Earlier this month Brent Council
started demolition of two 1960s tower blocks on South Kilburn Estate,
part of a £66.5 million redevelopment scheme that will see them
replaced by 229 low-rise apartments for sale and rent.
One of the 18 storey towers, Fielding
House (above), used to fill the view from the window of a flat I once
rented on the opposite side of Kilburn Park Road. Back in 1975 the towers were a
recent addition to the NW6 landscape, and the Victorian terrace whose
first floor I part-occupied was scheduled for compulsory purchase and
demolition by the Greater London Council.
Calling it a flat is being kind. It
wasn't self-contained, the toilet was shared with the tenant
upstairs, it had no bathroom, and the only running water was a cold
tap above a Butler sink on the landing. At the time such conditions were
commonplace, particularly in the private rented sector, and the
towers were part of a slum clearance programme designed to sweep them away
and provide good quality public housing for all who needed it.
Almost forty years on, the Victorian
terrace is still standing, and it is the towers that are coming down.
In a complete reversal, not only is high-rise making way for low (the 229 new South Kilburn apartments will be in buildings with traditional mansion
block facades and six or seven floors), but public sector housing is making way for
private: 126 of them will be sold off, and only 103 will be let.
'Private good, public bad' is the mantra now. More pictures here.
Tenant in an unfit kitchen, Kilburn Park Road, 1982