South Acton, London
South Acton is a place in the town of Acton, West London, situated 6.4 miles (10.3 km) west of Charing Cross. At the time of the 2001 census, Acton, comprising the wards of East Acton, Acton Central, South Acton and Southfield, had a population of 53,689 people.[1]
The area is dominated by the South Acton housing estate, a large public housing estate owned by Ealing Council. There are some 2000 residential dwellings on the estate, covering approximately 25 hectares of land.[2] These are accommodated in a range of principally medium to high rise blocks. The estate also provides shops, a youth club, a community centre, a nursery, school buildings and open space.
The area is well served by transport links. Acton Town, a major interchange for the District and Piccadilly Lines, with links to Heathrow and the West End is on the western boundary. On the southern boundary is South Acton station, a London Overground station running north to Hampstead Heath and south to Richmond. The site is bounded to the north by Acton High Street, to the south by the London Overground railway line, to the east by a Victorian residential neighbourhood and to the west by Bollo Lane and the tube lines. To the south east, on the other side of the railway line, lie the suburban residential areas of Acton Green and Bedford Park.
The estate and area is also particularly diverse. Historically, the area has been important for Irish Working Class immigrants, and recently this has been supplemented by Indian, Somali and African Caribbean immigration. Currently the population is 52% white, including 5% of Irish descent, 24% Afro-Caribbean, including a large Somali community, 16% Asian, with the last 8% being of other ethnic origins. A great range of first languages other than English are spoken at the local school.
Historically, the estate and the area has suffered from a poor reputation, in particular because of high levels of crime and drug dealing and use. However, recent efforts by the Council, local Safer Neighbourhoods Teamand Ealing Homes (the council's housing management company) and local residents have seen improvements in the area.[3] There are now ambitious plans to redevelop the majority of what is a mono-tenure estate, to provide a new mixed tenure community and benefit from the area's excellent transport links and proximity to the successful neighbourhoods of Chiswick and Ealing.
History of South Acton Estate
The area was originally built to a traditional Victorian street pattern with medium density terraced housing occupying the majority of the site. Although initially having good north/south links, the construction of the railway lines created a permenant barrier in these areas. In the post war period, the area was earmarked for comprehensive redevelopment that would involve clearance of the 19th century properties labelled as slums.[4] This was a common response by local authorities to the problems of poor housing after the war and it led to the proliferation of medium and high rise system built housing estates[5], influenced by Modernist ideals of Le Corbusier who sought to engineer the human machine [6] Government subsidies and local politics also encouraged the production of system built and high rise housing.[7] The council embarked on comprehensive redevelopment in 1949 with the construction of Bollo Court. The redevelopment continued over the 50s, 60s and 70s with a variety of styles and archetypes.
Property types and description
The central area of the site comprises 1960’s tower blocks and slab blocks, including Charles Hocking House, Barwick House, Hardy Court, Carisbrooke and Ludlow Courts, which are set in a generous open pedestrian space, located to the north of Bollo Bridge Road. Although geographically close to the red brick area to the north of the site and the blocks to west of the site, the area is isolated by a lack of interconnecting roads.
The west area of the estate is bordered by Bollo Lane to the west, the industrial area and Bollo Bridge Road to the south, and the Victorian Housing along Heathfield Road to the north. The existing infant and junior schools with associated open space create an eastern boundary. The west area predominately comprises a mixture of mid to high rise tower blocks. Geographically this area is closest to Acton Town tube station and its excellent public transport connections. The last part of the site to be built dates from the late 1970’s and is commonly referred to as the ‘red brick’ area, located at the north of the site, adjacent to the town centre. This area comprises a mixture of low rise and high rise blocks, with a large number of now unused underground car parks. It has a sloping site topography and lack of through roads, and is characterised by complex deck access circulation patterns, which are difficult to negotiate as a pedestrian.
Generally the estate is characterised by a series of slab blocks and towers set in mature landscaped open spaces which exploit the natural topography of the site. Flats on the upper floors of many of the taller buildings enjoy spectacular views across London. Some of the original inhabitants of the estate are still resident and can recall how pleasant it was when newly built. Traditionally the area was well served by local industries such as Wilkinson Sword and Lucas Aerospace but the last decade has witnessed a decline in traditional manufacturing employment and a steady deterioration of the physical environment.
The Council has been severely limited in its ability to invest in the fabric of buildings and the estate since it was built, primarily in the 1960’s and 1970’s. The buildings themselves and the public realm are now tired and significant new investment is necessary.
In 1999, NBA Consortium Services carried out a Stock Condition Survey. This identified a number of problems and shortfalls with the existing stock. These included need for concrete repairs, roof repairs, window replacements, better insulation standards, upgrading of lifts and common parts, access control and security as well as the need for improvements internally and to external spaces.[8]
Local Services and Facilities
There are a number of services and facilities within easy reach of South Acton.
Transport
The estate is well served by public transport. Acton Town underground station (Piccadilly and District lines) provides access to the West End in 20 minutes and Heathrow Airport in a similar time. South Acton station (London Overground) has trains to Richmond and Hampstead Heath). The underground station is earmarked for a £2.5m refurbishment in the near future by London Underground. There is, in addition, planning approval for a new station to serve Chiswick Park Phase 2, but this is currently on hold. Crossrail proposals, if they go ahead, will mean a fast connection between Paddington and Acton Central station.
For car users the location offers quick access to the A40 to the north and the A4/M4 to the south. Good bus services are available on Acton High Street and a limited service (the 440) runs along Bollo Bridge Road.
Retail
Acton High Street is the main local shopping centre, but has limited shopping facilities, although it does have a Morrison’s supermarket. Some local residents also use the Sainsbury’s in Chiswick. In addition there are a number of shops around Acton Town underground station. The main local shopping facilities are the Bollo Bridge Road shops, some of which are under used or closed. The Post Office was well used and seen as an important community facility. However, as part of the post office closures programme it was closed. [9]. In addition there are further shops on Hanbury Road, some of which are presently well used and some converted for nursery use. There are a few additional shops, one in the south area of the estate and two in the north, which are now closed.
Community and Leisure
Local leisure facilities include Acton Baths, Reynolds Sports Centre, a games area on the South Acton Estate’s South Park, Twyford Church of England High School and Ealing Tertiary College. In addition the Chiswick Park development has a Health Club and there are numerous private gyms within the Acton area. Acton Baths is currently the subject of consideration of the Town Hall redevelopment proposals. Other community facilities include the Priory Centre, which is a centre used by Somali women and other community groups, the Oak Tree Community Centre, which provides crèche facilities, the Sunlight Nursery and Bollo Brook Youth Centre. SASAC, the South Acton Sewing and Arts Collaborative has been very successful and is operating as a business from a building in the west of the estate.
Open Space
The estate is characterised by a number of large open green spaces forming part of a wider network of green spaces. The most significant of these in terms of ease of access is the generous open space provision at the recreation ground on Bollo Bridge Lane, originally a walled Victorian Park but now opened up and framed by mature trees. Tenants and residents on the South Acton estate and wider community have unrestricted access to this space, as well as to Acton Park, Acton Green and Gunnersbury Park. Within the estate the playground on Avenue Road is a well used space and the open space currently used as a football pitch is an important asset for young people. In addition, the recently created South Park involved young people in the creation of a skateboard area but is under used.
Groundwork West London have also been active on the estate and currently have two funded projects; upgrading the children’s play area on the recreation area to the east of All Saints Road and improvement works to the environment outside South Acton station. The allotments along the edge of the railway at the southern edge of the site are an important amenity. They are well used and have a waiting list.[10]
Education, Employment and Training
There are a number of providers for nursery aged children within the area, including at Berrymede Infant School and the South Acton Early Years Excellence Centre. The latter has recently undergone building works which have combined the former Heathfield and Hanbury Nurseries into an extended Sure Start Centre of Excellence for Early Years Learning.
Berrymede Infant School caters for pupils aged 3-7, with pupils aged 7-11 being provided for at the separate Berrymede Junior School, which is located in two buildings located on either side of Osborne Road. The Indices of Deprivation 2004 show that the two schools have the highest deprivation ranking of all 65 primary schools in the Borough.[11] Both schools have had good reports from their last OfSTED inspections and Berrymede Junior has the highest value added score in the Borough in the recently published league tables.[12]
Most secondary age pupils from the area attend one of the three closest high schools (Acton High, Twyford CE High and The Ellen Wilkinson School for Girls). Acton High School has been completely rebuilt and is now in brand new facilities. It is a specialist school for media arts.[13] Education for pupils over the age of 16 is provided via the sixth forms at Twyford and Ellen Wilkinson schools and also the Ealing, Hammersmith and West London College, which has campuses on Ealing Green and in Hammersmith.
Bollo Brook Youth Centre
The Bollo Brook Youth Centre situated in the center of the estate, is statutory youth centre which specialises in arts based activities . In the youth center there are instruments, a recording studio, cooking lessons and internet access available for South Acton youths. Many teenagers are found here recording music, including UK Garage and Grime popular urban british genres. The centre is also used for daytime programmes with young people who are not in mainstream education, delivered in partnership with other voluntary and statutory sector organisations.
Crime
Historically, crime has been a problem for the South Acton estate and it has attracted a reputation as a dangerous estate, with high levels of drug use and dealing, and other associated anti-social behaviour. The high levels of crime stem from a combination of poor design on parts of the estate that bear some of the features Alice Coleman identifed in Utopia on Trial of single entrances with multiple users, as well as complex deck access. It is also a result of a residualised social housing policy that has polarised entrants to social housing into the lowest income categories.
However, in recent years efforts have been made to tackle the problems. There are a number of drinking control areas on the estate and in Acton itself to tackle alcohol abuse. ASB and drug dealing is also being tackled by the Safer Neighbourhoods Team in partnership with Ealing Council, Ealing Homes and residents.
Regeneration
As long ago as 1996 the council decided that redevelopment and regeneration was needed on South Acton to improve the quality of homes and of peoples lives. As noted above, lack of investment and poor original design and the high levels of maintenance necessary meant that refurbishment was not the preferred option.
Masterplan
ECD Architects and Proctor and Matthews were appointed by Ealing Council to prepare an Urban Design Framework, or masterplan, for the regeneration of the South Acton Estate. This framework explores the potential of South Acton and sets markers for what could be achieved if redevelopment was to be pursued.
The framework proposed a mixed development is proposed, including the addition of new housing (public and private), community facilities, non-residential commercial development and retail.
The masterplanners recognised "a real opportunity to create a new high density urban quarter over the next decade, served as it is by Acton Town underground station on the Piccadilly Line and South Acton on the north London line."[14] South Acton has a high PTAL rating, meaning that density could be conceivably double from the 2000 units, to near 3500 units.
Recent Development
There has been several phases of development on South Acton since 2001.
Phase 1
In 2001 Barrie House, a 21 storey tower block on the centre of the estate was demolished and Phase 1 of the regeneration of South Acton began with the re-development of this site in partnership with Catalyst. The scheme consists of 86 new homes, both social rented and shared ownership and was completed in 2005. In addition six blocks were refurbished internally and externally and the Oak Tree Community Centre (located on Osborne Road) was demolished and new centre (offering approximately twice the floor area) was built in its place. The new community centre opened in August 2007.
Phase 2
Phase 2.1 on the site of Maugham Court, Reade Court , Lawrence Court, and Shaw Court Garages will deliver 129 new homes, comprising of 75 rented units and 54 shared ownership units, including 13 Wheelchair adapted units. Catalyst successfully gained full planning consent for this phase in November 2007. Construction of the new homes began in May 2008, with an estimated 2 years to complete the building works. Phase 2.2 on the site of Shaw Court and Kipling Tower car park will deliver a further 127 units with a similar split of rented and shared ownership units.
Selecting a developer
Following the slow progress since the beggining of phase 1 and the development of the masterplan, the council decided that a new approach was needed. Instead of piecemeal development, a developer partner would be selected to deliver all future phases of development or refurbishment and to deliver a vision for South Acton.[15]
The area has been described as "a once in a lifetime opportunity to create a completely new sense of place in what should be a high value area of west London." [16]
South Acton In Popular Culture
- Harlech Tower, on the South Acton estate, was a stand-in for the fictional Nelson Mandela House, the home of Del Boy in the popular sitcom Only Fools and Horses.
- Scenes from the 1986 movie Aliens and the 1989 movie Batman were shot inside the disused Acton power station.
- Musician M.I.A in interviews has hinted one of the meanings of her stage name is "Missing in Acton", with Acton being the place she grew up.
Neighbouring places
Gallery
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View of South Acton from Barwick House, showing Jerome Tower and Berrymede Junior School
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Acton Park
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Barwick House, on the South Acton estate
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Blocks of flats on the South Acton estate
References
- ^ Ealing.gov.uk
- ^ South Acton Neighbourhood Regeneration: Urban Design Framework, Ealing Council, 2004
- ^ http://www.actonw3.com/default.asp?section=info&page=concrime016.htm
- ^ http://www.english-heritage.org.uk/server/show/nav.1152
- ^ http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract;jsessionid=395DBD1DD196CAA2AB24CA21DB83B388.tomcat1?fromPage=online&aid=54657
- ^ http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=aPoxgOrq-poC&q=le+corbusier+towards+a+new+architecture&dq=le+corbusier+towards+a+new+architecture&pgis=1 Towards a New Architecture, Le Corbusier, 1984
- ^ The Politics of Mass Housing in Britain, 1945-1975, Patrick Dunleavy (1981)
- ^ South Acton Neighbourhood Regeneration: Urban Design Framework, Ealing Council, 2004
- ^ http://www.postoffice.co.uk/portal/po/content1?catId=57600693&mediaId=57600697 Post Office Closures Programme
- ^ http://www.ealing.gov.uk/services/environment/allotments/allotment_sites/#S Ealing Council Allotment Sites
- ^ http://www.communities.gov.uk/archived/general-content/communities/indicesofdeprivation/216309/ Links to IMD 2004 data
- ^ www.ofsted.gov.uk/oxcare_providers/list/ Ofsted Reports
- ^ http://www.ealing.gov.uk/services/education/schools/primary_schools/berrymede_junior_school/ Acton High School
- ^ http://www.ecda.co.uk/ecd_projects/southacton.htm ECD Architects
- ^ http://www.ealing.gov.uk/ealing3/export/sites/ealingweb/services/council/committees/agendas_minutes_reports/cabinet/20may2008-15may2009/_16_sept_2008/Item_12_-_South_Acton_Estate_-_Selection_of_Developer_Partner.doc South Acton Developer Selection Ealing Council Report September 2008
- ^ South Acton Developers Prospectus, Ealing Council, 2008
External links
- actonW3.com: Acton community website
- sarag.org: Residents' association for South Acton
- Moosehead Acton Triva Quiz site
- Stardom in Acton video on YouTube
- Transport for London: Official site for West London Tram scheme
- History of Acton website
- British History Online - Acton
- Acton Farmers' Market Website
- Council Tax charges in 2007/08