the spaces that allow them to organise, support one another, and thrive.

 

No suitable alternative space has been offered while the room remains closed. There seems to have been no suggestions of other spaces or due concern for where activities can continue in the meantime. And there appears to have been little consideration of the impact on those most affected.

 

“This is not how you treat communities who rely on this support service,” says Asif Zamir, resident of St.Raphael’s Estate and former Chair of the Resident Association. “It shows a disdain and complete lack of regard or respect. On the one hand they say it’s for resident safety, and on the other they are causing considerable harm.”

 

How decisions are made matters. When Brent Council acts without communication, without evidence, and without accountability, they reveal what they truly think of the communities affected. The failure to respond transparently when asked for information only reinforces that message.

 

Residents are not asking for special treatment. They are asking for honesty, respect, and basic fairness. If safety is the concern, then evidence should be shared, timelines made clear, and interim solutions provided so that children, vulnerable adults, and families are not left without support.

 

If community power is more than a slogan, then it must start with listening - not locking the doors as if the communities affected are irrelevant.

 

I understand that an apology has been made by the council regarding the poor communications involved in this action. However, keys to the new locks have not been handed over and no remedial works have taken place since Monday. 

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Doesn’t surprise me, this is a recurring pattern of how residents are treated with disdain by Brent Council.
This is how Brent council treats its residents, especially marginalised ones who have no voice so they think they can get away with it!
St Raphael has been transformed by St Raphael’s Voice for the better.
The centre is a hub of activities which provide support and bring diverse communities together. It has revitalised the area.
Rather than appreciating that they’re doing the job that the council abysmally fails to do and giving them utmost respect and support the council treats them in this fashion!
The elections are coming up and we need councillors and council management that truly care about the borough.
Let’s make our voices heard in May!

Philip Grant said...

Local (Stonebridge) councillors need to demand an urgent statement from Brent's Director of Property and Assets, and forward it to the Residents' Association so that they can share it with the St Raphs community.

Anonymous said...

Being familiar with St Raphael’s Estate photograph appears to show LB Brent former Housing Office.

Anonymous said...

The London Borough of Bent strikes residents where it hurts yet again.

Anonymous said...

I’m not surprised, Brent council cannot communicate. You’ll find out about roadworks when you see them, not because the council told you via X, or its own website. You’ll hear about consultations, but never the outcome, never what was changed as a result of resident input.

Anonymous said...

Sounds typical of dodgy Bent defo needs further investigation to find the truth, changing the locks is very drastic for what is supposed to be a fire safety issue that up till now nobody knew about?

Anonymous said...

Echoes here of the locking-up of 60 years old Granville Road Public Open Space South Kilburn, reduced in size but green invested in 2010 as part of the 'final neighbourhood masterplan'. After 2010 it has been on and off padlocked to exclude locals from accessing it. The most recent lock-out of locals has been for two years, for Brent leadership in ambiguity this park is re-rendered brownfield land site.

I have seen children playing football outside this market captured public open space on the road/ plenty of for- developer fly-tipping outside it too. How can a park be utilised if it is locked? Of course, the population growth zones of Brent have no children living in them - very Epstein think. 170 majority, yet a zombie government' the media says?

Meanwhile colonial at St Raphs. Which UK political party re-develops estates (populations excluded), as new population grown neighbourhoods, I cant think of one.
No one of any worth lives in these zones.