Robin Hood Gardens: Concrete Bungle?

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  • Опубликовано: 21 янв 2021
  • Depending who you ask, Robin Hood Gardens is either a bold and exciting expression of modernism or a concrete carbuncle. I though I’d take a look before it disappears.
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Комментарии • 3,3 тыс.

  • @d4v3tm
    @d4v3tm 3 года назад +1763

    if depression would be a building this is exactly how it would look like

    • @kamma44
      @kamma44 3 года назад +82

      London is full of depressing looking buildings like this.

    • @EthanJonesEthanJones
      @EthanJonesEthanJones 3 года назад +72

      I feel depressed just looking at it lol. Reminds me of the buildings in Communist Russia

    • @guidedmeditation2396
      @guidedmeditation2396 3 года назад +17

      The problem is with the people. The building is fine.

    • @guidedmeditation2396
      @guidedmeditation2396 3 года назад +18

      But yes it does look depressing doesn't it. A little power washing and color accents would dress it up in a week.

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 3 года назад +23

      @@guidedmeditation2396 Yes, some colorful insulated cladding, that's the ticket. Or NOT. How many died at Greenfell?

  • @gui18bif
    @gui18bif 3 года назад +1117

    Architects: "we love it!"
    "Then go live there and save it"
    Architects: "naah we'll pass"

    • @John_Wood_
      @John_Wood_ 3 года назад +21

      Architects tend to choose the period properties and mod up the interior a little!

    • @TARAKATACKY
      @TARAKATACKY 3 года назад +88

      I'm an architect. I remember reading about it in architectural books back in college (no internet then) and admiring it (in drawings that's it). Later I moved to London (early 2000s) and every time I passed by in the DLR I was thinking that must be the ugliest building I have seen in my life (and there are few competitors around). I only realized it was the building in the books like a year later. I finally went to visit inside the gardens, the place was just dreadful (and other things), I left in 5 mins. I would still save it though, but as a reminder to future architects to take people's life seriously and not just draw pretty diagrams for themselves. And as a perfect dystopian movie setting...

    • @simonkane
      @simonkane 3 года назад +16

      @@TARAKATACKY Isn't the problem lack of maintenance? I'm pretty sure lives were being taken seriously. Crime and poverty isn't caused by architecture.

    • @simonkane
      @simonkane 3 года назад +1

      @@TARAKATACKY I'm curiousm, as an architect, what you would have designed?

    • @hackdaniels7253
      @hackdaniels7253 3 года назад +36

      @@simonkane "Crime and poverty isn't caused by architecture." This is true, but a decent environment doesn't hurt.

  • @AndreiTupolev
    @AndreiTupolev 3 года назад +192

    I love the way the creators of these hell zones call them "Gardens". "Well, there's a scraggy piece of grass covered in dog sh*t and a tree that was alive a few years ago."

    • @FlashyVic
      @FlashyVic 3 года назад +28

      There's a semi serious rule of thumb about council housing that the more rural and idyllic sounding the name the bigger a crime ridden shithole it is. So beware some estate called Willow tree Meadows or Fluffydown Green.

    • @szabados1980
      @szabados1980 2 года назад +3

      Yes, many English places have ridiculous names. The cities are full of quarters called "hill" but there's absolutely no bump to stick out. Or this shithole being called a garden.

    • @thedman1696
      @thedman1696 2 года назад +3

      And always devoid of people because only the four/five most dangerous people who live in the building are "allowed" to use it

    • @lemsip207
      @lemsip207 2 года назад +1

      @@thedman1696 Because they are there 24/7 in the summer. You have to wait for the cold or wet weather to be able to use it or when it's too hot to be outside so then have to brave extreme weather that the chavs can't bear.

    • @paxundpeace9970
      @paxundpeace9970 2 года назад +1

      Don't be cruel i counted 6 trees on a one and a quarter acre

  • @lisaduller
    @lisaduller 3 года назад +85

    My friend had a flat here 18 years ago, I stayed there with her on occasion and essentially inside it was a nice flat and really quite large, the layout was strange, the kitchen/diner was the only room downstairs with the stairs running immediately beside the door. The stairs led to the centre of the upper floor with 2 bedrooms and a small bathroom to the left and the living room to the right. There was a small balcony running along the bedroom side but it couldn't be used as it was absolutely caked in pigeon poop despite the netting. The estate itself was an absolute dive, but that had more to do with the residents and their offspring than the area or buildings. Home is what you make it

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 года назад +12

      One key factor is that how a place looks is the most important part of whether they take care of it or not. Pride is a significant motivator. It sounds like the layout is well designed for efficient living, which is nice, but when the building looks like shit, people will treat it like shit.
      Certainly the residents housed there are less likely to treat it well - it is still 'rented' and housing antisocial people. But you can't blame the residents, this was literally built to specifically house them. If the better layout alone helped it would make perfect sense to put problem tenants there.
      One key part is the "community" space is perhaps much more of a negative in an antisocial community and more likely to bring conflict. In streets, you have multiple options for which way you can go and can avoid streets you don't like. Instead this was developed on the soviet mentality that people are a product of their conditions alone and a utopia will spring up in the right setting.

    • @goldboy150
      @goldboy150 8 месяцев назад +1

      ⁠@@carbon1255 interesting. I’ll preface this with acknowledging that I know nothing about architecture, town planning etc.
      What is the solution to the need for social housing coupled with the need to reduce urban sprawl?
      I don’t disagree about the inherent issue with high density housing but it seems like it is unavoidable in the long run.
      So is there any way of producing high density urban social housing where one doesn’t immediately fall into the trap you outlined?

  • @paulkennedy8701
    @paulkennedy8701 3 года назад +287

    5:23 Various prominent architects: It's a horrible place to live there, but somebody has to because it's "hugely significant".
    Maybe it can be a place for "prominent architects" to live.

    • @D_B_Cooper
      @D_B_Cooper 3 года назад +4

      Exactly.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 3 года назад +15

      I like this idea, turn at least one of these monstrosities in each country into an architectural reservation, and if the architects do not live there, they are not allowed to design in that style. But architectural societies have enormous power.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 3 года назад +2

      It would be interesting to see what they looked like if that was the case.

    • @dangerousandy
      @dangerousandy 3 года назад +1

      All those politicians needing* second homes...

    • @neilthehermit4655
      @neilthehermit4655 3 года назад +3

      Shush - don't mention the Barbican ! lol.

  • @shrikelet
    @shrikelet 3 года назад +295

    9:58 "Hmmm, this housing estate is rather unattractive. Perhaps it would be better if we parked our giant robot caterpillar on it?"

    • @edmundironside9435
      @edmundironside9435 3 года назад +10

      That guy couldn't have been serious, I mean, look at the lightning in the background!

    • @Nooziterp1
      @Nooziterp1 3 года назад +11

      Like putting a bow on a turd.

    • @Handhandme
      @Handhandme 3 года назад +3

      @@edmundironside9435 It's the beginning of the apocalypse and giant robot caterpillars are attacking the buildings

    • @ZeroKiriyuuIchiru
      @ZeroKiriyuuIchiru 3 года назад

      Lowkey reminds me of the OCAD building in Toronto.

    • @Jojo-uc9or
      @Jojo-uc9or 3 года назад

      @@Nooziterp1 A more pretty turd on a turd.

  • @Chaos------
    @Chaos------ 3 года назад +232

    Imagine working a gruelling 8 hours shift to come home to this beauty.

    • @booth2710
      @booth2710 2 года назад +24

      Id stay at work

    • @creeper8647
      @creeper8647 2 года назад +15

      It would have made a decent prison, from the looks of it.

    • @coyotelong4349
      @coyotelong4349 2 года назад +18

      It has a face only an architect’s mother could love

    • @johnwelch3896
      @johnwelch3896 2 года назад +3

      I lived there and it was epic

    • @heliumtrophy
      @heliumtrophy 2 года назад

      Good place to hang if you catch my drift ;)

  • @varkonyitibor4409
    @varkonyitibor4409 3 года назад +139

    "Modern tower blocks encourage antisocial behavior"
    "Yes we are going to fix that!"
    "But how?"
    "Here is this new style called brutalism, hated by the public, ugly as hell and looks depressing"

    • @dagwould
      @dagwould 2 года назад

      Buildings can't 'fix' behaviour.

    • @myra0224
      @myra0224 2 года назад +23

      @@dagwould It actually can. The more nooks and crannies you create, the more space there is for antisocial behavior.
      Also, if you move into this beautiful apartment that's clearly being taken care of, people have a higher chance of taking care of it too. But if it's already trashed and old, they don't bother.
      The environment DOES affect behavior, I hope you'll do some research on that (it's a big topic in Social Work actually)

    • @infinitesimotel
      @infinitesimotel 2 года назад +3

      @@dagwould Surroundings do affect people, very much. The more artificial everything becomes the more insane people become, that's why there is so much crime in cities than natural environments.

    • @julianevans9548
      @julianevans9548 Год назад +1

      4.55 - 'New Penthouse Prices from only £740,000'. Yes, with a view of all this hideousness.
      Ah, sweet capitalism.

    • @infinitesimotel
      @infinitesimotel Год назад +1

      @@myra0224 Environment affects behaviour 100%. The more natural and organic the better the energy and the social ethos.

  • @comicus01
    @comicus01 3 года назад +473

    Ugly is an understatement. Nice to see that you filmed it on an overcast and rainy day, it provides the perfect ambience!

    • @sandydancer187
      @sandydancer187 3 года назад +32

      Not hard to do in England.

    • @comicus01
      @comicus01 3 года назад +15

      @@sandydancer187 I've been to London twice. So much oppressive sunshine both times! I was disappointed.

    • @Omni_Shambles
      @Omni_Shambles 3 года назад +3

      @@comicus01 London is basically France when it comes to the weather. . . Come up to Scotland next time, you won't be disappointed. ; )

    • @cuckingfunt9353
      @cuckingfunt9353 3 года назад +4

      @@sandydancer187 On a perfect blue sky day in summer, that building gave you a shiver down your spine... It was grayer than a rainy day in Siberia.

    • @CuoreSportivo
      @CuoreSportivo 3 года назад +1

      what are the chances to catch any other day in UK?

  • @ShedTV
    @ShedTV 3 года назад +417

    This looks to me like the kind of estate where local councils, with government funding increasingly reduced, made the mistake of not doing any maintenance until it was absolutely necessary. This short-sighted approach meant that in many cases much more money was needed in the long run and building began to look very shabby quite quickly. As a resident it would be difficult to take pride in a building that no-one else is looking after, and inevitably those who could move away would. These factors create a downward spiral of decay where the only exit strategy for the council is to sell it off to a developer.

    • @jamesneedham6265
      @jamesneedham6265 3 года назад +62

      No in London its no accident, its a deliberate policy of social cleansing. Look at every estate of this era and they are either 'restored' into flats for the rich or demolished so that flats for the rich can be built.

    • @smorris12
      @smorris12 3 года назад +11

      ​@@jamesneedham6265 Post hoc, ergo propter hoc - you're making a logical fallacy and seeing conspiracy. It's not a policy, it's simply what to do with tower blocks that you can't house the lower social strata in without it becoming a nightmare of social problems and lawlessness. After all, they do have to house them somewhere else, it's not like they bus them off to the gas chambers.

    • @jamesneedham6265
      @jamesneedham6265 3 года назад +24

      @@smorris12 No its far worse they bus them off to Stoke on Trent. But seriously read the work of anna minton, big capital especially. These redeveloped estates never build as many units of social housing as was there before and while that could be a sensible policy of creating a more mixed community, it isn't because the majority of residents kicked out of their homes do not find places in the same boroughs.
      Also its worth pointing out in many cases the residents kicked out are not council tenants but have bought their home as part of right to buy and are forced out by compulsory purchase with offers way below market value.

    • @jakew7982
      @jakew7982 3 года назад +4

      @@jamesneedham6265 Yes, and right to buy is offered far, far, below market value? Why should they be offered a house at a lose to the taxpayer, only to be reimbursed full price, at an even great loss to the taxpayer? What housing was there before WW2, and what was the social, ethnic, and cultural make-up of these areas? You said they can’t resettle in the same borough, and yet less than half a century ago the residents were replaced wholesale anyway. There is no tradition or ‘right’ for anyone to claim they’re from that borough when their family has only been rooted there for less than 3 generations.

    • @smorris12
      @smorris12 3 года назад +9

      ​@@jamesneedham6265 Give me Stoke over the smoke any day!
      By definition they can't build as many units as they need to reduce the housing density to reduce the problems of hi-rise. Local government housing (of which I have friends who work in the industry) does its best to create housing within a framework of land-owners, current government policy, the demands of the residents based on need (disability etc), NIMBYism etc etc. and tries to steer a path through it all that houses people. There's a lot more accountability and oversite to avoid corruption now than in days gone by so mostly it's trying to get things done.
      Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity!

  • @bartbliek469
    @bartbliek469 3 года назад +67

    I don't know whats worse, the fact that its been left to rot all this time, or the fact that the redevelopment looks just as depressing, just with reduced ambition

    • @finnersmcspeed5646
      @finnersmcspeed5646 3 года назад +2

      I find it all very upsetting

    • @carlosjones8712
      @carlosjones8712 3 года назад +2

      The redevelopment looks a lot better

    • @arthurfine4284
      @arthurfine4284 2 года назад +7

      I'd give it another 70 year or so and we'll have a new generation of people calling out these new developments.
      The skewed windows annoy me to no end...

  • @TheIamtheoneandonly1
    @TheIamtheoneandonly1 3 года назад +70

    “Architecture is a very
    dangerous job. If a writer
    makes a bad book, eh,
    people don’t read it. But if
    you make bad architecture,
    you impose ugliness on a
    place for a hundred years.” - Renzo Piano

    • @goncalodias6402
      @goncalodias6402 3 года назад +3

      comming from they guy responsible for the center pompidou in Paris, the building that looks like is permanently in construction. and the shard in London. I'm not shure, but it looks like he is guilty of the thing he is criticizing

    • @MajorCaliber
      @MajorCaliber 2 года назад +4

      @@goncalodias6402 I think you're condemning Richard Rogers, who just died this weekend, not Renzo Piano from Italy.

    • @goncalodias6402
      @goncalodias6402 2 года назад

      @@MajorCaliber they designed the centre pompidou together

    • @williamorchard16
      @williamorchard16 2 года назад +2

      The difference being, if a writer doesn't sell any books, he/she goes hungry, while the architect has already banked his fat cheque on construction completion

    • @Wilhem275
      @Wilhem275 Год назад +1

      “The physician can bury his mistakes, but the architect can only advise his client to plant vines.”

  • @nicktrains2234
    @nicktrains2234 3 года назад +370

    I feel concrete just isn't a good building material for Northern Europe with its high rainfall. It doesn't look half bad in arid Spain or the sunnier parts of Greece, but in the UK the rain stains it making it hideous

    • @davidsheriff8989
      @davidsheriff8989 3 года назад +8

      South America - it is concrete jungle...

    • @stevenflebbe
      @stevenflebbe 3 года назад +40

      I believe it can be a good material if finished properly...as in the Barbican Estates for example.

    • @Michael75579
      @Michael75579 3 года назад +59

      @@stevenflebbe The Barbican, while horrifically ugly, has benefited from money being spent on maintaining it. Without this money it would be just another graffiti-covered, piss-stained concrete hellhole, like so many of the brutalist-descended buildings around the country. The idea that any of them are worthy of preservation just boggles the mind. As Jago said, most of the pressure to list Robin Hood Gardens came from architects and, looking at some of the garbage that wins, for example, the Stirling Prize, we can see how little regard we should pay to their views.

    • @chriszanf
      @chriszanf 3 года назад +27

      "
      I feel concrete just isn't a good building material for Northern Europe"
      Probably why they wrap it in brightly coloured flammable cladding!

    • @donaldboughton8686
      @donaldboughton8686 3 года назад +13

      Rust stains due to iron in the rock from which the gravel was derived. Used in the making of the concrete from which the building was constructed.

  • @CyclingSteve
    @CyclingSteve 3 года назад +220

    The problem it was trying to solve was ignored. They built it in Hell.
    It's sandwiched between 5 lanes of traffic to the East, 4 lanes of traffic to the West, 8 to the North and another 4 to the South.

    • @garrywallace1007
      @garrywallace1007 3 года назад +19

      What do they say- location, location, location!

    • @superman_69703
      @superman_69703 3 года назад +26

      And now they are advertising a 750k penthouse in a location like that.

    • @valvlog4665
      @valvlog4665 3 года назад +27

      An estate agent would paraphrase your observation as: "conveniently situated for efficient road connections."

    • @cn206
      @cn206 3 года назад +16

      I went round Robin Hood Gardens about 20 years ago. The flats are a good size and the landscaping was very attractive - but the location is atrocious. Still, I think the idea put forward in this film, of doing them up as student accommodation, would have been a good one. I don't think the new buildings there will be anything like as spacious or attractive.

    • @tincoffin
      @tincoffin 3 года назад

      What you say is true of every development in a town or city . They all have to fit in the space available.

  • @YoloMenace001
    @YoloMenace001 3 года назад +32

    'What do you think of when hearing Robin Hood?'
    Me and like hundreds of thousands of people: 'Nottingham'
    Londoners: 'Shitty block of flats'

    • @CommisarHood
      @CommisarHood 2 года назад +4

      Yeah as someone who lives in Nottinghamshire I'm actually a little offended that our local legend has been tied to this shithole.

    • @flashtrash7830
      @flashtrash7830 2 года назад

      Good news for Londoners. Robin Hood is also a named eastern entrance for Richmond Park. Nice leafy area and lovely gardens and lush greenery expand out with deer happily roaming as if out on a nature reservation. So Londoners can envisage that picture when hearing "Robin Hood" to banish the terrible nightmare , dystopian vision that the Smithson's gave of our future.

  • @roryocallaghan833
    @roryocallaghan833 3 года назад +23

    I wanted it to work. To enjoy those ‘cranked’, ‘articulated’ streets in the air. So I went and had a look. Got inside, wandered along the windswept, weather-facing corridors, nipped up and down the narrow, concrete stairwells. Heard a bang, echoing, somewhere not far enough away. Never felt so claustrophobic, or scared, in my life. When I got back to land, I breathed again.

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 года назад +2

      Almost a haiku. Yes, they are awful- I think to some peoples eyes they look good on a drawing board, and i'm sure the layout is efficient, but...

  • @Horus4302
    @Horus4302 3 года назад +413

    As a German I find it amusing how people imagine European cities as these Medieval fairy tale towns, while cities mostly look like this.

    • @thewhatwhat12333
      @thewhatwhat12333 3 года назад +6

      this

    • @buckystarfinger2487
      @buckystarfinger2487 3 года назад +20

      yep dont matter if im in washington or arizona it all looks ugly from the freeway

    • @rixille
      @rixille 3 года назад +2

      Disappointing for sure how at least the major ones are like this.

    • @manuelfigueiredo9401
      @manuelfigueiredo9401 3 года назад +35

      As someone living I cologne I’m not surprised. But visit Lisbon, Turin, nice, Granada, Amsterdam, Rome, Venice, Seville, Porto . The list goes on. Please don’t extrapolate to the rest of Europe how ugly German cities are

    • @formxshape
      @formxshape 3 года назад +23

      @@manuelfigueiredo9401 have you been outside of the tourist areas of Lisbon and Porto!? haha... awful. Countryside is ok.

  • @userofthetube2701
    @userofthetube2701 3 года назад +45

    I find brutalism absolutely fascinating for its boldness and ambition and at the same time totally horrifying. The concepts often look great on paper but they almost always fail to produce a pleasant place to be.

    • @bipbipletucha
      @bipbipletucha 3 года назад +2

      Likewise

    • @DLWELD
      @DLWELD 3 года назад +5

      Unfinished exterior concrete will always make a building look like a dump. Worse when it rains, even worse after a few years of rain - the black mold takes over. A highly depressing place to live. The paper and cardboard architects models never show weathering effects - should.

  • @DLWELD
    @DLWELD 3 года назад +50

    LOL "My play was a great success! But the audience was a failure."

  • @MajorCaliber
    @MajorCaliber 3 года назад +78

    Aesthetically, it could be dressed up with a pressure-washing of the concrete, and some really sharp, well-designed window frames. I mean large 2-storey maisonettes--with *private garages*--just blocks from Canary Wharf? AYFKM? Of course you don't want to move the poor and the unemployed in there.

    • @lena-sophiewagner2280
      @lena-sophiewagner2280 3 года назад +11

      That’s what I thought. Maybe if someone would just paint it white....

    • @HwoarangtheBoomerang
      @HwoarangtheBoomerang 3 года назад +8

      Don't try go save that monstrosity. Brutalism is the worst thing since modern art and communist housing. It wears on the human spirit.

    • @lena-sophiewagner2280
      @lena-sophiewagner2280 3 года назад +3

      @@HwoarangtheBoomerang but surely there must be something that can be possibly done with all those blocks

    • @alerojas2952
      @alerojas2952 3 года назад +7

      @@HwoarangtheBoomerang Communist housing worked in Chile but ignorant Europeans just know about their own experience. What can be expected of rough and uncouth commoners such as yourself.

    • @bluemountain4181
      @bluemountain4181 3 года назад +2

      @@lena-sophiewagner2280 Exactly, I think a good part of the reason why it looks so depressing is because it's just so grey and dull. If it was painted in bright colours and maybe had some art or interesting sculptures on it then it would look a lot better (though still not great, there's only so much you can do to disguise the fact that it's a concrete block)

  • @aaa-ow3xv
    @aaa-ow3xv 3 года назад +121

    "Only £740,000", This made me chuckle.

    • @englishciderlover7347
      @englishciderlover7347 3 года назад +13

      That's 'cheap' compared to some parts of London, which just goes to show how crazy London is.

    • @ingvarhallstrom2306
      @ingvarhallstrom2306 3 года назад +6

      I take it as a personal insult.

    • @barneypaws4883
      @barneypaws4883 3 года назад +2

      It made me angry

    • @mstevens113
      @mstevens113 3 года назад +4

      Just sums up everything wrong with the country. Nobody, absolutely nobody, gives a toss about the 99% of the country as they can screw more money from the 1% who have enough money they don't care that they are being screwed.

    • @Alex-cw3rz
      @Alex-cw3rz 3 года назад +12

      @@mstevens113 wait what, your comment is totally arse backwards. Wages have been stagnant for normal people for decades, not matching inflation and not even close to matching productivity. While the 1% specifically the 0.1% skim that off everyone else. Billionaires hoards Rose by 27% during the pandemic. While doctors and nurses have got 0% pay rise. But have been promised as much as 1% pay rise! Maybe in the future, lucky them...

  • @Endominius
    @Endominius 3 года назад +97

    I had a girlfriend who lived there in the late 80s. From the outside it was ghastly but the flats were not bad. Kitchen and living room upstairs and bedroom downstairs. Having spent a lot of time there I would be on the side of demolition. Ugly spaces make for ugly outcomes socially, that been said the whole area was ugly in the late 80s and Robin Hood Gardens sort of fit in.

  • @temptemp633
    @temptemp633 3 года назад +20

    Flats with soundproofing as a primary design concept. Still too much to ask for.

  • @acleray
    @acleray 2 года назад +36

    I lived on a council housing estate for the first 18 years of life. My parents were one of the first occupants of Kendal House, Priory Green in Islington, Formally Finsbury at the time. The house, and it's sister Redington House, were designed by the same man who designed the Penguin Enclosure at London Zoo, Bernhard Lubetkin, (apologies if I got the name spelt wrong). It was a wonderful estate, friendly welcoming in my opinion well designed. All the tenants came from the same areas and probably knew each other, they would greet each other when in the street and pass pleasantries. I went back a couple of years ago, (I'm now 68), and the place was a mess, wire security fencing and buzzer entry to flats, graffiti all over the place but more significantly, no children playing in the playground. A sad reflection on today's standards.

    • @infinitesimotel
      @infinitesimotel 2 года назад +4

      The problem root the area fell into was "diversity", it does that to once nice places.

    • @stretchchris1
      @stretchchris1 Год назад

      @@infinitesimotel wow. some open and blatant racism there.

    • @infinitesimotel
      @infinitesimotel Год назад

      ​@@stretchchris1 Socially engineered robotic nonsense comment from you.

  • @MarkMcCluney
    @MarkMcCluney 3 года назад +103

    Imagine this place being where you come home to after a lousy day at work. Architects - I'm talking to you.

    • @saeedhossain6099
      @saeedhossain6099 3 года назад +4

      there's a building set in New York, Silver Towers, that looks very similar, the major difference is that Silver Towers is housing for professors and well off staff of New York University. the expectation that architecture will solve economic issues of un or under employment, poverty wages is misguided...

    • @jamesneedham6265
      @jamesneedham6265 3 года назад +1

      Many of the residents liked it, indeed the flats themselves where fantastic. With Robin Hood gardens the problems design wise are the decks where too narrow and the stairs claustrophobic.
      Also another big flaw, arguably the biggest, was the fact anyone could access the decks which was solved with the simple addition of a security door.
      Another problem was the parkland as parks are in reality, dangerous indeed any are of nature is at night if its not policed and maintained.
      One of the oftern ignored aspects of the research by Jane Jacobs is how anti parks she was a most violent crimes happen within urban parkland and so by siting a building in parkland you create a building that's dangerous to access at night.

    • @buster782
      @buster782 3 года назад +1

      @@jamesneedham6265 I lived in RHG for 3 years and agree about the flats themselves - when you finally reached you flat it was quite reasonable inside. The buildings themselves were, of course, hideous and did nothing to encourage any sort of community spirit.
      I don't think I ever went down to the park space between the blocks during the whole of the time I lived there. The entrances to the blocks were on the other sides of the buildings so there was no danger in accessing at night.
      When I was living there the estate was owned and maintained by the Greater London Council which was much more capable, and probably more willing, to maintain it than Tower Hamlets Council which took it over. That takeover must have signalled the end of a very poorly designed experiment.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 3 года назад

      Its nigh impossible to get to or from these blocks, I dont think the replacements will be much better. Its a place I find difficult to get an opinion on, some idea that maybe residents should have had a contribution to what they would like the place to look like, but it was designed really at a time when no-one had noticed that the entire east end (bar a few folk) were off to Stevenage and Basildon. Space but access back to the city.

    • @andrewbrendan1579
      @andrewbrendan1579 3 года назад +2

      Great comment, Mark. The sight of Robin Hood Gardens doesn't nothing for the human spirit. No beauty, no comfort, no sense of rest and respite.

  • @Captain_Aardvark
    @Captain_Aardvark 3 года назад +163

    Maybe if architects were forced by law to live in their creations for at least a year after completion, they might design them a little more sympathetically.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 3 года назад +22

      Ten years, minimum.

    • @denisdrozdoff2926
      @denisdrozdoff2926 3 года назад +9

      Or if we wouldn't dump lack of maintenance and social work on their heads.

    • @tiny_gabi_
      @tiny_gabi_ 3 года назад +5

      Lubetkin lived in High Point I I believe? A relatively successful tower development, albeit only available to richer tenants in reality.

    • @57thorns
      @57thorns 3 года назад +12

      @@tiny_gabi_ Consider the high rises in NY next to Central Park, sometimes it is all about the location. But in the end: If there are people prepared to pay to live somewhere, it will be a decent place to live. If not, it will be a dump. Doesn't really matter if it is a highrise, a villa suburb or a cottage in the woods.

    • @jamesneedham6265
      @jamesneedham6265 3 года назад

      Most architects would jump at the chance, it better than the small semi in croydon most can afford!

  • @jdshaman6448
    @jdshaman6448 3 года назад +13

    I once slagged this building off. Some one, actually called Delboy, in the car said that they grew up there, it was lovely inside and built for the comfort of the residents. I learned to be more humble that day, not to make a judgement based on personal ignorance. It was a good life lesson. Do not judge a book by its cover. I later did a Rolling Stones tour with Delboy. Fantastic guy.

    • @flashtrash7830
      @flashtrash7830 2 года назад +1

      That's silly. If it looks awful, slag it off. We all have to pass such eyesores.If someone gives a personal insight of living there, that makes your knowledge of it richer but it doesn't mean pipe down and keep quiet about what caused you to slag it off in the first place: exterior ugliness - that bloke didn't live on the outside of it, and probably he might have agreed with you, exterior wise.

    • @vinceturner3863
      @vinceturner3863 Год назад

      I think a lot of people didn't like. living there, that wasn't all based on the 'book's cover'.

    • @vinceturner3863
      @vinceturner3863 Год назад

      @@flashtrash7830 That's right. I remember coming 'home' to my awful council block. Not a very welcome sight and didn't help make me feel comfortable or that I belonged. In other words the looks of the building I lived in alienated me. Sure, if you've all got loads of money, you could live in the Barbican, in spite of it being a concrete monstrosity.

  • @neddles33
    @neddles33 3 года назад +22

    As someone who has spent my 9-5 working in a brutalist building and found it extraordinarily depressing I cannot fathom how awful it must be to live in it as well

  • @tomhar9860
    @tomhar9860 3 года назад +148

    I studied this estate quite extensively during my Masters thesis. I went into it thinking “what an injustice to knock down an iconic piece of architecture” and came out agreeing with Historic England - it failed as an estate and was only championed by architects who didn’t live there.
    The element which Jago doesn’t touch on so much is that it’s actually comparatively low density and next to high value Canary Wharf and the DLR route right into Bank, and this is why they were so keen to redevelop.
    Whether the new housing will be better than the old is debatable, it’s less interesting for sure. The usual gentrification debate goes on; the new residents will not be the same group of people who used to live in RHG. The site is too valuable for that...

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 3 года назад +7

      If it is renovated for private sale, the flat owners need to jointly own the *land,* not pay ground rent, and leases, to keep economic parasites.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  3 года назад +19

      Interesting point, and you’re right, that is a notable omission.

    • @royfearn4345
      @royfearn4345 3 года назад +11

      What a hideous design

    • @johnburns4017
      @johnburns4017 3 года назад +3

      @@royfearn4345
      If it had weather proof exterior cladding with coloured wall sections, it would look very good.

    • @hannecatton2179
      @hannecatton2179 3 года назад +7

      The architects didn´t live there ! I am shocked .

  • @General_Confusion
    @General_Confusion 3 года назад +79

    Maybe it would have looked better if they had built it underground and just grassed over the top. The construction does look like it would make a good fallout bunker.

  • @daniel-bc5sp
    @daniel-bc5sp 3 года назад +18

    I never thought the site of a building could send me into spiraling depression.

  • @MajorCaliber
    @MajorCaliber 2 года назад +4

    Kudos to Jago for recording in typical dreary overcast London weather, instead of waiting for the tourist-brochure sunny day.

  • @blueskiesabove3950
    @blueskiesabove3950 3 года назад +95

    Keep ‘em coming Jago. Your content is like manna from heaven in these uncertain times.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  3 года назад +20

      Thanks! There’s plenty more on the way!

  • @christopherlawley1842
    @christopherlawley1842 3 года назад +951

    Ah, yes. Tower blocks. Flawed on so many levels

    • @thhseeking
      @thhseeking 3 года назад +27

      My brain imploded on that one :P

    • @ajs41
      @ajs41 3 года назад +36

      Tower blocks were an improvement for the first few years that people lived in them according to the residents themselves because I've read lots of accounts of it, but they deteriorated pretty quickly after that because concrete ages really badly.

    • @stevecriddle3299
      @stevecriddle3299 3 года назад +38

      Not to mention "floored".

    • @hughdanaher2758
      @hughdanaher2758 3 года назад +23

      yes, many stories to tell, but few with happy endings.

    • @michaireneuszjakubowski5289
      @michaireneuszjakubowski5289 3 года назад +26

      @@ajs41 "concrete ages really badly"
      Roman hydraulic concrete seems to hold up pretty well after some two millennia.

  • @arkadiusztrzesniewski4237
    @arkadiusztrzesniewski4237 3 года назад +47

    Lots of lots of brutalism. Pure concrete. Perfect for 1984 Orwell movie adaptation.

  • @hasnathabulable
    @hasnathabulable 3 года назад +7

    I lived there from 1985 to 2015. The estate was allowed to run down and all of us residents have mixed view on what has happened. I'm still in the area but now in one of the new build of Blackwall Reach. One thing I definately agree, the estate wasnt given a fair chance and yes the new estate is dull and bland compared to what we had, especially during late 80s and late 90s

  • @tonyboloni64
    @tonyboloni64 3 года назад +50

    One last aside: architects often forget the building is a backdrop for the inhabitants...not vice versa.

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 года назад

      This isn't fair, they ONLY had the inhabitants in mind- but they thought about people more like cattle & the issues with soviet thought in general, that these oppressive structures cure inequality.

  • @NoJusticeNoPeace
    @NoJusticeNoPeace 3 года назад +57

    I'm pretty sure I've seen this specific building in _several_ zombie apocalypse movies, which tells me it produces just the right level of existential dread and anomie to form a short-hand for cultural breakdown.
    It reminds of me Brasilia, a city designed and built from the ground up by urban planners to turn all of their models and theories into reality in order to produce a perfect city of the future. Today, Brasilia is the closest thing on Earth to a post-apocalyptic hellscape with a homicide rate higher than that of many countries offically at war.

    • @JagoHazzard
      @JagoHazzard  3 года назад +9

      There was a nearby tower block that showed up in 28 Days Later - the Balfron Tower.

    • @NoJusticeNoPeace
      @NoJusticeNoPeace 3 года назад +10

      @@JagoHazzard You know, a sort of overview of London-based filming locations for different films might make for an interesting video. A lot of them show up frequently.

    • @olinewman
      @olinewman 3 года назад +2

      @@NoJusticeNoPeace Greenwich Naval College. Alexandra road estate Camden. Laban building, Deptford. St Pauls church Deptford. Senate House Library.

    • @jibicusmaximus4827
      @jibicusmaximus4827 3 года назад

      Isn't Brasilia empty and cut of by forest, also it was used in the movie aeon flux, best thing in that film lol, I don't think it Is much like this place though.

  • @7ebr830
    @7ebr830 2 года назад +1

    For such a well-spoken wordsmith, I was shocked to hear him say "I personally".

  • @christopherperkins3416
    @christopherperkins3416 Год назад +1

    Many years ago I served an apprenticeship at the docks in Falmouth. One of the older tradesmen had a saying "In theory, practice and theory are the same. In practice they are very, very different.

  • @clickrick
    @clickrick 3 года назад +212

    "Wikipedia says that the eastern block was demolished in 2019, but I have reason to believe they may be mistaken."
    You mean like its still being quite evidently there when you go past it?

    • @John_Wood_
      @John_Wood_ 3 года назад

      Western block

    • @clickrick
      @clickrick 3 года назад +10

      @@John_Wood_ At the time the video was recorded, Wikipedia said that both had been demolished. Jago says the words I quoted. Hence that bit being in quotation marks.

    • @aliabdi8427
      @aliabdi8427 3 года назад +3

      I live there I believe it was 2016 or 2017 when it was demolished

    • @vincepersson1337
      @vincepersson1337 3 года назад +1

      The Wikipedia lads must have wanted it destroyed in a quick fashion that they wrote that line in advance.

  • @borderlands6606
    @borderlands6606 3 года назад +61

    When architects want to moralise rather than build beautiful, you get Robin Hood Gardens. Bright people with low empathy and high ambition who use the rest of us as a social experiment. A good job there are no parallels today, isn't it?

    • @olinewman
      @olinewman 3 года назад +3

      Fantastic turn of phrase.. "..Bright people with low empathy and high ambition ..." However, I'm now unable to read your post without hearing it in Jonathan Meades' voice.

  • @hamiltonellis9724
    @hamiltonellis9724 3 года назад +8

    I was doing some research on some old Brutalism buildings to use as models for the background of a comic I'm working on. Somehow I came across a picture of the Balfron tower and Robin Hood Gardens. I wasn't aware that these buildings were in England...I didn't even know the name of them until I saw this video. I assumed that they were relics of the fall of the Soviet Union.

  • @smoktephoto
    @smoktephoto 2 года назад +2

    I had a field trip there for a geography course back in university. This does bring back good memories from an academic perspective (brutalist architecture, social housing, tower blocks, regeneration, etc.), but probably not so good memories if I put myself in the shoes of the occupants of RHG. Personally, I think it's layer upon layer of problems that cannot be solved at once. Sure, you provide the bare essential of housing, but if its occupants are not harmonious and the surroundings are not managed well, it really is not worth it. I guess that's why the regeneration is taking place; to start afresh. All credit to the planners for trying to realise a vision that works in theory, but making it work in practice is another school of thought altogether.
    Either way, a good throwback to that field trip I went to.

  • @SomeRandomBod
    @SomeRandomBod 3 года назад +391

    It looks to me like they've kicked poor ppl out of an ugly old building, then moved rich ppl into a ugly new building 🤑

    • @PortCharmers
      @PortCharmers 3 года назад +43

      Yeah, take it from the poor and give it to the rich. In the true spirit of its namesake.

    • @mrb.5610
      @mrb.5610 3 года назад +16

      There's a massive redevelopment of Paddington going on - almost finished now.
      And a small 1950s block of council flats was knocked down for a massive trendy block of new apartments.
      And I often wonder if the original inhabitants were offered a place in the nice new building ? - or shipped off to some other estate sone where .... and I bet I know the answer.

    • @GreatSageSunWukong
      @GreatSageSunWukong 3 года назад +30

      @blacknester i doubt it, when Ealing council knocked down my estate, all the disabled people had to leave the borough because they didn't build any disabled properties on the posh replacements, most of the residents were offered relocation to Wolverhampton which went down like a led balloon of course, all the stress put my father in hospital but the council eventually rehoused him in a crumbling 100 year old terrace elsewhere in the borough which has a tonne of problems they never fix.
      The south Acton estate was a collection of 2 to 4 bedroom homes spread across a verity of masonets, bungalows and tower blocks with lifts, everyone had a car parking space and there was garages available to rent.
      The new posh and private estate offered less then 20% of the social housing the original estate had, studio flats only, no parking, and poor doors to the stairs to get up to the social housing on the upper floors, needless to say they didn't get many takers, especially since most of the residents of the estate were families like mine whod been there 40 odd years and the aforementioned disabled people. It was all deliberate I only know one 1 person who took up the offer.
      Also Ealing council wanted to boot everyone out well ahead of time so they could rent their flats out on short leases to students and things for extra money, they (the council) litterally kicked the garden gate in on my parents masonet and refused to fix it, leading to my parents place getting burgled via the french windows that lead to the garden, something that had never happened before.

    • @jonniejam-shovel6405
      @jonniejam-shovel6405 3 года назад +6

      @@GreatSageSunWukong a shocking story, but still relevant today. Many local council politicians have directorships, and work together with construction companies.
      Many people should investigate their respective councils, and look up individual politicians and see what type of gratuities are being handed out. A box at a football match for £500. Splendid meals in Covent Garden for £75 quid. Obviously the current situation has curtailed all that for the moment, but in my view its still an 'unethical practice'. They are obviously NOT attending to our business that we pay them for. They would soon complain and grumble if we 'withheld our council tax'.
      With regards to your family, this action taken against them is 'Social Cleansing'. It's disgusting and bloody shameful to treat people in this way. Horrendous. I send you my kind regards, and hopefully something will be sorted out soon to help vulnerable people.
      PS: please view this website, WhatDoTheyKnow.com
      You can browse and view freedom of information requests to local authorities. There is a goldmine of information on the site, well worth a look. Cheers.👍

    • @GreatSageSunWukong
      @GreatSageSunWukong 3 года назад +8

      @blacknester they use compulsory purchase orders, you don't have a choice. Not that you'd want to buy a council flat anyway, they charge you for building repairs and upkeep of the estate, my aunt bought her council place in North London, she died oweing the local council over 20k for such works she had no say in.

  • @houzbizness303
    @houzbizness303 3 года назад +94

    There's are a few comments about how this project would be much better appreciated and a better habitat if it was cleaned up or better maintained. Brings back memories of my dad who came home a broken man day after day for a period of about 12 months when he was working improving and maintaining similar areas of London. Each and every day he would get to work to have all his previous days work demolished, burnt down, or vandalised. He even received regular abuse and threats while working. My dad was tough but that level of disrespect and abuse was hard for him to handle.

    • @michaeljbrennan3728
      @michaeljbrennan3728 3 года назад +22

      The destruction was due to the attitude of not having any skin in the game by the residents. They do not have to pay fir upkeep so they don’t care if they destroy it. It’s the same way on this side of the pond. I delivered mail to a public housing development that was corporately owned. Those who were on full welfare status would cause ridiculous amounts of damage. They would get behind in their rent to the point of eviction or they would just skip out. One family skipped out on a Saturday night. It took a crew a month to fix all he damage they caused totaling $30,000. What did the residents care, they didn’t have to pay for it.

    • @henrikgiese6316
      @henrikgiese6316 3 года назад +8

      @@michaeljbrennan3728 Very questionable argument. I've seen horribly run-down privately-owned houses, and well-kept government-owned houses with tenants who've cared quite a bit for their homes (live in one myself).
      The points Jago brings up about unemployment, a feeling society doesn't care about you (often linked), and the fact that the government has to put those "problem persons" _somewhere_ seems like the major factors.
      Of course large blocks of (relatively) cheap housing will be the natural place for all those factors to intersect, so they get a bad rep. But if they didn't exist there wouldn't *not* be slums, it's just that the slums would be shanty towns instead. :-(

    • @z00h
      @z00h 3 года назад +5

      @@henrikgiese6316 talking about generalising, the privately owned estates where most of the flats are buy to let and many are rented out to council tenants who don't give a f. That sounds about right.

    • @henrikgiese6316
      @henrikgiese6316 3 года назад +1

      @@z00h Actually, the private houses I was thinking about are various single-family houses. Of course I don't know the owners, but from what I've heard illness, economic disaster, or just plain old age can cause maintenance to be ignored.

    • @Oakleaf700
      @Oakleaf700 3 года назад +1

      @@henrikgiese6316 The problem seems to be ''Problem families'', rather than the housing.
      A ''Problem family'' was put into a 'Middle class area'' by the council as an experiment...and it was a disaster.
      Police there 24/7 and neighbours intimidated.
      Some 'Problem families' think their notoriety is a kind of 'fame' of sorts...Very depressing.

  • @aliabdi8427
    @aliabdi8427 3 года назад +5

    I was born and raised here I would love to give my perspective. I now live in the new flats. I must say I prefer robin hood as with the walking area there was a sense of community with the neighbours. Now not so much which I really miss. Let me know if you would like an I interview with me will be more than happy to answers questions and comments.

  • @paulbrown9150
    @paulbrown9150 2 года назад

    I worked as.a trainee psychiatrist in Tower Hamlets in the 1970s. Specifically, I spent the best part of a year roaming the streets of Poplar and its adjacent conurbations, doing domiciliary visits. By then, most locals had been relocated east in the near-reaches of Essex(also to become urban wastelands). Those who qualified to remain in Poplar most notably included the least adaptable to the concrete jungle. These were the descendants of those who not so very long ago had enjoyed the squalid equivalent in village life, That is, generations of residents inherited new modalities of squalor. Your presentation was excellent because it gave a glimpse of the bungling back story of just one of the failed attempts at East London urban planning. Without having checked I would hazard a guess that no one Councillor, not one architect had ever spent more than an hour on the ground in their target locations, They never experienced the weariness of climbing the steps in endless tower blocks whose lifts had long been abandoned. Not once would they have enjoyed the stench of mostly urine as they might have cruised the stairs and stairwells. Remarkably, here and there in the midst of this disgrace, stood the occasional single house, or terrace of houses. These were in no better state of repair than their hugely ugly concrete confreres. And the people? Nobody ever gave them even a moment’s thought. That’s another story, and this is not the place tp tell it.

  • @LouisOnAir
    @LouisOnAir 3 года назад +3

    There's a 1987 Doctor Who serial about an architect that hates people actually living in his creations. This story makes me think of that.

  • @lunarbeetlejuice9768
    @lunarbeetlejuice9768 3 года назад +256

    I love how a good majority of the failures essentially boiled down to "london councils didnt want to pay for the upkeep and when it fell into disrepair, blame the residents for being antisocial" thats that classic classism at work right there.

    • @acharper6964
      @acharper6964 3 года назад +31

      A new project, or building, or railway are sexy and attractive. Dignitaries get their names on foundation stones. Architects and engineers get written up in puff pieces in industry journals and get industry rewards. And then it has to be maintained. Maintenance is unsexy and boring and maintenance budgets are the first to be trimmed or drawn out in times of budgetary restriction.
      I guess ease of maintenance should be a primary architectural requirement... but it is not easy to appreciate until much later.

    • @anjakellenjeter
      @anjakellenjeter 3 года назад +15

      Honestly, that applies to almost every council in the UK, not just London ones. I lived in a tower block in Birmingham - same problems. Hell, the same applies to most council's tenement buildings too.

    • @properplank6729
      @properplank6729 3 года назад

      Well said

    • @kevinfletcher1999
      @kevinfletcher1999 3 года назад +5

      All estates like this are meant to have a sinking fund, which is a percentage of the rent is invested for long term maintenance. I suspect they are raided for other purposes by the local authorities.

    • @MA-go7ee
      @MA-go7ee 3 года назад +7

      Low cost housing, especially the Government owned variety, is pretty much always run down regardless of country.
      At some point people will have to accept the obvious fact that poor people are more inclined to engage in anti social behaviour.
      Factor in the fact that the houses are Government owned and you have a perfect recipe for the decrepit monstrosities we see all over.
      Blaming the local Govt is sort of besides the point.

  • @emim6446
    @emim6446 2 года назад +4

    I love this! I read a really good article (which obviously now I can't find) about the brutalist school of architecture and how the majority of architects designing these sorts of buildings actually lived in quaint Tudor cottages and lovely semi detached villas. They wanted to design these buildings, but they didn't want to live in them, and I think that's hugely telling. There's also something uncomfortable about the way a tower block squeezes poorer people in one big box, stacking them all up, out of the way.

  • @tomgirldouble3249
    @tomgirldouble3249 3 года назад +9

    I was brought up in a tower block and lived in one for many of my adult years and loved it. However, councils/housing associations tend to neglect them and to fill them with their worst tenants saying that they’re ‘hard to let’. When we first moved in my dad was the caretaker, something else no longer seen, and everyone thought them very modern posh etc. The caretaker kept an eye on things and maintained and cleaned communal areas, every tenant used to keep their bit of corridor clean, as in the old street system. One big flaw though was being unable to let young children play out without supervision in lifts and you lived 10 or 12 floors up you couldn’t keep your eye on them, so families with young children should never have been put in them. The materials they were built with, concrete usually, doesn’t look good for long so they become very shabby looking in no time. These flats look particularly ugly to me though, but the new buildings are still high rise and look no better, so we all go round again...as I said a flat suited me but my children were older, I was older and my dad kept them clean and vandal free but that was in the 1960s. One thing more that is a big problem is they have no gardens, I did miss that.

    • @restoreleader
      @restoreleader 3 года назад

      I would like to ask what does all that talk about council and such means? These were not in private ownership? Maybe that is the problem, buildings where people actually own a flat are mostly well maintained and colorfully painted, even these classic eastern Europe styled districts can be a pleasant places to live

    • @bethenecampbell6463
      @bethenecampbell6463 2 года назад +1

      I always think that there should be more common spaces like soft play spaces for young children and computer lab/homework help spaces for older kids also usable for adults job seeking or doing higher education programs. Residents who serve as playground supervisors/computer helpers get a small stipend that doesn't take away from any benefits they might be receiving. A concierge for each building is a great idea to keep packages safe and to keep track of who's coming and going, especially non residents. Also to put in maintenance requests. It'd be great if council flats were desirable enough that providing a flat as part of compensation was attractive to skilled maintenance professionals. If they live in the building they're taking care of they might do a really excellent job and enlist other residents to keep deliberate vandalism down.

    • @tomgirldouble3249
      @tomgirldouble3249 2 года назад +1

      @@bethenecampbell6463 that was always a problem, I think it’s cruel to put families with babies & toddlers in a high rise, they can’t just go out & play.

    • @bethenecampbell6463
      @bethenecampbell6463 2 года назад +1

      @@tomgirldouble3249 Absolutely it would be ideal if families with young children could have access to a safe play space where kids could just go out in the back garden and parents could watch from the kitchen window. But high density urban spaces need to go vertical. That shouldn't mean that little kids are stuck inside all day, though. I don't know why every other floor couldn't have an open air play space with little slides, climbing frames, ride ons and make believe spots like a play house, grocery store, or ice cream van. And a couple of comfy benches for supervising adults. People who live there need to be willing to watch each other's kids for a few minutes and work together to keep older kids from vandalizing common spaces. How good of an experience people have in any living situation has a lot to do with what they put into making friends and getting involved in the community. There are things that need to be done to help them so they have the time and energy to get involved.

    • @infinitesimotel
      @infinitesimotel 2 года назад +1

      They neglect them because it costs them money, and the councils never suffer any adverse consequences from it no matter how strident the public slaves are.

  • @RemiCardona
    @RemiCardona 3 года назад +35

    French here, we had/have similar sink estates (TIL this phrase) in large cities across the country. And I've come to realize that the issue isn't the architecture itself, cramming poor people in one place *is* the problem. Tenants don't pay for maintenance (since they're tenants), owners (public or private) have zero short term incentive to pay for any maintenance, so those places collapse (litterally) as unemployment and crime rise, whether they're 20 story tower blocks or much smaller buildings, size and style are irrelevant.
    As for this particular project, I've seen a whole lot worse, but it's definitely not pretty either!

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 3 года назад

      I dunno, one thing that the conservatives did was to split council house rents into rent and service charges (which immediately impacted things like housing benefit and pension credit but that is another story). With the idea that you could see the maintenance and its costs on an annual breakdown sent through

    • @tincoffin
      @tincoffin 3 года назад

      One thing you notice is that as you drive south these buildings don't look as bad . They seem to be peculiarly badly adapted to the English climate. Damp patches moss and lichen show up quite soon after they are put up. You also get two other things right in my view. You tend to concentrate your modern developments in one area instead of scattering them around among older developments and you add a bit of colour to them so they are not always grey.

    • @highpath4776
      @highpath4776 3 года назад

      @@tincoffin Can Concrete work in UK ? Yes, sort of , the Shell Centre (both sides of the Thames works fine, 55 Broadway and the Holden Stations on the Northern line (though they need a clean), The estate in Camden south of St Pancras, The Royal Festival Hall and National Theatre. Are present day buildings better - no - See Colindale Airport development , and Freshwater Wharf Barking where building for its own sake seems utter rubbish inside and out. Was there any brick older buildings that did not work - yes , North Row (?) Kensington - mostly due to the communal heating.

    • @tincoffin
      @tincoffin 3 года назад

      @@highpath4776 I can't say that I am a fan of the Shell Centre or the others. However to digress here is an amusing story. When it was built the Shell management thought it would be a good idea to abolish the tea lady. Henceforward the tea was to be brewed in a central location and then delivered to various points throughout the building . It was a complete disaster as the tea leaves tended to clog the system and it was rapidly discontinued and the tea lady reinstated. A friend worked there in the seventies .The building was not in a good state but the tea distributor was still very much in evidence but unused. I found this YT video on it :
      ruclips.net/video/S-nrYDfY5oc/видео.html.
      I think the tea lady had been brought back when this was made.

  • @pibgorn9513
    @pibgorn9513 3 года назад +69

    Whenever I see plans of buildings such as these, I'm reminded of something the late, great Pterry Pratchett wrote in one of his books. He wrote something to the effect that the artist impressions always "unaccountably left out the litter and dog turds" from their drawings. (At least, I *think* it was Pratchett that wrote this.)
    (Another excellent video, by the way.)

  • @saturnsf12
    @saturnsf12 Месяц назад

    After discovering the Smithsons and the story of Robin Hood Gardens I've become obsessed with it. Your statement that it was all very good in theory is rather resonant; I may never have seen a (pair of) buildings with its high concept idealism writ so large you needn't know a thing about architecture to see it. I'm so taken with the "streets in the sky" idea, but while I love the idea, to me the visual effect is completely stunning. Perhaps the modular construction gave the buildings a broken up look that was bound not to age well, but the actual "streets", how they gave such a distinctive look to the exterior and how they really did seem wide enough to run around and socialize captivates me. And of course you could not only run around on those but in what seems like an enormous lawn between the two buildings. I would dearly love to see the interiors of some of the units; apparently they were large and with a great deal of thought behind the directions they faced and the mood they would create. I don't know... the idealism, the optimism and the belief in humanity all come across as quite noble to me.
    Clearly the buildings were quite long and the central green also looks huge, so getting it all in one photo or frame of film may have been impossible. As a result I still may not have a perfect picture of what the estate looked like in person. Nonetheless, I've got to be honest. I think it's kind of beautiful. And the idealism is truly touching.

  • @Supesfan88
    @Supesfan88 2 года назад +2

    The "...looked inwards. An island surrounded by busy roads." Reminds me of the supposed "problems" with Regent Park (Toronto) It was built to replace slums in the late 40s. But everyone (including my mum who grew up there) always said she felt it was built wrong/inside out. It too, became a "sinking ground" for trouble tenants.

  • @graemesydney38
    @graemesydney38 3 года назад +377

    I wonder if the Smithton's ever lived in a brutalism housing tower.

    • @Stafford674
      @Stafford674 3 года назад +14

      Maybe they are like Richard and Ruth Rogers who bought two houses in a beautiful Regency Terrace opposite the Royal Hospital and.... well the pictures are on the internet. I can't bring myself to describe the houses now. I've always said "Every architect is a graffiti artist at heart."

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 3 года назад +36

      They should have been forced to.

    • @John_Wood_
      @John_Wood_ 3 года назад +20

      @@Stafford674 Only a superstar architect could make a mess like that. I counted 20 something steps on a single flight of stairs, wouldn't even meet building regs...

    • @anonymoust2877
      @anonymoust2877 3 года назад +7

      @Crooked Skate Supply Co “worked hard”
      Yeaahhhhh...

    • @mazurylakespolandcottagere1945
      @mazurylakespolandcottagere1945 3 года назад +4

      @Crooked Skate Supply Co Perhaps they worked a normal amount and chose to live in a house rather than expect a handout.

  • @annother3350
    @annother3350 3 года назад +47

    If it's anything like 'Kidbrooke village' they'll just rebuild the same same but different, with less open space between blocks, and label it luxury....

    • @mugofbrown6234
      @mugofbrown6234 3 года назад

      I remember the Ferrier estate when I was training. It always fun to go there in an ambulance.

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 3 года назад +2

      @@mugofbrown6234 I remember the early days of my childhood you could walk from one end to the other on the high level and wouldnt get wet in the rain. Then they started to block bits off as it was a hotbed of crime...

    • @amandajane8227
      @amandajane8227 3 года назад +1

      @@annother3350 Yes that was great. You could choose which staircases to go up or down and which level you wanted to traverse. Just a shame the council didn't put the money in to keep it maintained.

    • @annother3350
      @annother3350 3 года назад

      @@amandajane8227 I think, as usual, it became a sink estate. I knew people who knew the first wave of residents and they seemed nice and to look after each other and the estate. By the time I had to walk through it, it had deteriorated and was full of graffitti, stolen burned out cars and BNP supporters who would come into our school and beat up unsuspecting black boys on a regular basis...

  • @tamasmihaly1
    @tamasmihaly1 2 года назад +1

    Since you ask... I think it's as dreary as my own Northwestern Washington state. I mean the architecture and the general environment both. Your videos are absolutely amazing. Thank you!

  • @jkirk888
    @jkirk888 7 месяцев назад

    This was very interesting. I lived in London many years ago and would love to see more pieces like this on its architectural landscape. Keep up the good work.

  • @isahak8644
    @isahak8644 3 года назад +108

    It was ahead of its time, it looks like a dirty flat from a futuristic overcrowded city.

    • @capybara2450
      @capybara2450 3 года назад +8

      It looked like a dirty flat back then.

    • @teecefamilykent
      @teecefamilykent 3 года назад +5

      Think the city blocks from Dredd in 2012 version with Karl Urban.

    • @Ellebeeby
      @Ellebeeby 3 года назад +2

      @@teecefamilykent EXACTLY what I was gonna say!

    • @eleffbee
      @eleffbee 3 года назад +3

      Could it be that the reason the buildings look like something out of Dredd is that's precisely where the comics/films/games got their idea of what that scenario should look like?

    • @teecefamilykent
      @teecefamilykent 3 года назад

      @@eleffbee yes! Either way it works!

  • @Recessio
    @Recessio 3 года назад +32

    4:55 speaking of 'out of touch architects', that advert for new flats from "only" £710,000!!!

    • @dangerousandy
      @dangerousandy 3 года назад +1

      £710k is cheap for London

    • @JohannesHauck
      @JohannesHauck 3 года назад +4

      @@dangerousandy speaking of a flawed system

    • @jamesneedham6265
      @jamesneedham6265 3 года назад +2

      I don't think architects ever price a building and I will bet you that not one of the Architects involved would feasibly be able to afford one of the flats especially as that will just be a studio apartment.

    • @poppedweasel
      @poppedweasel 3 года назад

      Oh c'mon, there's millions of Russian oligarchs and Arabian crude pumpers that need their investments.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 3 года назад

      That has nothing to do with the architects. Marketers insist on putting the word "only" before any price, these days, especially if it's a big one. Look at any car advert, for example.

  • @AndreTraveler
    @AndreTraveler 3 года назад +1

    Very informative video I enjoyed watching.

  • @MajorCaliber
    @MajorCaliber 3 года назад +2

    Another feature/bug which doomed RHG was that the private balconies, on the greens-facing side, are absurdly narrow, so narrow that they're completely useless for anything aside from fire escapes... or clothes drying lines (posh twats are clutching their pearls). You can't place even a small bistro table on them, let alone a chaise lounge or other patio furniture. Ridiculous.

  • @billywhippet
    @billywhippet 3 года назад +27

    I come from this area and have known this building for ever. Even as a kid it looked scary to me, and in my 50s now it still looks scary. Went to a house party there in the 80s, grim to say the least

    • @harrymail7
      @harrymail7 3 года назад

      It's being demolished now

  • @carolinegreenwell9086
    @carolinegreenwell9086 3 года назад +32

    if it looks brutal then that's the feelings it will engender in you

    • @foolsgold6970
      @foolsgold6970 3 года назад +5

      The term Brutalism is not to do with the looks of the structures. It's something to do with the French term for raw concrete. Although I admit that doesn't sound very tasty...

    • @Eliteerin
      @Eliteerin 3 года назад +1

      I'd say brutalism can look good when done properly

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 года назад +1

      @@foolsgold6970 actually, it does. early 15c., "of or belonging to animals, non-human," from Old French brut "coarse, brutal, raw, crude," from Latin brutus "heavy, dull, stupid, insensible, unreasonable" it is a loaded term in french.
      The french word for concrete is unrelated.

  • @JFK90
    @JFK90 3 года назад +2

    I really like your scientific approach to those buildings looking at them out of different angles and sum it up with a quiet ironic conclusion. Cool video and thx from Germany :)

  • @barry5111
    @barry5111 2 года назад +1

    I grew up in flats that were built after the war in central London and they are my earliest memories. Eighteen flats in my block and I knew every family by name and they knew me. There was a laundry room in the basement kept well and my mother's turn was wednesday night. There was also a clubroom there where some kind neighbour used to show films for the kids on a saturday night and there were times when a wedding reception was held there. They also used it for housy housy a sort of Bingo for the adults. Then gradually the more well to do people disappeared to buy houses and they were replaced by problem families or people arriving from elsewhere. Eventually the lift was used as a urinal by some ratbag and the clubroom became a doctor's surgery and another sort of person started arriving to get their needs. My parents left in 1972 and millions have been spent on the flats with security entrances and flats are selling for £750k that were bought under right to buy. Whether a block is ugly or not is irrelevant the people make a community and sometimes they wreck it and sometimes they create something special.

  • @stevenflebbe
    @stevenflebbe 3 года назад +77

    Leaving aside the questions of social engineering or architects being out of touch, my mind kept going back to the Colliers Wood Tower. I couldn't help wondering if those who voted Colliers Wood the ugliest building in London had ever seen Robin Hood Gardens.

    • @Earth098
      @Earth098 3 года назад +4

      This has nothing to do with social engineering. It's more of an example of architects being abstract artists.

    • @JVerschueren
      @JVerschueren 3 года назад +1

      So I Googled that and I'm sorry, but I have to agree with this dubious award. At least Robin Hood Gardens tried some interesting things, both conceptually and visually. It failed utterly and is an eyesore by modern standards, but it's not as grim and totally devoid of imagination as that Colliers Wood building.

    • @TreeMovies
      @TreeMovies 3 года назад +3

      Honestly, the Colliers Wood Tower was 100% more ugly than Robin Hood Gardens especially after it became abandoned and bits started to fall off the side

    • @stevenflebbe
      @stevenflebbe 3 года назад +1

      I might suggest equally ugly in slightly different ways 😅. But really, I was giving a shout out to another Jago video on Colliers Wood Tower. If you haven't seen it, you can find it here...
      ruclips.net/video/1gRSP-VbTW0/видео.html

    • @Jablicek
      @Jablicek 3 года назад

      @@TreeMovies years of it being covered in shadecloth didn't help either.

  • @y2keef
    @y2keef 3 года назад +55

    Barely had the time to make it through this longer video as I needed to go train my daughter to fight robots in a few years.

    • @mudmucks
      @mudmucks 3 года назад +2

      She's training herself - you're just watching her :)

    • @brianparker663
      @brianparker663 3 года назад +9

      Better still, train her to build her own bigger robots :)

    • @apemant
      @apemant 3 года назад +3

      Maybe you haven't seen this: ruclips.net/video/y3RIHnK0_NE/видео.html&ab_channel=Corridor
      Re: fightings robots :)

    • @SteveInScotland
      @SteveInScotland 3 года назад +1

      Go for the charging port! Ooooh!

    • @ramblingrob4693
      @ramblingrob4693 3 года назад

      Lol

  • @whizzytheelephantadventure1063
    @whizzytheelephantadventure1063 3 года назад +3

    "It inspires no emotions whatsoever. I don't know if that is an improvement or not." 🤣🤣🤣

  • @davidpeters6536
    @davidpeters6536 3 года назад +2

    I recently lived in a Bangkok housing "development" of 900+ mixed sized apartments in four seven story blocks surrounding a green communal area. The maintenance is done, the residents (owners and renters) respect their neighbors and the rules of the house. While not a "community" it was inexpensive, clean and a pleasant place to live.

  • @john1703
    @john1703 3 года назад +11

    'What is proposed is like a monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much loved and elegant friend." The Prince of Wales, 1984. This is what is required to have an effect!

  • @telemachus53
    @telemachus53 3 года назад +156

    It should've been listed - for immediate demolition. As a kid we used to say: "good riddance to bad rubbish". I say it now. It's awful, ugly, out of touch, condescendingly insulting, unlivable. Maybe someone should have suggested they live there themselves. Thank goodness it wasn't made a listed building.

    • @brainlessfool7815
      @brainlessfool7815 3 года назад +12

      As a homeless i wish i could have a box room there. Will be a luxury for me

    • @danielwhyatt3278
      @danielwhyatt3278 3 года назад +8

      Absolutely.These buildings have no real place in the real world of humanity. Both in living and beauty. At least vast mansions of the olden days had beauty to them and could still come to still be lived in by a few people if not the masses.

    • @virgiltracey9130
      @virgiltracey9130 3 года назад +1

      Yet.

    • @emmareporter4324
      @emmareporter4324 3 года назад +1

      @@danielwhyatt3278 balfron is actually real cool and thamesmead had a super cool design that you couldn't find anywhere else whilst balfron is listed and remains standing to this day thamesmead was sadly demolished last year

    • @supertrooper6011
      @supertrooper6011 3 года назад +15

      it is ugly but frankly whatever you build - if you stick a bunch of c***ts in it and refuse to maintain it - it probably wont be the nicest place after a few decades.

  • @brunosdaddogwalker9529
    @brunosdaddogwalker9529 10 месяцев назад

    There was a similar estate on Penton Rise near King's Cross which always i believed the residents loved.

  • @myra8275
    @myra8275 2 года назад

    I really enjoyed watching this, it’s a fascinating piece, thank you.

  • @spalftac
    @spalftac 3 года назад +24

    I suppose putting a thatched roof on top along with some Elizabethan style cladding is out of the question.

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 года назад

      That is the sad thing, the layouts are interesting (albeit wider staircases) and it would be nice to have a pitched roof and pillars on the balconies and decoration- however decoration is heresy to brutalist architects- they believe the soviet ideal is correct and that decoration is a capitalist corruption that breeds inequality.

  • @mugofbrown6234
    @mugofbrown6234 3 года назад +13

    Remember white dog pooh? It looks like a cubist version. You can't polish it and rolling it in glitter wouldn't do much either.

  • @bb32112
    @bb32112 Год назад +1

    Amazing video, I hope you do more like this 👍🏻

  • @sibat777
    @sibat777 3 года назад

    Just stumbled on this video, really enjoyed the way you presented this very well executed, so new subscriber and I will take a look at your back catalogue👍👍

  • @arkadybron1994
    @arkadybron1994 3 года назад +82

    Having lived in Hong Kong, I can say that I don't believe High Rise or High Density housing to be a problem, in and of itself. The problem (I believe), is in putting large numbers of socially inept people, into close proximity with one another.
    Having said that, building low cost poorly implemented housing and then allowing it to fall into disrepair, will foster unbearable tension within any community.

    • @arkadybron1994
      @arkadybron1994 3 года назад +3

      @Esther Sparrow I think you may have misunderstood what I was trying to say. Socially inept is not the same as anti-social.

    • @ketchuplad157
      @ketchuplad157 3 года назад +4

      'socially inept people' wowee youre almost as brutal as these buildings

    • @arkadybron1994
      @arkadybron1994 3 года назад +7

      @@ketchuplad157 It was not meant as pejorative term. People can be socially inept for a variety of reasons and is not necessarily the fault of the person who suffers from it. In a situation such as this one, those who might be thought of as socially inept, have lived their whole life, in a small more or less closed community, where everyone there, is more or less the same. Since these people are also generally speaking, not well travelled, they have rarely encountered people who are significantly different from themselves. Planners, then force together large numbers of people, all of whom, are from different social paradigms, into developments such as Robin Hood Gardens. The fallout from what follows, is almost inevitable.

    • @bobbowie9350
      @bobbowie9350 3 года назад +5

      dont even bother explaining. some people are too sensitive these days

    • @madsam0320
      @madsam0320 3 года назад +2

      You are just too polite, there will always be a small section of society that is out to make life miserable for the rest of us.
      A spot of ink will taint a glass of clear water.

  • @ingestedred7372
    @ingestedred7372 3 года назад +22

    My grandad used to live there when I was child. I used to play on that green. The new builds will suffer the same fate.

    • @mahlapropyzm9180
      @mahlapropyzm9180 2 года назад +1

      Indeed, I look at new build 'luxury flats' and all I see are future slums. All of them are god awful, every last one.

  • @gravnine
    @gravnine 3 года назад +1

    I used to go past this on the way to school everyday. We used to chat on the bus about how hideous it was compared to everything around it

  • @AmazingJayB51
    @AmazingJayB51 3 года назад

    Reminds me of the, demolished, Youth Study Center in Philadelphia, a place for young offenders. It was in a high income area so neighborhood citizens said it had to go. Reason for why it was built on the Parkway were similar to this.

  • @chrisstephens6673
    @chrisstephens6673 3 года назад +15

    "Let's create a new style we will call Brutalism, then fill it with the dregs of society and see what the phycologists make of it, should be a good wheeze".
    "OH LORD, they took our joke seriously and built it, theres our reputation shot to pieces"

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 3 года назад +5

      It was designed to be a solution to the post-post-war housing shortage and wasn't full of the 'dregs of society' when it was first occupied. Sink estates happen with neglect.

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 3 года назад +1

      "Brutalism" comes from the French "brut", meaning "in its raw or natural state", not the English "brutal". It refers to the buildings being made of naked concrete rather than covered in decorative elements. It wasn't the architects who decided who'd live there, but their clients, the city councils.
      I don't like brutalist buildings, either -- at least, not in northern Europe, since any concrete looks pretty awful when it's damp and under a grey sky -- but your description of their architects isn't really fair.

    • @chrisstephens6673
      @chrisstephens6673 3 года назад +1

      @@eattherich9215 sink estates are created by councils putting the dregs in one, if only there were only enough for one, place.🤔
      Fill a tower block or one of these monoliths with the cream and the situation would be different.
      To say estates create the dregs, sorry must try to be PC disadvantaged hoodlums, is very simplistic. Good manners create contentment whatever the situation. Fill the Ritz with the drags, sorry again hoodlums, and see what happens.
      Having said the above, with tongue very slightly in cheek, even I might start to be depressed by living in one of these monstrosities .

    • @chrisstephens6673
      @chrisstephens6673 3 года назад +2

      @@beeble2003 the road to perdition is paved with good intentions. Architects should trained out of having an ego before they are given their first pencil. Architects should design to please the viewer, ie general public, not a tiny cohort of fellow delinquents and vandals .

    • @beeble2003
      @beeble2003 3 года назад +1

      @@chrisstephens6673 Anyone who wants to design large buildings is going to have an ego. The architects in this case _were_ trying to please the people who lived in these buildings: they were aware of the failings of tower blocks and were trying to make something better. They failed utterly, but they were trying to do the right thing. It's silly to pretend that architecture is just some self-centred conspiracy against the common man.

  • @nicolechan2010
    @nicolechan2010 3 года назад +35

    I am living in HK, the public estate built in 1970s and 80s have similar long airy corridors for residents to mingle and play mahjong. Which served their purpose and HK people enjoyed their time on the corridor especially during summer hot days.

    • @carbon1255
      @carbon1255 3 года назад +4

      In HK the weather is nice and middle class people live in tower blocks due to land value. It is more comparable to the poor Chinese tower blocks.

    • @Bigbadwhitecracker
      @Bigbadwhitecracker 3 года назад

      I think you like in something that's 10 square meters.

    • @adonaiyah2196
      @adonaiyah2196 2 года назад +1

      I doubt anyone is gonna play mahjong in the grime of a council estate corridor

  • @SimLauren
    @SimLauren Год назад

    I can confirm (by looking out of my kitchen window) that the eastern block was not demolished in 2019.
    I’ve been happy to see the new little shops pop up in the last few years as the first stages of blackwall track have completed, but I’m not looking forward to the impact on parking when they pull out the carpark at Blackwall station and re-route all the busses down my narrow road when they move the Bus Stops in Stage 3… 😕

  • @mushroomcraft
    @mushroomcraft 9 месяцев назад

    You gotta remember, it had asbestos in it (and was even illegally demolished without proper safety precautions) so it was screwed from the start

  • @1990Judson
    @1990Judson 3 года назад +6

    Can´t remember were i read it. But an urban planer in my country, when asked about large housing estates and why they almost inevitable fail, answered the following: "You can stack rich people but not poor people"

  • @erejnion
    @erejnion 3 года назад +14

    This problem of something being liked by architects and ONLY architects is something we had here in Bulgaria too: the 1300 years of Bulgaria monument in Sofia that had deteriorated so much it had to be torn down. The protest for "saving" it consisted almost 100% of architects. Of course, it got demolished. Nobody liked it back when it was new, so even less people were willing to leave its formless husk. The actual panels with bas-reliefs are in a museum, at least.
    What happened with the space was all sorts of dumb, however. They brought back an old monument that was demolished by the communists... with zero care if it fits in its surroundings. They put it in a circle in the middle of the National Palace of Culture garden, brutalist architecture which is wholly designed around hexagons and octagons. And instead they designated a space in front of the National Gallery (the former palace from before communism) for experimental art. It should have been vice-versa. The pre-communist monument with the pre-communist palace, and the experimental art near the center of experimental artists in Bulgaria.

  • @foo-foocuddlypoops5694
    @foo-foocuddlypoops5694 3 года назад

    Glad you mentioned it, because I couldn’t stop thinking of the 2012 Dredd film this entire video.

  • @Mike8981
    @Mike8981 2 года назад +1

    Very interesting obsevations: I thought that one of the criticisms of Robin Hood Gardens was that the walkways/stairwells were too narrow. Hunstanton School is just up the road from where I live. I can certainly appreciate its architectural merit and it must have been revolutionary at the time it was built in 1954. Unfortunately once again practical problems surfaced very quickly with the walls of glass making the building practically unusable in hot weather. The building was nearly immediately adapted by blacking out the lower half of the walls. I agreed that the fact that Alison Smithson wanted the buldings photographed without people or furniture was particularly telling.

  • @bjorntoulouse7523
    @bjorntoulouse7523 3 года назад +521

    If we ask the Germans nicely perhaps they’ll do a repeat of the Blitz.

    • @stephenhunter70
      @stephenhunter70 3 года назад +23

      With all then nice modern toys they now have maybe they might do a proper job of it this time. Lol

    • @joge3031
      @joge3031 3 года назад +23

      Regarding the state of the German airforce - we might have to contract it out to another Nato ally

    • @bjorntoulouse7523
      @bjorntoulouse7523 3 года назад +7

      Where’s Fred Dibnah when you need him.

    • @rushelm8101
      @rushelm8101 3 года назад +1

      Nice try! They can't even dynamite their own flakturms! (They tried in Vienna)

    • @RidesandAdventures1
      @RidesandAdventures1 3 года назад

      A remastered version

  • @JeffreyOrnstein
    @JeffreyOrnstein 3 года назад +81

    I found this very interesting. I'm an architect at the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA), so it's fascinating to compare New York's public housing to that of a foreign city. NYCHA owns about 2,500 buildings housing 5% of the city's population, or a little over 400,000. And how many NYCHA buildings have we torn down since the first public housing development was built here in 1935? Just ONE. Even that was considered a wrong move by the tenants. NYCHA has many "superblock" developments - the key difference is that they are vertical in form, rather than horizontal, which seems to be more common in Europe. But New York is an inherently vertical city, so it fits. The superblock concept is pretty much dead in America, as most cities have demolished their public housing. They looked good on paper, but the reality was quite different. But as far as I know, we have nothing like this in New York. While a few have balconies, none have the outer walkways like Robin Hood. How are these estates maintained? Is there a super or other maintenance people employed on-site? Does it have elevators? What are the apartments like? It looks like not much if any funding has gone into this site for many years. At NYCHA, we are spending many billions on upgrading our buildings - new roofs, new elevators, new boilers, repointing brickwork, and on and on. We have a staff of 500 architects and engineers/construction managers, plus an army of consultants to handle the work we can't do in-house, which is like 90% of the workload. Of course, the population demographics within NYCHA has changed over the years, which brought "issues" to public housing, like increased crime, but there seems to be no solution for that. Unlike replacing a boiler. But hey, $100 a month for a subsidized apartment in Manhattan is a good deal, even if you have to put up with a few "problems."

    • @2H80vids
      @2H80vids 3 года назад +7

      An interesting take on it indeed. One good point you raise is the outer walkways. I wonder who thought that was a good idea?

    • @wilhelmcody5833
      @wilhelmcody5833 3 года назад +3

      Having brick facing in a city of brick buildings helps soften the appearance.

    • @daos3300
      @daos3300 3 года назад +15

      'which brought "issues" to public housing, like increased crime, but there seems to be no solution for that' - there are plenty of solutions. but since we live in a world with an economic system which actively and shamelessly places profit over people, no profit can be made from those solutions, so they are not be pursued.

    • @justsah24
      @justsah24 3 года назад +12

      Sounds like for you work for NYCHA but haven’t been in an actual apartment inside of said buildings cause y’all buildings are HORRIBLE, sir.
      & that can’t be blamed on the “Changing of the demographics” so take that subtle racism elsewhere.

    • @JeffreyOrnstein
      @JeffreyOrnstein 3 года назад +14

      @@justsah24 Yes, I work for NYCHA as I said. I certainly have been in apartments. Some were awful, and some were unbelievable. I remember going into one apartment - and the tenants - a woman, her baby, and the baby daddy, had big beautiful white leather furniture all throughout their apartment, with marble flooring they installed on their own. Glass tables, and a big washer and dryer. Neither of them had a job, I would say. So...it's a real eye-opener to see the "poor or low-income" having nicer stuff than I had at the time. What a racket public housing can be. Yes, some developments are not good at all, but others are really nice. Some of the buildings we have, you would not know it's public housing. The changing demographics is absolutely true, no matter how much it may hurt your feelings.

  • @Redf322
    @Redf322 2 года назад

    Architects love living in the Barbican. So allocation is the key here. I love it.

  • @liviniaprice2947
    @liviniaprice2947 3 года назад

    Just found your channel and I love it. I’m so interested in London architecture, I hope you do more videos. Subscribed

  • @buggs9950
    @buggs9950 3 года назад +4

    I turned up on a site one day and asked the first lad I saw if there was architect there, he said "yeah, howdya know that?". I pointed at the classic maroon Saab parked outside.
    The beauty of stereotypes is that they're often pretty accurate.

  • @Gazellekaz
    @Gazellekaz 3 года назад +17

    This is not an area I'm familiar with, so it was a real treat watching this thoughtful and very informative video. You're a treasure. Thanks again for what you do.

  • @XIXCentury
    @XIXCentury 3 года назад

    I enjoyed living in an apartment bloc, it's a good vibe once you cover your balcony in carpets

  • @vryzenok
    @vryzenok 3 года назад

    Nice video. Thanks for creating!