I am pleased to publish this 'Good News' guest post by Philip Grant and congratulate him and his heritage colleagues for their persistent campaigning to save the historic murals for Brent residents and visitors to Wembley Stadium.
Three sporting heritage murals on the east wall of Olympic Way, 23
August 2022.
It was April 2018 when Wembley History Society first called on Brent Council
and Quintain to put the Bobby Moore Bridge tile murals, celebrating Wembley’s
sports and entertainment heritage, back on permanent public display. They’d
been covered over with vinyl advertising sheets since 2013, under a secret
advertising lease deal between the developer’s Wembley Park subsidiary and
Council officers.
In August 2017, Brent’s planners finally got round to approving
advertisement consent for this “cover-up”. Although Quintain’s application had
asked for five years from September 2013, it was given for five years from 27
August 2017!
When Council officers extended Quintain’s advertising lease in 2019 (in a very “dodgy deal”), they did get an agreement to have the tile mural scenes on the east
wall of Olympic Way “revealed” for 21 days each year. This was first done at
the start of Brent’s year as London Borough of Culture in January 2020.
However, local historians and many local residents wanted more than
that! We did not want Quintain renewing the advertisement consent for the
Olympic Way murals, due to expire on 27 August 2022, so I started the year by
sending a letter to their Chief Executive Officer. I asked for Quintain’s agreement to put the murals on the walls of
Olympic Way back on permanent public display once the advertisement consent ran
out, and in March I received a letter confirming they would do that.
On Tuesday I was passing through Wembley Park, so went to take a look.
And yes, they are back on display, and will stay that way! Residents, and the
tens of thousands of visitors to Wembley every year, can now enjoy the American
Football, Rugby League and Ice Hockey mural scenes all year round. That is what
they were specially designed for, back in 1993!
The drummer mural on the west wall of Olympic Way, awaiting restoration.
On the west wall, the “drummer” tile mural (the last remnant of a scene
celebrating the “Live Aid” concert at Wembley Stadium in 1985) is still waiting
for new tiles to be added. Most of the original design was lost when steps down
from the then bus stop were built for TfL around 2006. Quintain have
commissioned an artist to design a suitable “infill” for the triangular section
(now just concrete) down to the bottom of the steps, using the same type of
tiles as the original. I’ve been told that this should be in place by November
2022.
That just leaves the Bobby Moore Bridge subway. There are colourful tile
mural scenes along the walls on both sides of the underpass from Wembley Park
Station. In 2019, Brent’s planners persuaded Planning Committee to allow the
vinyl adverts to be replaced by light panels, which could be used for
advertising, despite strong local opposition. The only concession to Wembley
History Society’s call for all the tile murals to be put back on display was
the framing and display lighting for one mural, showing England footballers at
the “Twin Towers” stadium.
The England footballers mural in the Bobby Moore Bridge subway, 23
August 2022.
Brent Council’s current advertising lease with Quintain, which includes
the right to advertise on the subway walls (except for the footballers mural),
expires in August 2024. Perhaps then we can have all of the tile murals put
back on permanent public display. The progress we have made so far shows that
it is worth standing up for Brent’s heritage!
Philip Grant.