The first in a series on BB2 this Tuesday was on Deptford High Street, enthusiastically reviewed in the Guardian by Sydenham's own Lucy Mangan, with a former "chair of the Lewisham planning council" - I assume this should be 'committee' - set up as villain in chief.
Did anyone see this? There's a good discussion of it on Brockley Central, which feels more balanced. Lucy Mangan's review kicks off, and continues, which what feels to me like unreflecting sentimentality
while the comments on Brockley Central show some appreciation of the current liveliness of the area, in which immigrants, both from overseas and Brits drawn to the big city, students and other young people now play a part, as well as people whose families have stayed.Deptford thought it was a tight-knit working-class community with friends and family jostling happily for space amid the market stalls passed down through generations, in the houses that were handed down likewise and using the dozen pubs nearby as homes from home. The council and its environmental health officers of the passionately modernist 1960s thought it was a motley collection of slums and undesirables – the perfect place, therefore, to begin living their dream of re-organising chaotic London into a sleekly efficient city fit for the shining future
Any 'passionately' * adhered to project for social engineering is almost bound to end badly, because passions get in the way of admitting mistakes - see the distinction between 'piecemeal' and 'utopian' in this earlier thread - but Lucy Mangan's rose-tinted romanticism would seem to undermine official concepts of 'decent houses' - in today's planners' language - and endorse quasi-property rights for original residents of an area - although to preserve traditional 'communities', you would also need to prevent too many individual members of them moving out. How would you do that? Once you start thinking through the policy implications of this sort of emotional communitarianism, its inadequacies become obvious. For a more analytic critique of appealing to 'community consensus' see this blog post from Matt Bruenig.
The program doesn't seem to have been so much about the retail liveliness of the area, which so many of here in Sydenham are concerned about, but the two are inextricably linked - see this thread
* Why I worry when people try to tell me how they are passionate about something ...