lea bridge, east london. a community blog for friends of millfields and lea bridge riverside to enable us to share news and views on these much loved green spaces in east london
Thursday, 26 July 2012
Saturday, 14 July 2012
step back in time at the markfield beam engine steaming day
There is an opportunity this Sunday (15 July) to see a magnificent masterpiece of Victorian engineering in operation: the
Markfield Beam Engine and Museum is having a steaming day.
The museum and engine is housed in its original Grade II listed Engine House in the former sewage and treatment works for Tottenham which now forms of Markfield Park - just a short walk north of Springfield Park, along the River Lee.
This
remarkable engine was built by Wood Brothers, of Sowerby Bridge, Yorkshire,
between 1886 and 1888. It was commissioned on the 12th July 1888 was
used to pump
sewage in the Tottenham area of North London. It saw continuous duty from that
time to around 1905, when it was relegated to standby duty for storm water
pumping.The
Engine has been restored to working order and can be seen operating under steam
power on designated days, the next of which is this Sunday.
The
museum is open: 11:00am to 5:00pm with steaming at:
1:00pm
to 1:45pm
2:30pm to 3:15pm
4:00pm to 4:45pm
2:30pm to 3:15pm
4:00pm to 4:45pm
Location:
Markfield Road, SouthTottenham, N15 4RB
There is a café on site if you fancy coffee and a bun and all areas of the site are disabled accessible.
More information at: Markfield Beam Engine
There is a café on site if you fancy coffee and a bun and all areas of the site are disabled accessible.
More information at: Markfield Beam Engine
Friday, 13 July 2012
Running the water supply: A walk around Walthamstow’s reservoirs
Email received (via Katy Andrews - with thanks) from Roger Huddle of the Walthawstow Radical History Worshops.
Hello everyone, just to let you know about our next event:
Running the water supply:
A walk around Walthamstow’s reservoirs
One
of the most powerful local enterprises from the early nineteenth
century through to the twentieth was the East London Water Company. A
combination of ruthless business methods and a visionary zeal led them
to harness the flow of the River Lea and build between 1862 and 1904 the
twelve reservoirs that border Walthamstow. A wonderful place to visit
for its views and wildlife, it is also a fascinating insight in late
nineteenth century engineering and industrial architecture.
Sunday 15 July at 2pm,
Meet at the car park of the Ferry Boat Inn
Ferry Lane N17 9NG
Please join us
Admission: £1 at turnstile
Railway & underground station: Blackhorse Road /Tottenham Hale
Buses: Forest Road/Ferry Lane 123 & 230
Wednesday, 11 July 2012
reinstatement of leyton marsh meeting tonight (wed 11 july)
The Olympic Delivery Authority are holding a meeting this evening to discuss the proposed reinstatement plan for Leyton Marsh.
Date: Wednesday, 11 July.
Time: 6.30pm to 8.30pm
Place: Latham's Yard Estate, Woodmill, E5 9GQ. Head towards the end of Woodmill Road, leading to Magnolisa Mews. The meeting room is in the car park of Thistle Court.
You can read the Save Leyton Marsh group's initial response to the proposal on: www.saveleytonmarsh.wordpress.com
Sunday, 8 July 2012
Wednesday, 4 July 2012
22 reasons to save the Ship Aground
Updated
4 July: Due to errors in the planning notices issued by Hackney
planning which failed to adequately describe the scale of the demolition
proposed for the Ship Aground, it is having to reconsult on the
application and there has been a delay in the application being
determined.
We understand it will now go to the planning sub committee on 15 August 2012. It is not too late to object: the Planning Service are required to accept and consider all comments received up until the time the application is formally determined - so please do help save this heritage asset within Lea Bridge Conservation area.
We understand it will now go to the planning sub committee on 15 August 2012. It is not too late to object: the Planning Service are required to accept and consider all comments received up until the time the application is formally determined - so please do help save this heritage asset within Lea Bridge Conservation area.
SHIP AGROUND, 144 LEA BRIDGE ROAD, LONDON, E5 9RB (REFERENCE 2012/0325)
Our objections to the above planning and conservation area consent
application are summarised below. If you agree, please write to Caroline.ozor@hackney. gov.uk
at Hackney Planning this week.
1. Status of
the application
The
status of this application is in doubt and it may be invalid. There are a
series of errors or misleading statements in the application forms, in
drawings, and in the supporting statements. The application form states the
works have not commenced – work has commenced, so the application form may be
invalid. It is misleading, and possibly unlawful, for the Authority to accept
‘existing’ drawings in a planning application that do not show the building in
its present state.
2. Extent of
demolition
The extent of demolition of the
historic fabric is unjustified and unacceptable. The fact that this has already
been carried out should be entirely set aside in determining this application,
as the recently published National Planning Policy Framework states.
3. Change of
use
The principle of the change has
not been established, nor it justified in this application.
4. Relationship to the previously consented but unimplemented scheme
The
application is entirely different to the previous consented scheme in terms of
land use mix, extent of demolition, scale of development and intensity of use
so that scheme cannot be allowed to set any precedent whatsoever.
5. Archaeology
Archaeological impact has not
been assessed and this may be significant, requiring further investigation or
monitoring.
6. Designated Heritage Asset
Insufficient
regard has been given to the status of this building as a designated heritage
asset. The applicant and their advisors have sought to denigrate and diminish
the building’s status rather than to apply proper building conservation best practice.
The advisors assess the former state of the building whilst failing to mention
that a substantial proportion of the fabric has been demolished.
We object to the loss of the
roof-line and chimneys, the addition of a stairwell on the east wall and strongly
object to the use of the front beer garden as a car park.
7. Ground
contamination has not been assessed
An assessment of ground
contamination has not been submitted. The excavation of the proposed extensive
basement area may require decontamination or mitigation measures. The site is
within a former industrial area known to be contaminated. Adjacent sites have required
de-contamination prior to development.
8. Pre-application
advice
The applicant relies upon officer
level pre-application advice, which is not relevant to this application because
the proposed scheme is materially and significantly different to the earlier
proposals.
9. Flood
risk has not been assessed
The application fails to take
account of flood risk and proposes a extensive basement level public assembly
area in a flood risk area without any apparent evacuation strategy.
10. Other
environmental impacts have not been assessed
The building has remained empty,
partly demolished and boarded up for a considerable period of time. There is a
possibility that habitats have become established, such as bat roosts. A stage
1 habitat survey should therefore be undertaken and submitted and, if necessary,
followed up with a stage II habitat survey.
11. There
are many errors in the detail of plans which obscure the extent of the many
harmful changes proposed to the building
The plans and elevation are
poorly drawn and contradict one another. The effect, if not the intention, is
to lessen the apparent scale of the changes and the further loss of original
fabric.
12. Loss of
the original roof form
The loss of historic valley roof
form, clearly visible from the riverside path and the Lea Bridge Road, is deeply
harmful to the character and integrity of the building and the conservation
area. Hackney guidance on extensions specifically opposes the loss of historic
roof forms.
13. Harm to
the Conservation area
The proposal will materially harm
the character and appearance of the Lea Bridge Conservation Area. The proposed
height in relation to the mostly single storey schoolhouse is excessive and
overbearing and will diminish the historic setting. Views from the riverside path,
south of the Princess of Wales, will be harmed with a further overbearing volume
damaging the view of the silhouette of the schoolhouse roof.
14. Harm to
the setting of the adjacent listed building
The proposal will harm the
setting of the adjacent listed schoolhouse building, eroding its value as a
heritage asset. The schoolhouse is Grade II listed and identified as "at
risk". Hoardings currently obscure views along the row of buildings. Views
from the bridge and the river will be revealed when these are removed, taking
in the east side and front of the Ship Aground. It is critical that the
Victorian setting is preserved in these views. The applicant’s advisors fail to
even identify these views and potential impacts.
15. Harm to the viability of future plans
to restore the adjacent listed building
Plans to restore the schoolhouse are
advancing with considerable progress expected in the next year. The proposal
will materially affect the future functioning and setting of the schoolhouse and
the plans to bring the schoolhouse back into viable economic use as an
education and interpretation centre. A ‘tipping point’ has been reached and the
survival of the building is in doubt if a scheme does not come forward in time
to save it. The proposed car park serving 100 guests would obviously be a
visual eyesore, create noise and have potential safety implications for school
parties attending the schoolhouse. It may even require modern signage and
yellow lines in the cobbled lane or adjacent roads, which would detract from
the listed schoolhouse and may jeopardise the chance to secure Heritage Lottery
Funding.
16. Basement
impact
The proposed extensive basement
is an unjustified overdevelopment of the plot and will create a very poor
quality environment for users and neighbours. A full assessment impact
assessment (BIA) is needed.
17. Fenestration
The applicant has misrepresented
the proposed loss of the original fenestration, glazing and external doors.
Misleading errors in the plans and elevations demonstrate that most if not all
windows and decorative glazing is to be removed, bringing further destruction
of the historic fabric and a further diminution of the designated heritage
asset.
18. Over development
The scale of the development and
intensity of the use represents a gross overdevelopment of the plot with
serious consequences for both the functioning of the property and potentially
significant effects upon neighbours and the highway and side streets. The
application should be refused because it is overdevelopment.
19. Capacity
The proposed layout and the mix
of use uses will clearly exceed the capacity of the property to accommodate the
significant numbers of visitors and users anticipated (but not fully detailed
in the application). The plot, the proposed scheme and layout and the
neighbourhood as a whole cannot accommodate the intensity of use proposed.
It is a great mystery why such as a substantial increase in volume and floorspace is needed, and so much historic fabric must be sacrificed, in order to serve so few users and visitors; only a few more than the applicant suggested could be accommodated in their first scheme, which involved no demolition and no increase in volume or floorpsace.
20. Traffic
and transport impacts
Serious errors and oversights in
the transport assessment appear to follow from the earlier misleading
statements in relation to capacity and the pattern and intensity of use of the site.
If the data inputs are wrong then the assessment is flawed and the conclusions
cannot be relied upon. The application should be refused on the ground that a
proper assessment of the transport impacts of the development has not been
undertaken.
21. Parking
The loose proposal to negotiate a
‘Pay and park’ deal with Paradise Park is deeply problematic. These spaces are
not owned or controlled by the applicant; they serve an established residential
and commercial community; they are outside the ‘red line’; and they are to be
secured at some future date so that they cannot be controlled through this
application or a S106.
Most importantly, this indicates
that the applicant anticipates the need to provide for significant numbers of
additional car-bound visitors, contrary to their assertion (and the submitted studies) that
visitors will be few.
22. Fire and
Emergency strategy
A fire/emergency strategy has not
been submitted and this may have serious consequences for both the every-day safe
operation of the property and when it is used intensively for festivals etc. as
well as the safety implications for neighbouring properties and their shared
access paths and roads.
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