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Hyde Park, Leeds

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Brudenell Road, one of the main roads through Hyde Park
Hyde Park Corner, Leeds

Hyde Park is an inner-city area of north-west Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, situated between the University of Leeds and Headingley.

It is mainly in the Hyde Park & Woodhouse ward, though some areas of what is often considered to be Hyde Park lie within the Headingley Ward. It is also the local name for Woodhouse Moor which is a tree-lined moor between Woodhouse Lane and Moorland Road. The area is in the centre of the city's student community. Being next to Headingley, a large student community, Hyde Park is now an established alternative student district. Alongside the students it also has a sizable South Asian community.

The area contains two mosques and one Hindu temple alongside outlets primarily catering for the student population there remain a number of smaller shops selling largely traditional South Asian goods. This arguably lessens the impact of studentification, though some community groups do consider this to be a problem and tension exists [1].

Swallows and Amazons author Arthur Ransome was born in the area. A blue plaque on No 6 Ash Grove commemorates this.

Black Flag singer, Henry Rollins also once resided in Hyde Park, in one of the streets in the Harold Terrace area.

Kaiser Chiefs singer Ricky Wilson (Kaiser Chiefs) is another notable figure who lived in Hyde Park, while a student at Leeds Metropolitan University, in one of the Hessles. He released a song with the band (then called Parva) entitled; Hessles. This song a direct link to the area in Hyde Park.

Community

In July 2005, Hyde Park became the focus of international attention as police carried out a raid connected to the 7 July 2005 London bombings. Officers used a controlled explosion to enter a property at 28 Alexandra Grove, situated roughly where the Hyde Park and Burley areas meet[2]. Hundreds of local residents were evacuated as police searched the house, one of six in West Yorkshire to be raided that day. Despite media speculation the house had allegedly been used as a 'bomb factory' by the suicide bombers, police later said they found no explosives in the property.

The area suffers considerable social deprivation including high unemployment, bad housing stock and a high crime rate[3]. In July 1995 the area suffered serious rioting after the taking over of a local pub, The Newlands, by the police to be used in surveillance [4]. The local community rallied and created Unity Day[5] a popular community festival started by the Hyde Park Residents Association held on the moor, usually in August.

Amenities

Hyde Park is the home of the Hyde Park Picture House, an independent, historic, art house cinema. The Royal Park, on Queen's Road, is a large pub with a downstairs gig venue, popular with the student population, and next door stands the Brudenell Social Club, a members club which has recently taken on a new role as a venue for local and underground music. The area is also home to the Hyde Park Social Club, a members-only pub. Brudenell Grove is the home of the infamous Hukaz - one of Hyde Parks nicer drinking venues and Booze Bin. The area also has several independent restaurants, such as Popinas bistro, Hukaz Bar / Restaurant, Baraka and Moorish. In addition, Hyde Park is home to many student house and street parties.

Housing

The vast majority of residential properties in the area are late Victorian and Edwardian back-to-back brick terraces. Most houses face onto wide streets with communal access alleyways at the rear. Main roads are cambered and some still retain original Yorkstone pavements and iron guttering.

Nowadays a large number of houses in Hyde Park are owned by private landlords due to the area's proximity to the city's colleges and universities. Approximate average rent is around £55 per person per week, although rents can be as low as £45-£50 and as high as £65. By letting to students individually, landlords are able to charge higher per house rents than would be achieved by letting the whole property outright, which is standard practice for non-students.

Many houses in Hyde Park have five or more bedrooms and are spread out over as many as four levels: basement level (lower-ground floor), raised ground floor, first floor and 2nd floor (often constituted from a loft or attic conversion).

Chestnut Avenue

Chestnut Avenue in Hyde Park was the subject of many articles in 2001/02, including one in the Daily Mail asking Is this the most burgled street in Britain?[6]. This is not shown in the police statistics [7] but the high student population with many valuable items in their houses are a common target for criminals. In fact, references to its being, 'The most-burgled street in Britain' go back as far as at least 1993.

Hessle Terrace

In the early hours of Saturday 5 May 2007, West Yorkshire Police shut down a street party held by the tenants of two properties on Hessle Terrace and Hessle Avenue, at which there were estimated to be 200-300 people. Students from the University of Leeds gained media coverage on BBC Look North,[8] BBC Radio Leeds, The Yorkshire Evening Post[9], several local newspapers and a minor article on the BBC Yorkshire website,[10] after claiming that the Police had used brutal and heavy handed tactics. They claim that at no point did the Police request the party be dispersed, however, the Police released a statement contradicting this claim.

Eight people were hospitalised with dog bites and injuries from Police batons, including one man with a fractured arm. Students involved claim that whilst the party was busy, it was also peaceful and relaxed, and that the Police's use of Dog Handlers and Batons was an extreme overreaction. After the incident, a group of students involved launched a Facebook campaign, and sent complaints to the Independent Police Complaints Commission. After an investigation by the West Yorkshire Police, attempts to charge the members of the two properties that hosted the party for being a Public nuisance, eventually led to no charges being pressed by the police on the individuals in question.

References

  1. ^ List of local residents groups concerned with Landlordism and Studentification from the Heal HeadingleyWebsite
  2. ^ BBC News coverage of the suspected 'bomb factory
  3. ^ Leeds statistics, area statistics for Burley/Hyde Park in pdf format
  4. ^ Davis, Nick Dark Heart: The Shocking Truth About Hidden Britain, Vintage ISBN 0-09-958301-1
  5. ^ Unity Day a festival held in Hyde Park
  6. ^ Heal Headingley National Newspapers Archive 22.5.02
  7. ^ Labour website, "Chestnut Avenue has been previously reported as ‘most burgled street In Britain’. Although this is disputed by police"
  8. ^ BBC News. "Students slam "brutal" police" (video clip). Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  9. ^ Smith, Bruce (2007-05-09). "Chief refutes brutality over street party". Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved 2008-01-17.
  10. ^ http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/6628109.stm