Monday 23 August 2010

Regeneration's What You Need

A few weekends ago, Mrs Ox and myself decided to take a trip to Stratford, East London to see the progress on the redevelopment around the Olympic site. It was of keen interest to us in fact, as we have started to think of buying a property in a few years' time, and it would appear that Stratford is pretty much the only London location we'll be able to afford whilst keeping our commutes reasonable.

At the moment, other than a promising-looking building site, it's still a bit skanky, if I'm honest. Certainly though there are worse places to live in London. Yet Stratford is a bit more run-down that what I'm used to, and I did feel slightly on edge at times, to the amused delight of MrsOx.
Stratford station Regenerated:
Still as much chance of a stabbing.
Photo by Clive Power (It says I had to tell you that).

"You've never really lived anywhere poor, have you?" she commented when we were on the bus home surrounded by vagrants and mouthy drunks.

I wanted to correct her and assert my working-class roots - My Dad left school at 15 to work down the mines, ffs! But the fact was, she was right. My Dad's upbringing was not my own thanks mainly to his own work ethic & industry (thankfully not down the mines for very long). I in fact grew up a Landlord's son mostly in quaint coaching inns in well-kept villages and well-to-do market towns.

I did live in a rough dive-pub in Southampton between the ages of 3 and 6, but other than that, I've led a pretty charmed life of locations. My formative years were spent either in the not-very-ghetto'd Cotswolds, within the midst of straw-boaters upon the regatta-loving Thames or in the shadow of royal polo tournaments in Sussex.

At one point, I could even boast Led Zeppelin's Jimmy Page & spoon-bender Uri Geller as next-door neighbours (Well, I could boast about Jimmy Page at least).
Stratford: Easy to get out of, at least.

Either way though, Mrs Ox was right, I've never lived anywhere 'edgy', 'up-and-coming' or 'vibrant' as the estate agents refer to Stratford* in their window adverts. Perhaps I have lived a rather sheltered life in that respect.

This is the odd thing about these areas of London though - you could live on a very nice middle-class street but there could be a problem estate at the end of the road. You can have run-down social housing blocks down one side of a road, and on the opposite side some new-build yuppie flats exchanging hands for silly money.

Everything is on top of everything else and areas once thought too dodgy to venture into at night are now becoming gentrified. One problem of that of course is that the poor are often not taken along with the regeneration but actually forced out by rising property prices.

East London Regeneration: The Luftwaffe started things off.

Hopefully, Stratford (which isn't really that bad, obviously) will indeed benefit from the Olympic regeneration and become one of those areas where people want to move to without driving out the less well-off, so that they too can benefit from it. Maybe I will benefit from it too, one day.

Although I'm not saying it wasn't nice growing up where i did, I feel truly grateful to be a resident of London - there is a lot to be said about how enriching it is to live amongst a melting pot of people from such diverse backgrounds and culture all mingling together.

Still less likely to get mugged and stabbed in Moreton-in-Marsh though.


*For 'edgy' read 'dangerous'.
 For 'up-and-coming' read 'still pretty run-down, but they are building some stuff.'
  For 'vibrant' read 'large ethnic minority population living below the poverty line'.

4 comments:

  1. Anonymous3:22 pm

    "One problem of that of course is that the poor are often not taken along with the regeneration but actually forced out"

    not true old boy. you can even find some poor working class council types in places like covent garden don't you know

    it's the "normal" folk that are pushed out - with just the rich or poor/unemployed left behind. but don't take my word for it - just pick up any copy of the daily mail for proof ;-)

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  2. I stand corrected, in my orthopedic shoes.

    ReplyDelete