New dawn for Hell's waiting room

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Author: Martin Fletcher
Date: Oct. 20, 2008
From: The Times(Issue 69459)
Publisher: NI Syndication Limited
Document Type: Article
Length: 164,918 words
Source Library: Times Newspapers Limited

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0074 0FFO-2008-1020-0074-001-001 2[S]

timesonline.co.uk/property New dawn for Hell's waiting room

timesonline.co.uk/property New dawn for Hell's waiting room

0074 0FFO-2008-1020-0074-001-001 2[S]

The Aylesbury estate, a byword for urban squalor for 40 years, is to be torn down. Can planners get it right this time? Martin Fletcher reports

Red Lion Row, a tiny South London backstreet overshadowed by one of the bleak grey apartment blocks of the infamous Aylesbury estate, has had a bloody recent history. It was here, last Boxing Day, sllllllBii that a 20-year-old Nigerian-born asylum-seeker named Dipo Seweje was shot dead after being chased through the estate. His body lay undiscovered for 26 hours in a communal garden. Here, too, in late 2005 an 18-year-old pastor's' daughter, Ruth Okechukwu, was pulled from a car and stabbed repeatedly by a teenage Angolan immigrant for failing to show him respect. A bunch of long-dead flowers marks the spot where she died. Now work is about to begin in Red Lion Row on one of Britain's most ambitious inner-city regeneration projects: the phased demolition and replacement of the entire Aylesbury estate, over 15 years, at a cost of £2.4 billion. Some 2,700 flats in more than 40 monolithic concrete blocks on one of the largest estates in Europe — it covers 70 acres — will be reduced to rubble, one by one, and replaced by 5,100 new homes built on a mercifully more human scale. Some 7,500 residents will have to be moved out and housed elsewhere while their homes are successively demolished and rebuilt. The project will end one of the country's more disastrous experiments in postwar municipal housing — an experiment that has made the Aylesbury a byword for crime and deprivation, the first port of call for politicians seeking to highlight the desolation of Britain's inner cities, and the backdrop of choice for film crews seeking the archetypal "sink" estate. Episodes of The Bill

The Aylesbury estate, a byword for urban squalor for 40 years, is to be torn down. Can planners get it right this time? Martin Fletcher reports

Red Lion Row, a tiny South London backstreet overshadowed by one of the bleak grey apartment blocks of the infamous Aylesbury estate, has had a bloody recent history. It was here, last Boxing Day, sllllllBii that a 20-year-old Nigerian-born asylum-seeker named Dipo Seweje was shot dead after being chased through the estate. His body lay undiscovered for 26 hours in a communal garden. Here, too, in late 2005 an 18-year-old pastor's' daughter, Ruth Okechukwu, was pulled from a car and stabbed repeatedly by a teenage Angolan immigrant for failing to show him respect. A bunch of long-dead flowers marks the spot where she died. Now work is about to begin in Red Lion Row on one of Britain's most ambitious inner-city regeneration projects: the phased demolition and replacement of the entire Aylesbury estate, over 15 years, at a cost of £2.4 billion. Some 2,700 flats in more than 40 monolithic concrete blocks on one of the largest estates in Europe —...

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