Monday, September 8, 2008

A View from the Bridge

In recent decades areas of cities which were overlooked or simply remaindered by departed activities such as London's dock lands or New York's Tribeca have by master strokes of imagination been re-born as culturally exciting and commercially valued places for people to come and work, live and play. This model, whereby neglected commercial properties are given new life, often by arts based organisations, is so common today it is almost a cliché. However, when I once tried to enlighten one well fed member of the New Labour gravy train he bridled badly at the suggestion that his career in re-developing run down chunks of northern real estate with public money owed anything to 'perverts'.

What Mr 'Never Missed a Meal' failed to see was the essential creative background to city re-generation. His fat head was well stuck in the concept artists' aerial impressions of sweeping new zones spreading out across 'derelict' land which he paraded before the eyes of the credulous. The idea that there might be something there worth hanging on to – a history of place for example – was not on the agenda. Big vision means big profits, jobs on the boards of successful bidders and finally, retirement to the Caribbean where the sun always shines ...

Cities interest me. The great ones continually re-invent themselves, sometimes, as in Europe after 1945, by necessity, other times by the creative spur of a few less prejudiced minds. A good example of this is the Ouseburn, where already by the twenty first century some exciting initiatives had made an impact. Taken together with outlying areas there is here still a set of wonderful opportunities and challenges. In coming weeks I hope to celebrate this vision, one which depends on people, on a sense of place, of imaginative solutions to work, living and transport, one which enhances the environment rather than rolls everything up in corporatist ambitions.

First, some portraits of the place. These link together parts of Battlefield, Ouseburn and Shieldfield. 



Looking east at Portland Road. Battlefield Open Space lies beyond the trees at the bottom of the lane. This area is rich in development opportunities. Just to the right a set of offices, Maling Square, has given the area a new dimension.




Shieldfield Tower peeks over the Portland Road Halls of Residence. Just to the right, behind the shrubs is the southern extent of the old Berger Paint factory site, subject to a planning application for eight tower blocks of five hundred plus apartments. This road dips behind the re-developed building to the left. Part has opened as an Italian restaurant. Further down artists' and craftspeople studio spaces have been created. Other nearby businesses have had a face lift of repainted facades. The road leads beneath the East Coast Mainline railway a few yards away to Stepney Bank and onwards down to the Lower Ouseburn.




The railway bridges which are such a prominent feature of the Lower Ouseburn. The East Coast Mainline is on the left; the right hand tracks are those of the Tyne and Wear Metro light railway. A station was once proposed for this site and may yet be constructed. If so it would provide a very useful access point to the Ouseburn Valley and Shieldfield.




The area is rich in building land opportunities particularly for mixed use. Here the space on the left adjoins the new Maling Square office development. The building at the top of the photograph may well be re-developed as is or new build. Close by are a Chinese church and community centre and the locally well known Biscuit Factory commercial art gallery. There is also a large hall of residence here. This is a potential hub of Lower Ouseburn which together with a Metro stop could become a vibrant place to live and work.




A view of a new building going up just beside Stepney Bank. Many of the buildings down the steep bank towards the Lower Ouseburn are of some historic interest and reach back into the area's industrial past. Here there are stables and an artist's print workshop, Northern Print. Stepney Bank connects by an arch beneath the railway to Shieldfield. There is also access to Battlefield Open Space.


Coming soon: More images of the Ouseburn–Battlefield area and further thoughts on what makes the area such a special mixture of present experience and possibility for the future.


Ah! There goes Summer ...

The torrential rain has kept most of us off the streets and I am no exception. Here is one I made earlier, taken almost exactly a year ago it is proof the sun does sometimes put in an appearance.





Saturday, August 16, 2008

Summer? II

Some further images of Battlefield in Summer(?) ...



First, some Common Adenostyles, obviously a garden escape.


Next a lovely Grey Poplar, Populus x canescens



A view of the combined cycle way and footpath. It wends through the overhanging trees which I can remember as 'stick' plantings back in the mid 1970s.




The old paint factory site subject now of a planning application. At least the plants and birds have it to themselves for the moment.



Cyclone fencing around the site, 'gravel' invaded by plants.


It seems less and less likely that the scheme to erect eight tower blocks for 500 plus dwellings will go ahead due to the "credit crunch" and the economic outlook impinging on developers profit margins.


This is the quiet time for Battlefield, despite the summer holidays and the schools being closed. When students return in mid to late September the cycle path will be busy with pedestrians and cyclists hurrying between the Universities of Newcastle and Northumbria and the student digs spread across the suburb of Heaton.


A post on my thoughts on the architecture and possibilities for future sympathetic development of the Battlefield area and neighbouring Lower Ouseburn will appear shortly. 



Thursday, August 7, 2008

Summer?

Some photographs of Battlefield taken recently.




Rain seems to suit the trees which are groaning under growths of foliage.



Progress on the new Ouseburn Community Centre has been swift.




Rain over Battlefield. The sun breaks through now and then so it has been an up and down summer here.

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

But will it ever happen?

Potential?


This photograph was taken earlier in 2008.
The site remains untouched by shovel or pick in August.


Realistic prospect or speculative investment?

The signs have been up for some while. Ambitious plans to build "environmental offices" over part of a former car showroom adjacent to the Battlefield alias City Stadium open space do not seem to be progressing at time of this posting.

Each day there is more gloom from the property front. Costs too are rising. Against this background of financial uncertainty the decisions investors make (or have made) will need revision.

While some would say it is already over supplied with empty offices, some brand new, others old, redundant and in need of modernisation, Newcastle needs still more office space apparently.

But will it ever happen?