UK housing experiment leaves a Ghost Town on a mountain!

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  • Опубликовано: 25 май 2023
  • Deep up the Rhondda Valleys in Wales you can find Penrhys. It's not actually in a valley due to a planning mistake made in the 1960's. This was a social housing experiment that went wrong. At the time when it was built more houses were required for miners. But it turned out that nobody actually wanted to live on top of a freezing cold massive hill and it ultimately caused the end of this estate. It had a horrible reputation for crime and poverty. Nowadays most of the estate as been abandoned and boarded up. Thew few people that remain like it here but this place has a ghostly feel about it.
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Комментарии • 1,3 тыс.

  • @kunga72
    @kunga72 Год назад +419

    Went there about 30 years ago. All I can remember are gangs of feral children in shell suits and a Mad Max vibe.

    • @j_cara
      @j_cara Год назад +19

      😂

    • @xbdgames6355
      @xbdgames6355 Год назад +1

      Went there too for a work contract. I'm being serious when I say some of Afghanistan looked better than this place.
      I even seen someone taking a shite by a wall.
      Mental

    • @djx-tec4580
      @djx-tec4580 Год назад +31

      I went there 3 years ago saw the same thing😂

    • @PeanutButter111
      @PeanutButter111 Год назад +80

      Owe, I was there 30 years ago in my shell suit, best time of my life. Going down the mountain on a cardboard box, the bonfires were out of this world. Old little lady used to give out sweets to us little feral shits, but with all that said the memories of looking at the clouds while lying on fresh grass knowing you're away from society is something so precious that I wouldnt trade those memories for all the monies in the world. It doesn't matter if it was a shithole it's our shithole

    • @FireInTheSoul
      @FireInTheSoul Год назад +68

      I was one of those feral kids in a shell suit, and had the best childhood living on top of a mountain in the middle of nowhere, no one bothered us, we were allowed to live free and the vibe up here has continued ever since. We're a step away from society and surrounded by nature. The community was always amazing back in the 80s. Someone couldn't pay me to move from here. I wake up to the sounds of birds and look around to nothing but mountains and greenery, my kids play on the mountains everyday and when the sun shines we get the best of it. When it snows we get the best of it too and the most beautiful scenery. Not all is what it seems.

  • @eyezwideopen1889
    @eyezwideopen1889 Год назад +62

    I lived here as a new born baby in the mid 80's as my parents were young and skint. My old man told me that because of the rediculous crime rate at the time he used to push his motorcycle up the stairs every night to our three story flat to keep it safe on the balcony... That was until it was slolen from the outside!

    • @CaymanIslandsCatWalks
      @CaymanIslandsCatWalks 9 месяцев назад +2

      Lol

    • @predictivetextisforaunts
      @predictivetextisforaunts Месяц назад

      Not as ridiculous as your spelling of that word.

    • @George-gg1ny
      @George-gg1ny Месяц назад

      Gee that place must be bad to do a shift every time you fancy a run on the motor bike... That was hilarious thanks 😂

  • @andrewstones2921
    @andrewstones2921 Год назад +162

    I went here in 1983, so that was 40 years ago. I don’t remember it looking so run down at that time, and the house that I went In was ok. The thing actually that stands out about this part of wales is how nice the people were, but the kids all seemed to get into trouble with the police and many of them would take extended holidays in Portland in what was a Borstal at the time. But again the thing is my memory is that the people were actually decent, just that they had very little opportunity and the kids were bored and got in trouble.

    • @stevejelly3161
      @stevejelly3161 Год назад +5

      Andrew Stones ... you mention the good people ???..... Mining heritage 🙂
      .
      Plus somebody can move into a "posh" area and just get "hell" !!!
      .
      Hey must be clean air up there as it's so high 🙂

    • @gregmuir4001
      @gregmuir4001 Год назад +1

      Yoo sir?? 38 years ago slow down please lol 😆 I was born in 83! Haha

    • @richardpennington5445
      @richardpennington5445 Год назад +2

      No excuse for kids getting bored there. There were sports facilities and countryside to explore. There was even a Community Centre.

    • @andrewstones2921
      @andrewstones2921 Год назад +4

      @@richardpennington5445 I’m sure you are correct In theory, but in practice sports cost money and many of the kids that grew up there had parents so poor that they didn’t buy sports gear or encourage their kids to participate. If you had been there you may understand. Whilst a lot of kids found themselves In trouble with the law they were not intrinsically bad kids at all, not that would be any consolation if your house or car was broken into every month. I know a few of those kids, one of the reasons I went there is a good friend of mine grew up there. He got in trouble like many of the kids, but later he turned his life around and runs a successful building business.

    • @pseudonayme7717
      @pseudonayme7717 Год назад

      That's a good description of every working class town/community in the UK 😁
      Hello from Dundee 👍

  • @deanieleet
    @deanieleet Год назад +226

    Is it weird that I really want to live there? It's like living at the end of the world or a post apocalypse or something, it's a total vibe. I dig it.

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +33

      It certainly is my friend

    • @AndrewMinns
      @AndrewMinns Год назад +16

      if you have car to get out an explore yeah why not. away from annoying humans in a budget cabin in the woods scenario

    • @Bob-ts2tu
      @Bob-ts2tu Год назад +6

      somehow i can understand what you mean lol, but i'm not sure if i'd really want to live there myself.

    • @PeanutButter111
      @PeanutButter111 Год назад +19

      Bring some hot chocolate in a flask and I will show you around 🤣

    • @jonathanpork-sausage617
      @jonathanpork-sausage617 Год назад +12

      @@AndrewMinns Who needs a car? Straight out of the front door onto the hill! Boom!

  • @rhianjones4422
    @rhianjones4422 11 месяцев назад +45

    I actually lived here for over 16 years and loved living here. My brother still lives here, the views from his room window are amazing. The houses are lovely and spacious inside and the people living are lovely too. I love going back up there to visit, I have so many happy memories of Penrhys

    • @angrymuffinsb
      @angrymuffinsb 10 месяцев назад

      Why’d you leave if it’s so amazing?

    • @rhianjones4422
      @rhianjones4422 10 месяцев назад +9

      I left to look after my mother who was quite ill at the time, also my brother needed somewhere to live and the council agreed for him to take over the tenancy of my flat...that's why I left.

    • @angrymuffinsb
      @angrymuffinsb 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@rhianjones4422 I understand, I’m sorry to hear that

    • @jonbaker1697
      @jonbaker1697 10 месяцев назад +1

      I love the sloping roof , of the houses. Better looking than horrible tedious terraced/ track houses.
      The colour of the exterior was wrong. Cream is always going to look terrible after , just one yr. I would have used mute colours. Eg.a colour scheme near near that looks wonderful , BLK from the top third of the building. To the roof. And the bottom two thirds was bricks coloured burgundy -ish

    • @johnmiller9953
      @johnmiller9953 7 месяцев назад

      lol@@angrymuffinsb

  • @leonbishop5183
    @leonbishop5183 Год назад +257

    In the 1960’s when this “good idea” was built the government and their councils actually spent money on the people with a no expense spared approach to the point that they actually built entire new towns, hospitals, schools, leisure centres,shops,churches and all the things laughed at in this video all around the country and places like this were a lovely place for the working man to live.
    What destroyed this place was it being sold off years ago and put to private hands where profit and cost cutting are the main concern, all around (and I live in England and I’m successful ) I’m seeing everywhere the relics of these “council days” being hurriedly demolished and replaced with private pay through the nose modern equivalents and everybody’s oblivious to what we had in the past.
    This place was actually so lovely back in the 70’s, from Cardiff we visited my mums cousin there many times and it was lovely, we were a little envious of how nice it was but like anything that’s not invested in soon goes down hill, what could be nicer than a modern small estate at the top of a mountain? Great views and a small community all living decent working class lives, it was a “good idea”.
    Coal was replaced in the valleys sure but today like everywhere leisure, food and hospitality are the main employment around the country,other parts of Wales and the uk also have lost their industry but employment is abundant in those modern things.
    Made me very sad seeing this as I remember it lovely just the powers that be mishandled things from the top replacing investing large scale in the people to now just leaving the likes of housing associations, private short term renting, private care homes, rent paid for your room and a bus pass, and crime should be neutralised by the police? More busses subsidised by the council if they cared and spent the money could’ve got those people down that hill to those jobs and the grey houses could’ve been painted, the welsh do need to stop fly tipping as many a picturesque natural place is littered I’ve seen worse than anywhere.
    They closed the old people homes, mental hospitals,privatised everything, almost totally stopped spending on the nation, even took the milk off the schoolchildren, its the health service next?! Everybody’s forgotten what the people used to be entitled to and what was the norm....Thats what really happened to Penrys 😐👍

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +31

      True doesn’t feel like anything is attempted on a large scale anymore.

    • @calvinmondrago7397
      @calvinmondrago7397 Год назад +62

      That's true. What people don't get about Thatcher's aspirationalism (I'm by no means a Labour supporter btw) is that, rather than being a way to enrich working class people, it was a way for the government to divest itself of its responsibilities to working class people.

    • @narannavan
      @narannavan Год назад

      Coal was NEVER replaced in the Valleys. You're wrong to state that or even think that. Otherwise, all correct, but you're missing a name and a place. It's Margaret Thatcher and Westminster.

    • @Walesktf
      @Walesktf Год назад +25

      That's the tories for you!

    • @pauldavies5655
      @pauldavies5655 Год назад

      and YOU and people like you are the reason i cannot do business in that part of wales ----- you think your ENTITLED ( your words ) .
      i could make that place superb within 2 years but people like you will ALWAYS blame the people who make money !

  • @crystalcars5210
    @crystalcars5210 Год назад +190

    I’ve delivered parcels here a number of times and I can 100% agree with this video.
    I hated going here and always wondered “who the fuck built this shit hole up here”.

    • @swanvictor887
      @swanvictor887 Год назад

      the answer is Assholes who knew they would never need to live in the dump! Architects and Planners in the 60s remind me of War Criminals sometimes!

    • @thestallionspeaks640
      @thestallionspeaks640 Год назад +20

      I also delivered parcels here once, at first I felt like it was a dangerous council estate, but after speaking to residents, everyone was nice to me and I felt like the arsehole, so I relaxed. Even delivered to the smaller of the two large abandoned buildings at the top. Nice to know people are inside it.

    • @thailandertravel
      @thailandertravel Год назад +4

      cheeky cnt your a delivery scruff to me but i wouldn't say it to you

    • @moreton61
      @moreton61 Год назад +7

      @@thailandertravelhe has a point, it is a dump though mate. Makes Baghdad look beautiful lol

    • @quantro65
      @quantro65 Год назад +2

      I do delivery too & if I had to deliver round there I'd turn back & fail all of them . Looks like 10 minutes a drop
      No thanks 😅😅

  • @sandrafinbar
    @sandrafinbar Год назад +67

    I watched a Tv programme about a village called Perthcelyn that was also built on a hill in the same area as Penrys. Feel sad for those who have to live in these bleak places.These Turdtown videos are very interesting. Thankyou

    • @badcampa2641
      @badcampa2641 Год назад +7

      Gurnos, Perthcelyn and Penrhys. All within in a few miles

    • @benjamin-ri2do
      @benjamin-ri2do Год назад +1

      I live near them all where I live Rhymney came in at number 2 in Valleys turdtown haaaaa

    • @jungatheart6359
      @jungatheart6359 Год назад

      There's also Fernhill in the same valley as Perthcelyn, built in a similar architectural mould (no pun intended) to Penrhys, yet still largely occupied and quite lively. Bizarrely, immediately below the estate by the main road are some of the poshest houses in the Valleys - at least 4 or 5 bedroom suburban villas which wouldn't look out of place in the Surrey commuter belt. It also has the advantage of being close to Aberdare, which is as far above turd status as Mid Glamorgan settlements get, whereas poor Penrhys is girdled by the almost uniformly depressing Rhondda towns.

    • @benjamin-ri2do
      @benjamin-ri2do Год назад

      @@jungatheart6359 we came in at number 2 Rhymney I live pontlottyn it's a step away same place when u grew up around a turdtown you can't smell the shit 😂

  • @anokata-kd8oc
    @anokata-kd8oc Год назад +111

    If this wouldn't be this far away from everything and the condition of the houses weren't this bad, I actually could imagine living there. "Away from all people" - What a wonderful phrase, isn't it? :X

    • @sandrafinbar
      @sandrafinbar Год назад +6

      Yes, but people need shops, services and facilities etc such as transport to other places because most won't have a car and the bus fare is an extra expense to get out for the day.

    • @tinderboxcreations
      @tinderboxcreations Год назад +1

      You wouldn't be away from all people though. You'd be stuck with those you would most likely want to be far away from.

    • @anokata-kd8oc
      @anokata-kd8oc 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@sandrafinbar This is right. But I'm young and I'm up for a hour-long walk every two days, so I would be fine with it

    • @anokata-kd8oc
      @anokata-kd8oc 11 месяцев назад

      @@tinderboxcreations Oh, the "asocial" ones are sometimes the most social ones when you're living next door with them. You're right anyway, but it is a beautiful imagination.

  • @TwinTowerTwo
    @TwinTowerTwo Год назад +50

    If this place wasn't so isolated and hilly and if the houses were in better condition I think it could work, I quite like the angular design of the houses and their positioning is spacious; this has potential and more appealing than a tight terraced street with nowhere to walk or park.

    • @jonb3311
      @jonb3311 Год назад

      You're taking the piss.

    • @reddwarfer999
      @reddwarfer999 Год назад +7

      The only reason the positioning appears 'spacious' is so many houses have been knocked down!

    • @thetruthwillout3347
      @thetruthwillout3347 Год назад +3

      Someone should build a cable car to take you to and from the valley below. That would be fun and useful.

    • @juliebone4929
      @juliebone4929 Год назад +4

      ​@@thetruthwillout3347 before it's vandalised.

    • @timothypowell6298
      @timothypowell6298 Год назад +3

      I would say use them repair and upgrade. As it is they is a lack of housing in many areas throughout the UK for local people's here is a chance to get a good number up and running in that area alone .

  • @markstill515
    @markstill515 Год назад +75

    It was the right thing to do at the time, but they needed infrastructure. There’s similar estates built in Slovakia in the 1960s but they had railway tram services stopping at the villages and mainline connections. They should have got Soviet’s in the 1960s to do the planning

    • @swanvictor887
      @swanvictor887 Год назад +14

      looked like they did, frankly!

    • @Bob-ts2tu
      @Bob-ts2tu Год назад +2

      It's like many places that were thrown up in the 60's like system built tower blocks, a product of there thinking and time to produce affordable housing for increasing post-war populations, and although we see them as abject failures now, it's part of our history, and as you say happened the world over

    • @swanvictor887
      @swanvictor887 Год назад +3

      @@Bob-ts2tu indeed and through that period, there was very much a feeling of optimism and looking forward to the future with excitement, as Europe rebuilt itself after the war. Architects and planners perhaps, it could be said, got a little too excited and swept along with new ideas and fashions/fads. Not a lot of thought was put into long-term maintenance of these projects, if you see what I mean, everyone was caught up in the excitement of the 'new'.

    • @Bob-ts2tu
      @Bob-ts2tu Год назад +3

      @@swanvictor887 hahaha yes, we used to see some of the new buildings a 'futuristic' and how the future will be. An analogy is that we all wanted digital watches when they were new and analogue was seen as 'old fashioned', but later realised digital had no 'soul' and now you wouldnt dream of wearing a digital dress watch, but that's not to say digital doesnt have a place. GL

    • @colin25250
      @colin25250 Год назад +3

      Ideal place to site illegal immigrants instead of army barracks and small village communities

  • @robwebber1217
    @robwebber1217 Год назад +16

    I had to deliver up there in the early 90’s. Air gun pellets used to pepper the van as I drove out.

  • @DrQuadrivium
    @DrQuadrivium Год назад +139

    This place has many things in common with Skelmersdale in Lancashire. Town planning _(together with charted accountancy)_ should be considered an imprisonable crime.

    • @JB-yn4cs
      @JB-yn4cs Год назад +29

      I used to do a lot of work for the council in Skem. A very grim place. I was busy doing a rewire for a sweet old lady only to have her crack head son trying to start a fight with me because he thought I looked at him (all I did was hold the door open for him..).

    • @ljchampion7952
      @ljchampion7952 Год назад +5

      What’s wrong with chartered accountancy?? (Genuine question)

    • @04smallmj
      @04smallmj Год назад +5

      What's wrong with (good) town planning?

    • @DrQuadrivium
      @DrQuadrivium Год назад +9

      @@04smallmj ...
      'Good' towns evolve according to the needs of the communities who live in them. Most 'planned towns end up as disasters because it's impossible to predict, or plan, for the future.

    • @DrQuadrivium
      @DrQuadrivium Год назад +10

      @@ljchampion7952 ...
      Like Estate Agents they charge exorbitant fees for very little actual work.

  • @chrismattravers5434
    @chrismattravers5434 Год назад +42

    I grew up in the Rhondda and Penrhys had a poor reputation. So many folk were plonked there and if you haven't got a car - you really could feel stranded - it is an eye sore. I know many who live there now have done much to try to improve it and it's reputation has improved. He is right though about 60s planners, architecture - dreadful!

    • @PeanutButter111
      @PeanutButter111 Год назад +5

      Yeah grew up here too. Got some fond memories actually :)

    • @FlashyVic
      @FlashyVic Год назад +7

      And I bet all those architects and town planners lived in lovely Georgian or Tudor houses. God forbid they might have to spend even a single night in the hovels they are responsible for.

  • @jamesbeeching6138
    @jamesbeeching6138 Год назад +36

    To add to the original residents misery the houses were very badly built and suffered from leaks and damp...Apparently the original architect based the house design on an Italian mountain village!!

    • @DessieTots
      @DessieTots Год назад +5

      Must have been the same Italian mountain village that Erskine in Scotland was based on.

    • @gamingaccount9890
      @gamingaccount9890 Год назад +5

      They filmed a zombie movie in that area with the slanted houses. Nazi Zombies.. They had a zombie war in that neighborhood.

    • @richard8016
      @richard8016 Год назад +8

      It was based on the Basilicata region in Southern Italy where the houses have similar single roof lines and are also built higgedly piggedly. But the hill tops there tend to be a bit warmer.

    • @swanvictor887
      @swanvictor887 Год назад +5

      @@gamingaccount9890 was it a movie or a documentary...?!

    • @swanvictor887
      @swanvictor887 Год назад +3

      an Italian village bombed by the Allies during WW2...?!

  • @705johnnyboy
    @705johnnyboy Год назад +10

    back in the 90s i remember installing alarms up there jesus it was bleak and some young kids nearly stole my ladders ....

  • @_stoatchaser
    @_stoatchaser Год назад +34

    There was a similar looking estate just outside Oldham called Sholver. It was built to re house people from old slum terraced houses that were way past their best. Within a month of people moving in all the doors had been burnt and the baths were full of coal !! My Dad worked there as an electrician for the local council as an apprentice. Some of the tales he told of that place were unreal

    • @AndrewMinns
      @AndrewMinns Год назад +4

      You can understand why the victorians viewed the working class as only good for cannon fodder for the army. I despise my fellow peasant class as well.

    • @lablackzed
      @lablackzed Год назад +1

      😆😆😆I went to counthill grammar school loved the place .👍🍻

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад +4

      I saw a documentary shot in another town where a site was cleared and new housing was built in 1975. It was all demolished in 1984 because the whole area had turned into Mad Max and the junkies and toerags had basically just trashed it all beyond repair.
      9 years. And I thought those tower blocks were bad coming down after less than 40.

    • @leopold7562
      @leopold7562 Год назад +4

      Funny you should mention that. Watching this reminded me of Sholver as well. Or, more specifically, Upper Sholver. The lower bit was a big standard council estate, but the upper bit was a complete hovel within a couple of years of being built. They even decided, in their infinite wisdom, to build a ring of shops in a well, so the whole place was completely obscured from view, allowing the bored youths to rob, smash and torch the shops without fear of reprisal, as they’d just brick any police cars that went in there and became trapped. Even the shiny new bus terminus didn’t last long. It was originally a standing point for buses to wait for the return journey back to Oldham, but GM Buses very quickly retimed them so that they stayed for just long enough to let passengers on and off, as a bus stood there any length of time was never leaving in one piece.
      Last time I was out that way, it looked like the whole place had been pulled down. And just as well, I suspect nobody liked living there

    • @benhodkinson6467
      @benhodkinson6467 Год назад +1

      Wow just wow! Your views should remain unverbalised

  • @terencebarrett2897
    @terencebarrett2897 Год назад +42

    Honestly I can't believe it,, surely there's bleeding millions of people, who would jump at the chance to be away from uncivilized xxxx" give this town ,village ""to people who want to live in peace

    • @jonb3311
      @jonb3311 Год назад

      Off you go then. Put your furniture where your mouth is.

    • @FireInTheSoul
      @FireInTheSoul Год назад +5

      @terencebarrett This is true. I've lived here since the 80s and its so peaceful. We're a step away from society and surrounded by nature.

    • @AndrewMinns
      @AndrewMinns Год назад +6

      @@FireInTheSoulCould do with the residents cleaning it up and slapping some colored paint on their houses like Tobermory in Scotland.. Id live in a picturesque located hill village away from most humans,but not while it resembles the council tip. The dreary gray stained council houses in Bodmin road in Plymouth i moved to ruined the wooded valley location. i painted mine the first year 100% improvement. none of the neighbors, locals were interested. Just low aspiration peasants.

    • @JB-yn4cs
      @JB-yn4cs Год назад +4

      Yup - I spend most weekends going to somewhere peaceful & rural for bike rides & walks. The houses might not have been all that, but saying there's nothing for kids to do - there's plenty of exploring, walking, fresh air.

    • @FireInTheSoul
      @FireInTheSoul Год назад +6

      @@AndrewMinns I can't speak for others but my house is lovely, my garden is beautiful and I've been planting on the hillside next to my house, trees and suchlike. I do agree that that council should be up here and painting some of the houses. There is only so much residents can do as there is no painting these houses without scaffolding. They are rather large.

  • @AstronomyWales
    @AstronomyWales Год назад +23

    Looking forward to this. Penrhys is right up the hill from where I live. Can't wait to hear your perspective on it.

    • @paulsengupta971
      @paulsengupta971 Год назад

      Ystrad or Tylorstown?

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 11 месяцев назад

      Out of curiosity (Assuming you're living close to the bottom of the hill) how far uphill is Penrhys? ⛰↖😇
      From the video it looks to be a little ways (Perhaps 300-500ft) but it's hard to scale what I'm seeing accurately. (And living in a part of the UK that's as flat as the Netherlands doesn't help that much! 🙃)

    • @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe
      @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@@dieseldragon6756no idea but the hill is massive, I've rode up it even on an electric bike it was extremely difficult.

    • @kurman4749
      @kurman4749 2 месяца назад

      If it's Tylorstown then that's great. I used to live there once, on Parry Street. I moved away in 1994 for work and got married a second time. I love Tylorstown.

  • @bigglestornado3882
    @bigglestornado3882 Год назад +14

    Good description. One of those large buildings had a boiler that was powered by coal from the mines nearby.

  • @iaina3251
    @iaina3251 Год назад +21

    Those houses are soooo
    Scottish looking. I used to live in a town in Scotland full of those kind of houses

    • @markcf83
      @markcf83 Год назад +4

      Plenty of housing like that in Merthyr......

    • @vintagevic4593
      @vintagevic4593 Год назад +4

      Eg Cumbernauld

    • @MDM1992
      @MDM1992 Год назад +1

      They're all over the uk. Just the posh and privileged don't venture out into the "rough" areas to see them.

    • @nicolad8822
      @nicolad8822 Год назад +1

      I always think the grey render which goes streaky when it rains is just about the worst type of housing you could build in Scotland. We had a brand new council house in Glenrothes in the mid 60s, looking at it on Streetview,glad we moved on within a few years.

  • @moonbeammoonbeam5739
    @moonbeammoonbeam5739 Год назад +20

    This is very sad to see. It feels very depressing.

  • @pauldavies5655
    @pauldavies5655 11 месяцев назад +2

    i worked there --- during the early 90 s doing refurbs.
    the security guard said " mate , you can t park your van outside the compound it will get robbed"
    i said " son i m from merthyr tydfil " ---- went down the shops up to a gang of local youths and said " see that van there , every week that does not get touched i shall give you £20 "
    BEST security guards ever !

  • @l1andn154
    @l1andn154 Год назад +1

    Never would have expected markyd123 to be making content like this, but I’m all for it, good job man keep it up!

  • @tonyalways7174
    @tonyalways7174 Год назад +25

    Architects and Town Planners- geniuses all.

    • @AallthewaytoZ2
      @AallthewaytoZ2 Год назад +1

      Corruption has had a hand in all this throughout the country.

  • @jimandmarypowell9783
    @jimandmarypowell9783 Год назад +15

    To add to this, a murder was committed here some years ago. The residents were either too scared or too tight knit to co-operate with the police investigation. The murdered person, apparently, had broken too many of the cultural norms that abound. Read "Cider With Rosie" , noting a similar incident in rural Gloucestershire.

  • @larryjimbob
    @larryjimbob Год назад +1

    The Full Log delivered. Glad you went back for an extra squeeze 😁

  • @271chrissy
    @271chrissy Год назад +24

    So many poorly designed houses in the UK. How any of these plans got approved by councils is just shocking...Cold damp houses...How an architect can walk away with pride knowing that this was his or her work.

    • @anonymousone6075
      @anonymousone6075 Год назад +3

      most of the time the councils back in the 70, 80s and 90s just built estates where they would chuck all the problem families and then these estates would get a bad reputation obviously.
      I don't think they were designed for normal people to live in, more like a punishment

    • @raymondadams7570
      @raymondadams7570 Год назад +7

      the architects don't live there

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад

      It was the 1960s, that's why. Brutalist shitheaps plonked wherever they would fit.
      And basically no concepts of listed buildings or conservation meant that beautiful and perfectly serviceable older buildings were just levelled for concrete crap, which itself was levelled less than 40 years later.

    • @vorebiz
      @vorebiz Год назад +6

      Damp in UK houses should be a national scandal.
      I don't know a single person who has purchased a house or rented who hasn't had some sort of problem with damp and mildew. That includes brand new builds.

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Год назад +2

      ​@@vorebiz❤what's the issue with you Brits? Seems like normal western development of tech and housing standards were and still are ignored?
      In DK these concrete structures were built everywhere, with no heating or construction issues...
      Insulation of hundred year old houses in private hands started mid 70'es.

  • @jonjohnson2844
    @jonjohnson2844 Год назад +20

    Seems like somewhere I might be able to afford to buy a house

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +2

      They aren’t for sale 😂

    • @benjamin-ri2do
      @benjamin-ri2do Год назад

      How can. Buy my aunties it's in the thumbnaill 😂

  • @new_memeplex
    @new_memeplex Год назад +14

    Your videos provide more insight into the uk’s social, economic and cultural dysfunctions than a thousand academic papers or a legion of patronising speeches about ‘levelling up’.

    • @jonathanpork-sausage617
      @jonathanpork-sausage617 Год назад +1

      No they don't. They are just half-funny often ill-informed rants.

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Год назад

      ​@@jonathanpork-sausage617seems like Thatcher started the process?

    • @DukeofBlasphemy
      @DukeofBlasphemy 4 месяца назад

      @@jonathanpork-sausage617 Care to explain to us what's so ill informed about them?

    • @jonathanpork-sausage617
      @jonathanpork-sausage617 4 месяца назад

      They don't look at the whole picture.@@DukeofBlasphemy

  • @davidharris4062
    @davidharris4062 Год назад +24

    I have heard that there has been a planning application for a new school, also the site is going to be sold to a developer, no doubt new houses will be sold which no locals can afford, the building with the blue roof was part of original boiler house, the boiler house has been demolished, also the pipe used to supply the houses used to freeze, so no heat 😂😂😂

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +4

      Thanks for clearing that one up

    • @davidharris4062
      @davidharris4062 Год назад +1

      @@Turdtowns no problems

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Год назад

      Maybe it's about time for another Viking raid to straighten out some issues over there?
      No households are forced to deal with frozen pipes here around

  • @davekennedy6315
    @davekennedy6315 Год назад +30

    What a shame. I actually like the odd looks of the houses, makes a difference from all the clones you get on most UK estates. Surely they could fix the place up?

    • @bengunn3698
      @bengunn3698 Год назад

      @dave.....Yes they could fix it up , with the massive amount of illegal /legal immigration SERCO could take over this place and provide tenants . They could charge the government for the invaders rents and it would become a nice little earner . Being on top of an hill would be nothing to young single men and for entertainment they could go down to the valleys . Welsh left wing parties would finally be getting their sanctuary cities ., and as they are voted in by locals there would be plenty of support for the project. No work would be needed as welfare will finance it .

    • @tobyjackman3212
      @tobyjackman3212 Год назад +4

      Would struggle for employment though

    • @davekennedy6315
      @davekennedy6315 Год назад +2

      @@tobyjackman3212it should surely be a cheaper place for big businesses to set up. Its completely @#£%ed up the inequalities in the UK. This kinda thing shouldn't happen in modern times, they say we have a shortage of houses/flats yet happily let existing properties fall into ruin. Such a load of bollocks!

    • @tobyjackman3212
      @tobyjackman3212 Год назад +1

      @@davekennedy6315
      Good point

    • @monk3yboy69
      @monk3yboy69 Год назад +1

      Modernist architecture….something the UK just dies not understand .

  • @cajsheen2594
    @cajsheen2594 Год назад +24

    This area looks to me as though it has potential. The planting of trees and large shrubs could have helped if sited with care, a coat of paint and a good clear up. A site could have been designated to leave rubbish to be collected. Lastly, some estate staff to be on call for residents when needed. Where there's a will there's a way! XXX

    • @anonymousone6075
      @anonymousone6075 Год назад +3

      they should have looked at any swiss random village and how the houses aren't all crammed in next to each other

    • @nxxynx5039
      @nxxynx5039 Год назад +6

      Does nothing to fix the fact that even the poor of society have little desire to live in horrible concrete boxes prone to condensation, mould, cold and genuinely depressing atmosphere. Something councils and Labour struggle to understand - brutalism and USSR inspired design is not what the working class families want, we want traditional homes - to live in dignity in the homes we grew up in.

    • @jonahwhale9047
      @jonahwhale9047 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@nxxynx5039 You highlight the real problem is in your last sentence. "We want". The problem was always within the people, not the buildings. At some point, perhaps in the 1970s, a rot set in where things changed from "we do", to "we want" then, into the 1980s, to "we destroy". An unrealistic sense of entitlement married, to an unwillingness to do anything (along with raising feral kids). People stopped doing anything, even picking up their own shit, expected the council to do it all instead.
      You want a nice traditional cottage? Well the problem with that is that they are unaffordably expensive to build, so if you want one, you've got to earn it or build it yourself. Not expect to have it laid on for nothing, on Benefit Street. Then the next problem arises, the people you're talking simple don't know how to live, and don't want to graft.
      There was very little wrong with that village that couldn't have been made good, had people only been willing to put back in.
      They have no respect. No respect for themselves. No respect for their environment. You could give them the equivalent of a private property block, and they'd turn it into a shithole within weeks. I've seen it with my own eyes.

    • @AJ-qn6gd
      @AJ-qn6gd 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@jonahwhale9047Sad but true, Margaret Thatcher (love her or hate her) summed it up when she said, give a man a garden and he’ll turn it into a desert, sell a man a desert and he’ll turn it into a garden !

    • @jonahwhale9047
      @jonahwhale9047 11 месяцев назад

      @@AJ-qn6gd I guess that was her theory when they were doing secret arms deals with Saudia Arabia. Not much sign of any gardens arising. I think the original source may have Arthur Young. How about ...
      "Give liberal free market capitalists a planet, and they'll turn it all into a desserted wasteland"
      Seems to be more apt. The weather as we type is wiping out everything green. So to are their economics.

  • @jasehargreaves
    @jasehargreaves Год назад +10

    Fascinating vid, I want to go and see this place

  • @budycelyn
    @budycelyn Год назад +10

    the blue bombshell up the top, in the late 80's was a training centre, i took a course there in computer science for a year, hated the place.

  • @bengunn3698
    @bengunn3698 Год назад +3

    Thanks for advertising it , SERCO will find some tenants for this housing estate . I expect they did not realise it was there .

  • @rad44rr
    @rad44rr 11 месяцев назад +6

    They should hold an art event here where people get to paint houses, murals, get involved with DIY community stuff such as gardens/allotments, play area/nature areas, skatepark for those inclined, a youth club etc. Community builds places up !

    • @laurahall3094
      @laurahall3094 4 месяца назад

      But they don't want Strangers there...

  • @amcluesent
    @amcluesent Год назад +24

    Would probably have been quite nice if all owner-occupied

    • @iwobbly9374
      @iwobbly9374 Год назад +6

      Biggest problem was that no one had any money. To go off the estate they had to catch the bus down and back up the hill. It’s a really steep continuous slope which is about a mile long, that takes no time at all in a car. Once you arrive at the roundabout you then have to traverse the rest of the site, which is on a steep hill, to get to your house. Not a good idea to walk in any inclement weather as the wind, rain and snow can really come down in this part of the world. The bus service was very infrequent so a two way journey would take half a day, few people could afford to run a car. The bus service would stop early evening. People were just isolated and abandoned here on minimal social security and unemployment benefit.

    • @robertely686
      @robertely686 Год назад +3

      Pebble dash suddenly takes on a beautiful hue if the house is owned privately.
      The private house owners wouldn't need jobs in the area either, they could fund their houses from their own sense of self importance.

    • @jonathanpork-sausage617
      @jonathanpork-sausage617 Год назад +3

      I have lived in a housing assocation place for the last 7 years because the house prices in the area where I moved to were/are bonkers and am lucky to be over 55. The area is fine. Plenty of tenants take care of where they live. The idea that renters are an inferior species is a bit of a myth.

    • @normanboyes4983
      @normanboyes4983 Год назад +1

      @@jonathanpork-sausage617 Get a tad more realistic rather than idealistic. When someone is renting and the landlord does the bare minimum the property goes downhill fast. Witness what happened when people bought their own council houses in the 80s - suddenly the mortgage payer spent more money in a year on improving the house than the council did in the previous ten years, they also take more care of both the exterior of the property as well as the interior. If you look at the horror stories of mold in houses it is almost exclusively people renting and rarely mortgage payers (who funnily enough don’t dry their clothes indoors on rads).😊

    • @jonathanpork-sausage617
      @jonathanpork-sausage617 Год назад

      @@normanboyes4983 I don't see how more realistic you can get than being a housing association tenant for years. But you know better or are an ill-informed bigot. Whatever. I am happy where I am.

  • @heleni9331
    @heleni9331 8 месяцев назад

    Your video has made the national news, it was featured in an article in the Daily Express. Congratulations, and keep up the good work.

  • @davidlittle5816
    @davidlittle5816 Год назад +2

    As the sign used too say "Welcome to sunny penrhys-Watch your wheels". The road round is a great proving ground for any car mods you might make, it's like Wales own Nurburgring but a bit shitter!

  • @fabioantoncini1451
    @fabioantoncini1451 Год назад +9

    Always welcome to visit the Medway towns in Kent

    • @MATTY110981
      @MATTY110981 Год назад +1

      My Grandparents lived in Rochester and got to know to Medway towns very well.
      Considering it has a historic centre, good transport links, employment opportunities and has the geographical advantage of being in the south east. The place should not be such a dive.

    • @paulosullivan3472
      @paulosullivan3472 Год назад +3

      Yeah Gillingham and Chatham are two of the worst places in the UK for sure.

  • @vincentbrooker3062
    @vincentbrooker3062 Год назад +7

    I live in the south of England. The issue of problem families all being dumped in one estate happened here as well. The local council had taken it over and they thought it was a great idea. Before that it had been used to rehouse families for inner London as part of a plan to improve people living standards and it it was a good place to live.
    The place became a good place to get your drugs amongst other things such a place to dump your old cars. In the end the council had to pull the whole estate down and at the same time they erased its name from history!
    So much for council social engineering.

    • @mac1975
      @mac1975 11 месяцев назад

      Rowner?

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 11 месяцев назад

      I'm also in the south and an estate near mine was similar - When I moved here, it was somewhere you never went unless you were pretty good at looking after yourself or were wearing Police-issue body armour!
      Since that time it looks like they've mixed housing allocations up a bit to try to „Even things out“. The estate I mention is now a lot more moderate after many of the problem households have seemingly been dispersed over a wider area (There's now a security detail and community Police office there, which also helps) and this seems to be better than the approach they took in the 80s.
      However, you still get „Hot pockets“ here and there. One block in my estate is known to have an array of issues which means the Police visit it a lot. Probably better than the other estate used to be, but still a bit of a „No-go“ area on occasion.

  • @braggminiaturesAnthonyBragg
    @braggminiaturesAnthonyBragg Год назад +2

    I WAS BORN THERE IN 72 AND LIVED THERE FOR TEN YEARS.HAPPY DAYS INDEED .THAT WAS JUST BEFORE THE PLACE STARTED TO CRUMBLE ...SPENT LOTS OF TIME BEING A KID IN THE FOREST ON TOP.G..REAT DAYS....YES THERE WAS THE INFAMOUS OLD BOILER HOUSE ON THE TOP ROAD THAT WAS ALWAYS BREAKING DOWN AND HAD LOTS OF POWER CUTS DUE TO THE EXPOSURE TO WIND AND RAIN UP THERE.

  • @jondixon4937
    @jondixon4937 10 месяцев назад +4

    I delivered a bed here for work in the 90's. It was the last drop of an awful winter's day and just getting dark. I delivered across the UK including deprived areas of cities like London and Birmingham and I never felt unsafe until I went to Penrhys. It felt like one of those places you would just disappear if you looked at someone the wrong way and the other lad with me wouldn't get out of the truck so I had to do the delivery on my own. The amount of people out and about was unnerving considering the weather up there that day.

  • @noctuary28
    @noctuary28 11 месяцев назад +4

    I live a little further up the valley in Pentre but me and my boyfriend sometimes go to Mary's well for walks I've taken some mad liminal space pictures up at the town, you summed it up perfectly. Everyone says 'don't park up penyrys they'll nick your car doors' 😂😂

  • @matthewbriggs9414
    @matthewbriggs9414 Год назад +22

    You gotta do West of the Lake District! Beautiful countryside encrusted with bleak, deteriorating settlements. That stretch of coast is in stark contrast to the picturesque scenes that can be found just a few miles away.
    Really love these vids! These places need plubicity to remind everyone about the unacceptably substandard conditions that linger around the UK and how the nation still needs to figure out how to deal with boom towns and villages that fall into decay.

    • @bengunn3698
      @bengunn3698 Год назад

      @matthew The problem is already being dealt with , The UN has Britain slated for a population density of 184,000,000 , check it out yourself , so these towns could be bought up by such outfits as SERCO and used to house the illegals . No industry or work needed .

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +5

      I really want to mate. How busy is it up there early June? I think I’ve missed my chance

    • @matthewbriggs9414
      @matthewbriggs9414 Год назад +1

      @@Turdtowns Can't say for sure. Based myself in Cockermouth for 7 months, back in early to mid 2021. Plenty going for that little town, which is why I was shocked by the depressive deterioration of the towns and villages when I eventually ventured out towards the coast. Whitehaven had a lot of potential for rejuvenation, but just wanted to escape the other places. No idea what the tourist season is like for that area, but the Lakes is heaving and accomodation prices do start getting crazy, even in Cockermouth.

    • @jonathanpork-sausage617
      @jonathanpork-sausage617 Год назад +4

      Yes. The interestingly named Workington would be a start.

    • @michellebyrom6551
      @michellebyrom6551 Год назад +2

      ​​@@jonathanpork-sausage617 I recall Workington from a few visits around 1990. A lovely setting with a basic old town layout that works elsewhere. Even then, it didn't have the hordes of tourists found a few miles east.
      Like this video and many other towns, there's no economic base supporting them. Right through history, major towns and cities developed due to trade routes and local features serving particular industries. Sometimes that was raw materials like coal, other times its flat land or strong flowing water for mills or just the damp atmosphere of Lancashire and Ulster that's good for textiles and paper production.
      Derwent Pencils in Keswick shifted focus when the wad ran out at the other end of the valley. Now they import from South America. They also go far beyond lead pencils. They became a producer of a wide range high quality art supplies. And a surprisingly interesting museum. That's the kind of thinking needed across GB now. What else can be done with what materials? There's a limit to online services, solid products are needed to provide sustainable jobs.

  • @nickyjlyons
    @nickyjlyons Год назад +15

    My ex girlfriend grew up in the village at the bottom of the valley, Pontygwaith. She once took me on a little tour of Penrhys, it really is bizarre. I’ve never seen such a depressing place in my life. I just feel so bad for the people who live there. It’s fascinating though so if you’re ever nearby it’s a must see!

    • @LeonJones-xn5kc
      @LeonJones-xn5kc 6 месяцев назад +1

      Pontygwaith is the place to be 😊

  • @trudilm3864
    @trudilm3864 Год назад +8

    The concept wasn't terrible, it was just the execution of it. The 60's were a time of concrete housebuilding. Most of that housing has now been removed right across our islands. We've demolished a number of huge estates as 'failed' but the issue still remains: people need homes. We now have more 'people' than we ever did before. All the land formerly designated for housing needs to be used for housing (along with appropriate infrastructure) and the land designated for farming needs to be used to produce food.
    That shouldn't be rocket science.

    • @pootle5096
      @pootle5096 Год назад

      Yet the Government have a clear agenda to reduce farming land - they're reducing subsidies and actually paying farmers huge amounts to let land go wild.
      It won't be too long before we follow Holland and Ireland with the MASSIVE reduction in cattle just to "reduce methane" because of this crackpot psychopathic green agenda bullshit of which the ONLY thing green about it is the money being made by those pushing it.

    • @TheWolfXCIX
      @TheWolfXCIX 11 месяцев назад

      The geography of Penrhys is terrible though, unless you have a car you're stranded and services are difficult to reach. No point trying to rebuild there, especially when there is not huge demand in that area

  • @tarana9329
    @tarana9329 Год назад +4

    Given a lot of people work from home now I can see this place making a come back. Scenery looks lovely.

    • @AdamGoodman4U
      @AdamGoodman4U 8 месяцев назад

      it really has got MASSIVE POTENTIAL.

    • @kurman4749
      @kurman4749 2 месяца назад

      I can assure you that the views from Penrhys are absolutely stunning.

  • @lucieni
    @lucieni Год назад +3

    You’re doing great! Nearly 23k xx

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +1

      Thanks my friend

    • @lucieni
      @lucieni Год назад +2

      @@Turdtowns Keep on keeping on mate x

    • @gazb2740
      @gazb2740 Год назад

      @@Turdtowns Are you Markyd123?

  • @tinachristine4573
    @tinachristine4573 10 месяцев назад

    I drove past your place and I sped up. Thank you for the background story.

  • @davem9208
    @davem9208 7 месяцев назад +2

    Nice video as I actually know of Penrhys and have driven past it on many occasions. One interesting, if not a morbid fact about the area is, that in 1962, after a smallpox outbreak when the local hospital was used as a main site for treatment of it, rather than clean and fumigate the hospital, it was burnt down, being fed with a constant petrol supply to keep the fire going. Were you to come off the island, go down Penrhys Rd then turn first left, it would have been to your left before you got to the golf club. Its footprint can still be made out in the field there, if you know where to look.

    • @kurman4749
      @kurman4749 2 месяца назад

      Yes, I lived just down the hill in Tylorstown at that particular time in 1962 during the smallpox outbreak, I was 13 at the time. When you drive or walk past that spot you find yourself at the golf club and take in some incredible views.

  • @wastelander138
    @wastelander138 Год назад +14

    Reminds me of the village of Hallglen in Falkirk. The brutalist, angled buildings are very similar to what was done there. It is also high up and has had a reputation for being a bit of a craphole. Then again, that could be said for a lot of Falkirk 😆

  • @pipoo1
    @pipoo1 Год назад +7

    To my eyes the location looks stunning, so I’d say it’s more the people than the location that was at fault. Then again I was raised in Aberdeen which is a very hilly city, being built over the peaks and valley of 7 hills before becoming flat as a pancake along the coastal edge.

  • @robertk2194
    @robertk2194 Год назад

    just discovered your channel and i am a big fan

  • @morganbartfield5457
    @morganbartfield5457 Год назад +5

    Yeh it's so run down and deserted it's peppered in solar panels and I also see a lot of cars. I guess the definition of Ghost town has changed a lot over the years.

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +2

      Actually a lot of the places with solar panels were empty. The definition of a ghost town is empty or nearly deserted.

    • @Jon-em4kc
      @Jon-em4kc Год назад

      Solar panels put in place by the housing association, probably state funded, earns them income from an empty property!

    • @glynrhys68
      @glynrhys68 3 месяца назад

      yup it's clearly not a ghost town. it's not empty, most of the houses are occupied.

  • @paulhcan
    @paulhcan Год назад +11

    The house designs look depressingly familiar - every way you described it sounds a lot like parts of Newton Aycliffe in Co Durham. The main difference being they decided not on Grey for the outside, but black brickwork....which looks surprsingly similar in terms of the emotional impact it has.

  • @Pizzpott
    @Pizzpott Год назад +6

    When I was a kid, 6 years old or so, living in Llwynipia, directly below Penrhys, we used to climb over the back wall and walk straight up the mountain to Penrhys, stopping at St. Mary's Well on the way, which was at that time wide open and accessible. There were no houses there and it was beautiful up there then but by the time I was 8 and we moved to Ynyswen, there were houses. I used to go up there as my dad worked up there as a carpenter. He used to call them 'Little Boxes' and sing a bit of the song by Pete Seger to me about them. Roll on 15 years and no one wanted to go to, and as vandalism was then a thing, after centuries of being open to anyone, St. Mary's well was enclosed in Railings, a gate used to be open to allow access then, I doubt it does now though.

  • @lawrencelimburger9160
    @lawrencelimburger9160 Год назад +2

    Like the full (v)log style!

  • @gregkennedy8545
    @gregkennedy8545 Год назад +1

    Did a lot of landscaping in areas like this, all over the Welsh valleys, i remember planting 30 odd mature trees in a park, as we put them in kids came behind us and ring barked them all. Bricks hurled at us as we built sports pitches and so on. Charming

    • @AallthewaytoZ2
      @AallthewaytoZ2 Год назад +2

      1000-2000 newly planted trees were torched by kids on a hill overlooking Port Talbot. All the trees were planted by volunteers (mostly good kids).

  • @lleweybyrne
    @lleweybyrne Год назад +3

    Very interesting story. Never heard of this place. The 4th most deprived town in Wales. God help the other 3 above them on the list!

  • @Peteakwindsurf
    @Peteakwindsurf Год назад +3

    In 1989 We got taken here on a geography field trip to conduct interviews with locals - needless to say it didn't go well...

  • @mathewjenkins5829
    @mathewjenkins5829 10 месяцев назад +1

    Born and raised on Penrhys ...Loved the place!

  • @ddraig1957
    @ddraig1957 Год назад +6

    Penrhys is an extreme case,but there are similar looking estates all over the UK.There is one in Barry,also on a hillside but not nearly as high.I think 60s architects meant well but some of the social housing they designed have been outlasted by the old terraced houses they were meant to replace.

    • @R118GSiVVC
      @R118GSiVVC 11 месяцев назад

      Is that the one down past Lidl?

    • @LeviBandito
      @LeviBandito 9 месяцев назад

      Billy banks that used to be in penarth was absolutely bizarre too. Got knocked down about 10 years ago

  • @theharold6703
    @theharold6703 Год назад +6

    Go there in the depths of winter. Looks like something from the ussr. It's fantastic.

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +2

      I’m actually considering that would be cool to see

    • @PeanutButter111
      @PeanutButter111 Год назад +1

      ​@@FireInTheSoul lol. You on a history rant again? 😂

    • @FireInTheSoul
      @FireInTheSoul Год назад +1

      @@PeanutButter111 always 😊😎❤🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿

    • @scoobyyt1548
      @scoobyyt1548 Год назад

      Sounds like a plan to me . I’ve driven along the m4 from my area near Bath all the way down through wales and only ever passed these places . I’ve gotta take the car and go and explore it properly on foot.

    • @kurman4749
      @kurman4749 2 месяца назад

      USSR is capitalized.

  • @dogcatdogable
    @dogcatdogable Год назад +7

    The pitched roofs look cool to me. I don't think the architecture is/was really the problem, the infrastructure is.

    • @monk3yboy69
      @monk3yboy69 Год назад

      Yup, nothing wrong with the architecture, it’s beautiful .
      These properties just require looking after, like any building.

    • @AallthewaytoZ2
      @AallthewaytoZ2 Год назад

      The houses were poorly designed and poorly built. That is one of the reasons why there was a problem with black mould, damp, and freezing temperatures in winter. The orientation of the rooves also means they don't take advantage of the sun so are naturally cold, dark and damp which are not helpful on top of a windy exposed cold wet mountain. The layout of the houses was also not conducive to healthy social interaction. The pipe from the big furnace at the top of the mountain would also freeze meaning people were without heating for prolonged periods of time. The southern Italian mountain village the architects based their plans on, in addition to being in southern Italy and being in a warmer and drier area, looked pretty but was also itself poorly designed and not a good template for building a village on a cold, wet and exposed mountain in northern Europe. Why didn't they use a Swiss village or Scandanavian village instead?

  • @paulball1767
    @paulball1767 10 месяцев назад +2

    Penrhys Estate was built and opened in 1966. I lived here from 66 to 72 and these houses were spacious and the comunity are very close. We had the comunity centre the pub and a spar in the 60s. We did have a lot of black pats due to heating coming then from the boiler house through coal.

  • @dotpeat1372
    @dotpeat1372 Год назад +1

    Looking at a global scale this still a grande place to be, no belligerent government, completely off grid and quite some space; educate all with watching the 11 series of Walking the Dead, and you can create Heaven on Earth. Small note; I am Daryl! Great upload!

  • @falls333
    @falls333 Год назад +54

    Maybe you can make a Turdtown on Jaywick in Essex along with Clacton-on-Sea and other towns in Essex, Jaywick is the most deprived area in the UK and has an interesting back history to explore.

    • @lucieni
      @lucieni Год назад +7

      I made a comment about Jaywick too! I’m Kent but have visited Jaywick on a trip from Norfolk to Suffolk via Essex to Kent and discovered Jaywick…. I wish I hadn’t!!!

    • @glencurtis6052
      @glencurtis6052 Год назад +5

      This is a great shout and needs to be done

    • @davidrobert2007
      @davidrobert2007 Год назад +12

      In one area of Jaywick most of the roads are named after old time car companies, and the roads are laid out like a car radiator grille when viewed from above. I think it was originally built as a holiday resort, nowadays it's the last resort.

    • @QwadLuzr
      @QwadLuzr Год назад +6

      Jaywick is the turdtown of all turdtowns.

    • @alwayspooh1588
      @alwayspooh1588 Год назад +4

      Jaywick, what a dump. Most towns in Essex are fine - except for Pitsea, Basildon, Southend, Clacton, Canvey - oh crap, there are lots of crappy towns in my county! It is mainly just the coastal areas that are in poverty, like in Suffolk and Norfolk.

  • @MatthewEng2593
    @MatthewEng2593 Год назад +5

    I think it has potential for renewable energy. The roof design looks ideal for solar and the mountain is ideal for wind. It could be free energy with a little investment

    • @mickymidnight1
      @mickymidnight1 Год назад

      It must be suitable for wind as there are quite a few large commercial turbines quite near by....like 15 minute walk away

  • @filmremaker4436
    @filmremaker4436 6 месяцев назад

    what a location though a lovely forestry behind the site with such lovely walks access to both valleys a beautifull golf course and sunshine all day in the summer with no major roads running through here i would imagine all new houses to be built there in the future id love one

  • @benhall4141
    @benhall4141 Год назад

    Great video, thanks

  • @lucieni
    @lucieni Год назад +4

    If ever you cover Essex…. Jaywick… You’ll absolutely love it x

  • @robertquinn8210
    @robertquinn8210 Год назад +4

    "From Bauhaus to Our House," is a great book not about Penrhys, but about why crap like Penrhys exists.

  • @flemmingsorensen5470
    @flemmingsorensen5470 Год назад

    Hindsight is always crystal clear....

  • @MASKINA
    @MASKINA 11 месяцев назад

    Despite your foul language I do enjoy your footage and explanation of this site. I like urban exploration.
    Keep it up!

  • @presterjohn71
    @presterjohn71 Год назад +11

    I had to do some debt collecting in that area during the 90s. A bloody terrifying place at night. What made it worse is that you could never find the house you were after. He's not joking about the random doors etc.

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 11 месяцев назад +19

      Debt collectors should never be made to feel safe.

    • @davidaston1644
      @davidaston1644 6 месяцев назад

      I bet you got bullied at school didn't you?
      Who else would be a debt collector?

  • @thestallionspeaks640
    @thestallionspeaks640 Год назад +1

    A few months ago I had to deliver parcels in Penrhys, it's the only time I've not gone straight through the roundabout. There were plenty of kids out playing, and some residents gathered around a running car, but I remember the further up I went the more empty and abandoned the place felt, lots of clearly abandoned cars, plenty of available parking spaces, fly tipped rubbish. I had to deliver a parcel to the smaller of the two large boarded up abandoned industrial buildings at the top, I was confused on if it was the right building, but I knocked the metal door and some lad answered the door. I'm not sure what's going on in the building, I can only hope it's been purchased for renovation.

    • @mishav90
      @mishav90 Год назад

      I live next door to the building you delivered too, it is privately owned by one man who lives there and is slowly renovating the building.

  • @roberttaylor7462
    @roberttaylor7462 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thanks for preparing the video. Speaking as spatial planner the design of the settlement (2:26) is pretty good - the dwellings face the right orientation for solar gain, there is what looks like a district heating system (maybe that is the hospital building referred to), there is alot of space around the buildings for recreation and minimal shadow paths to neighbouring properties. There is what looks like most of the facilities needed for the scale of the settlement. Including allotment gardens. And the designs of the dwellings themselves whilst possibly could be viewed as dull are not especially offensive either. The geographical location is one of isolation and there fore compromised and we don't know the exact rationalle for siting here and this is ultimately the downfall given poor access to non-daily shops, services, social contact, jobs and further education. The main thing that you have to understand is that new towns are notoriously difficult to plan for because of their unnatural non-organic origins and Penrhys is clearly not self-supporting. To add to the backdrop of this is not the failure of planning but the influence of global economics in the 1970s onwards which has been further exacerbated by neo-liberal politics through the last four decades. Once the mines closed there is little prospect for this type of settlement unless there were some economic development (jobs) nearby or transport initiatives in order to cater for low car ownership to access them.

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 11 месяцев назад

      By the sounds of the video a district heating system sounds like a damned good idea _on paper_ ...But if the paying for it isn't made a standard and inclusive part of the rent (So you pay the same as everyone else whether you're working/on benefits or not) then it's only workable _in practice_ if everybody on the system is in the same boat. 🔥🔁💸
      As this video shows: Once the 70s energy crisis hit, that was it for employed people living on the estate - They weren't receiving any support toward the cost of the communal system while those on the dole had their bills held. Cue floods of employed folk moving out in droves to homes where they can have full control over the heating, and the bills they pay for it.
      I live in an estate with a number of (originally) council blocks - Mixed private & social ownership, mixed employed/disabled/retired - And have often thought district heating would be well suited to our estate. After seeing this video though, I'm not so sure anymore... 🤔

  • @LIVERPOOLandFARBEYONDNEWS
    @LIVERPOOLandFARBEYONDNEWS Год назад +4

    An interesting town with mad looking estates is Skelmersdale which was built to house thousands of liverpools scousers who lived in slum housing. The estates look like some of the worst you will see in Europe

  • @Sinaisid
    @Sinaisid Год назад +3

    I remember going there in 1977 looking to buy my first car (I lived in Pontypridd) - and it looked new and fresh then - better than the run down estates of, e.g. Trebanog. However, its issue was obvious even to a 17 year old me!! It was remote from the Valley’s with no community at all, and was like a wind tunnel!! Oh and the car - complete scam!! I bought a nice Morris 1300 from a colleague of my dad!! Instead ( Well ok my dad paid for it!!).

  • @stephenlawrenson2380
    @stephenlawrenson2380 Год назад +2

    Very similar design houses to Beth Avenue in St Helens. I lived there in the early 70’s. Now gone, it had a lifespan of about 35 years before being flattened

  • @dazzanomas9418
    @dazzanomas9418 11 месяцев назад +1

    As youngster back in the 80's we was always warned to stay away from Penrhys, when i got my first car i took a drive up to see it and understood why we was all warned to stay away from the place. From this video you can not grasp how rough this place really was, even the police wouldn't go up their at night unless they where in a convoy of riot vans because they would always be attacked by local gangs of teenagers. The local feral kids would start a house fire in the hope a fire engine would turn up just so they had something to throw bricks at, back then it was how they entertained themselves.

  • @darksta01
    @darksta01 Год назад +6

    A turd village surrounded by turd towns. Driven through the valleys a few times and always wondered what lunatic would build on top of a mountain

  • @Foxys1974
    @Foxys1974 Год назад +6

    Looks similar to housing in Cumbernauld

  • @rolyswansea8439
    @rolyswansea8439 Год назад +2

    Back in the 80s, I was doing a recce for a gig at the Star in Pentre and decided to find out whether Penrhys was as bad as its reputation. Seeing malevolent expressions on the face of the kids, I rapidly changed my mind and put my foot down til I reached a paved area and the crunching noise of broken glass. I didn't want to get stuck up there with a flat, so slapped on some right lock and the van arse-ended on the rubble in a handbrake(-less) turn. As I GTFO, the kids were picking up bricks, so was glad to see them fast receding in the mirrors. The gig at the bottom of the hill was a little like the Country Bar in the Blues Brothers film.

  • @danielcox7886
    @danielcox7886 Год назад +2

    Love your video's can't wait til the next. Penrhys is a dump and I commented previously saying, "wait til you get to the Rhondda knowing you'd find it lol."

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +1

      It would have been easy to miss. It just looks like some houses by a roundabout really. That’s why I Google street view ever single town before visiting 😂

    • @danielcox7886
      @danielcox7886 Год назад

      @@Turdtowns Someone would of told you. Apparently they used to do road blocks on that roundabout demanding money or valuables. (Rumour has it). I went to Penrhys 20 years ago. It was even worse. Research Billy Banks Penarth.

    • @Walesktf
      @Walesktf Год назад

      @@danielcox7886 The Billy Banks have been knocked down and private housing and flats have been built on the land which the council sold off to a private investor as it has excellent views of Penarth marina and Cardiff Bay. But yeah, back on the day the council flats at Billy Banks was an extremely rough place to live and visit.

    • @kurman4749
      @kurman4749 2 месяца назад

      @@danielcox7886 Rumour has it wrong, pal. That never happened. Someone has been pulling your saggy bell end!

  • @kathleenswift7979
    @kathleenswift7979 Год назад +5

    Could put the Channel visitors there🤣

  • @richard8016
    @richard8016 Год назад +7

    The population of the Rhondda was already falling when this place was built, Families including my grandfather's had their homes compulsory purchased to force them up the mountain. It was the first of many such villages planned by the old Rhondda borough council as a grand master plan for how people should live. Not surprisingly there was such opposition including d##h threats that these plans were quickly forgotten.
    Unbelievable the houses were supposedly modeled on a village in Basilicata, Southern Italy, Ironically thats where my grand mother came from!
    There's a bit of a difference between a southern Italian hill top village and a wet windy Welsh mountain top.
    The big blue building was the boiler house for the heating system you mentioned. The ducting for the pipes were a super highway for cockroaches.

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад

      Yea I heard homes were compulsory purchased. Can’t stand that if you buy a place it shouldn’t happen. Unless they pay you massively over the odds.

    • @richard8016
      @richard8016 Год назад +1

      @@Turdtowns He didnt live long after the move. My Aunties swore it was from a broken heart. He'd voted labour all his life too.

  • @AttitudeCharter
    @AttitudeCharter 5 месяцев назад

    I've been here. Took a photo of the houses as it looked so grim. Hasd no idea what the history or background was. Thanks for clarifying.

  • @vorebiz
    @vorebiz Год назад +2

    Portland in Dorset used to be like this until the 2012 money came in, followed by the "investors".
    It's still a bit grotty but in the late 90s and early 00s it used to be like something from Threads on a bleak day.

  • @gavinhawkin6632
    @gavinhawkin6632 Год назад +6

    It looks like a place where the Uk army would practice Cold War war games!!

    • @Turdtowns
      @Turdtowns  Год назад +3

      They actually did this to a few different villages in the uk. Minus the war part.

    • @majorlaff8682
      @majorlaff8682 Год назад

      Very Cold, war games.

  • @Shagyamum
    @Shagyamum Год назад +4

    Need to do a vid on Bradford. Constantly gets voted UK's worst city and was recently named most dangerous city in Europe. Lived there my whole life and can't wait to move.

    • @nervousheadache
      @nervousheadache 11 месяцев назад

      I’m going to assume it isn’t as bad as it’s made out.

  • @Ian-bq7gp
    @Ian-bq7gp Год назад +2

    I wild camped in october on that hill above Rhondda. It was flooded and the vango tent ended up in a lake. Theres a shortage of housing for many and refugees would be good occupants like Afghans who are often strict muslims and want to work and they are not into using drugs generally. I would live there if it is safe and secure. You dont want kiddie fiddlers and thieves around. The church being there open is very positive and a great inspiration for Rhondda.

    • @OmmerSyssel
      @OmmerSyssel Год назад

      Are you for real? Entire western Europe are haunted during generations by your adored religious nutters! 😮😂😂
      Skyrocketing inbreeding, crime and unemployment statistics proves your romantic nonsense completely out of touch with reality! 🙄💸💸💸

  • @Sirthanksalotmind
    @Sirthanksalotmind Год назад +2

    The large building at the top of the village is/was the boiler house for the communal heating system, I believe.

    • @sandrafinbar
      @sandrafinbar Год назад +1

      The heating system must have been inefficient or expensive. Possibly the homes were not insulated well or not at all, especially for the hill top location. Not sure about the concrete construction and the grey is horrible.

    • @Sirthanksalotmind
      @Sirthanksalotmind Год назад +2

      The creator of this video has it spot on. People who lived on the estate had no control over their energy bills, meaning that anyone who actually worked was at a disadvantage, financially. I live in Pontypridd and have been up to Penrhys a few times. It is truly a s**thole of a place. Should have been torn down in its entirety, decades ago.

  • @adamweston4152
    @adamweston4152 Год назад +11

    I used to deliver meat to Woody's shop and i never had any problems with the locals, it's a awful place though and back when I was delivering i always felt sorry for the people who had to live there.

  • @aceofspades5786
    @aceofspades5786 Год назад +3

    951 empty homes, all restorable, and nice views. criminal waste

  • @01karmacop
    @01karmacop Год назад

    Paisley. Watching from Scotland peace and love to all

  • @Janz32
    @Janz32 Год назад +2

    It's such a shame, would be a lovely place to live, look at the fantastic views you would have, I hope a developer see the potential on this place.

  • @pjdee5879
    @pjdee5879 Год назад +3

    If it was cleared they could sell serviced sites for self-builders. The roads, sewage, electric, etc are already in place. Great views for people who can afford to build.

    • @monk3yboy69
      @monk3yboy69 Год назад

      Thinking the same thing

    • @AdamGoodman4U
      @AdamGoodman4U 8 месяцев назад

      @@monk3yboy69 it has got MASSIVE potential of becoming
      some sort of an Eco Town.