tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2129943063330427887.post48685279435822739..comments2024-03-28T19:20:52.408+00:00Comments on WEMBLEY MATTERS: Is Brent's 'Metroland' suburban housing under threat?Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2129943063330427887.post-26961878963655893662016-09-03T15:34:02.711+01:002016-09-03T15:34:02.711+01:00"Metroland" was the term used to promote..."Metroland" was the term used to promote healthy housing developments close to the Metropolitan Railway, allowing families to move out from overcrowded inner London areas, but for their breadwinners to commute easily "into town". <br /><br />In the early 1920's, Metropolitan Railway Country Estates Ltd was advertising building plots for sale on its Chalk Hill Estate: 'immediately adjoining Wembley Park Station, comprises some 123 acres, and has been planned out in half-acre and acre plots for the erection of small houses of a country type, with ample grounds for gardens and orchards.'<br /><br />Not all of the suburban estates built in the Wembley area in the 1920's and 1930's had houses with such large grounds, but many were deliberately designed along "garden suburb" lines, with grass verges and trees along the streets, and the local Council(s) restricted developments to no more than ten homes per acre.<br /><br />The need to build more homes is not a new problem. In the 1960's developers were buying up homes on the Metroland Chalk Hill Estate because of their large plot size, and the newly-formed Brent Council decided to do the same. Their aim was to create a modern, high-density estate with over 1,500 homes. Despite strong local opposition, they used compulsory purchase powers to put together the site for their own Chalkhill Estate. When completed in 1970, Brent's development was described (by the "Daily Telegraph") as 'one of the finest municipal housing estates in Britain.'<br /><br />Many readers will know that within thirty years this estate was being demolished as unfit for modern needs. Readers who don't know the story can find it in an illustrated article (Chalkhill - 1,000 years of history) on the Brent Archives website at: https://www.brent.gov.uk/media/1717937/Chalkhill_1000%20years%20of%20history.pdf<br /><br />So, redeveloping Metroland suburban housing for high-density flats has been tried, and failed. Yes, people need places to live, but families need homes, and a home is not just a box. It is part of an environment where you can live, breathe, enjoy some peace, some greenery ... in short, some quality of life. <br /><br />Too many blocks of flats, packed in closely together, is not the answer. Yes, there do need to be some higher-density homes, for those without children who don't have the time or health to look after a garden, but please leave us many of the green suburban estates we currently enjoy in the Wembley area, and elsewhere.<br /><br />Philip.Philip Granthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08216646114377430489noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2129943063330427887.post-64852397477206890782016-09-03T14:43:39.237+01:002016-09-03T14:43:39.237+01:00When they built the British Empire Exhibition in t...When they built the British Empire Exhibition in the 1920's, on the site of the original Wembley Park, they did "rename" it. <br /><br />There is a fascinating booklet in the Wembley History Society Collection at Brent Archives called: "Wembley - The First City of Concrete." (Published in 1925 by the British Portland Cement Association.)<br /><br />Philip.Philip Granthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08216646114377430489noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2129943063330427887.post-80712286313141462212016-09-01T10:16:28.704+01:002016-09-01T10:16:28.704+01:00Wembley Park, Metroland just exactly where is &quo...Wembley Park, Metroland just exactly where is "Wembley's Park" oh I forgot silly me its King Edward VII Park which was bought for us by the Council back in 1913 to compensate us for the loss of "Wembley Park" when they built the stadium and surrounding area. Perhaps now there is no Park ( with the exception of the Childrens Play area at the LDO which will soon be removed as outlined in Quintain's persistent development plans). Wembley Park they should rename it. Wembley's Concrete Jungle? Suggestion's please.Jaine Lunnhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07815584566299095436noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2129943063330427887.post-68960047769040211512016-08-30T09:48:37.277+01:002016-08-30T09:48:37.277+01:00Brent Council are a disgrace. My family and I have...Brent Council are a disgrace. My family and I have lived in Brent for over 35 years, yet when I wanted to extend my family property they refused to grant us permission for our initial design on the grounds it ruined the amenities. This was a fickle excuse considering that they have allowed what was once a borough filled with greenery to be ripped apart and turned into a concrete jungle. Bunch of hypocrites and corrupt to the core. How many brown envelopes would have been handed out during the whole development tender?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2129943063330427887.post-72138121297379291832016-08-28T14:14:16.117+01:002016-08-28T14:14:16.117+01:00Just because property developers can be arrogant a...Just because property developers can be arrogant and deceitful doesn't mean that higher-density housing in the vast 1930s estates of outer London is wrong - particularly around stations and good bus routes.baarnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12301292285255035403noreply@blogger.com