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Community History Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Uncategorized

Broomfield House options under review

IMG_2863The rejection in January of the Heritage Lottery Fund bid for Broomfield House was a temporary setback, not game over, say the groups behind the proposals.

Further discussions with HLF have revealed that the application may in fact have been a near miss – it was supported by London HLF officers in Round 1 of the process, and only rejected at the national stage due to the number of other applications and availability of funds.

The bid is understood to have scored highly on heritage and community and the close relationship with Enfield Council but, in the form submitted in October, was a higher risk than HLF was willing to accept. Friends of Broomfield Park and the Broomfield House Trust are now looking at options for a way forward. At update will be given at the next Open Meeting of the Friends of Broomfield Park on 8 May -(7.30 at the Ruth Winston Centre).

‘Seen against the long history of attempts to at regeneration [the setback is] not a fatal one,’ said Roger Blows of the Trust and Laki Marangos of the Friends in a joint letter to the Enfield Advertiser last week. “The latest proposal is the most encouraging to date.” The Broomfield House working group has called on Enfield Council  to remain steadfast in its commitment to the future of the house.

One thing is for certain, if there is to be hope for Broomfield, a huge fund raising effort will be needed, and that means support from the Palmers Green community.

For the latest information, visit http://www.broomfieldhouse.org/index.html

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Food Health History Palmers Green Shops Uncategorized

Horse with repetition

The recent controversy about horse meat in various products is nothing new apparently.

In his book, Southgate and Edmonton Past, Graham Dalling tells the story of the outcry in 1941 when it was discovered that meat roll served at local British Restaurants (run by the Council) had been adulterated with horse meat.

Investigations showed that the Council’s catering officer was also in possession of unfeasibly large supplies of custard powder, probably intended for the black market.

Police swarmed the Town Hall at Palmers Green and there were calls for the entire Council to resign. They didnt, but the catering officer was successfully prosecuted.

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Palmers Green Planning and open spaces Uncategorized

Dreaming of spring, laughing children and boats

The boating pond in Broomfield Park lay drained of water at the weekend, exposing its concrete bottom. The lake was created at the instigation of  Thomas Melville of Old Park House, who served on Southgate Urban District Council for many years and was its chair during the war. It was known for some while locally as Loch Melville.

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Uncategorized

The silver screen returns

Time was, if you fancied a night at the cinema, you had a huge range of options. There were two cinemas in PG, the huge Palmadium, and the Queens, both on Green Lanes. A stroll up to Winchmore Hill would take you to the Capital, or Southgate to the Odeon, and Enfield had several more.

These days its a case of schlep down into Wood Green or Muswell Hill, or jump in the car to Southbury Road. And you can just about make it to the wonderful Phoenix in East Finchley on the 102 if you have a bit of time on your hands and don’t mind getting back a bit late, but frankly we never quite have the energy.

But could it all be changing? Last month saw the second cluster of events from Around the Corner Cinema, which first saw light of day as part of the N21 festival.

Meanwhile, Palmers Green’s own Talkies Community Cinema has been going from strength to strength. The latest announcement from Talkies is First Thursdays, a series of monthly nights at the Dugdale Centre running from May until August. The summer season then finishes with a sing along Wizard of Oz at the United Reformed Church in Fox Lane on 31 August, the eve of the Palmers Green Festival. The full roster for the First Thursdays events is: 2 May A Serious Man, 6 June The Wave, 4 July Zero Dark Thirty, 1 August Chungking Express.

But you don’t have to wait until May for your next cinematic experience. This month Talkies takes part in the international  Future Shorts festival with a night of award winning short films at Baskervilles on Friday 22 March. There are two showings – the first at 7.30 is now sold out but at the time of writing there are still tickets for the second showing at 9.15. Baskervilles are offering a special pre show menu, as well as drinks and cakes. Bookings for all events can be made here.

Talkies is also asking local residents what kinds of film they would most like to see in the future. Click here to complete the questionnaire : Main Film Genres Questionnaire_(final) and email to David Williamson at talkiescommunitycinema@gmail.com. You can see responses so far on the Talkies website.

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Categories
Art and Culture History Southgate Uncategorized

Happy Birthday Southgate Station

IMG_3119Eighty years ago today, on 13 March 1933, the very first passengers streamed through the round ticket hall of the newly opened Southgate station, armed  with free return tickets to Piccadilly Circus, part of a London Underground opening promotion to local residents.

We have got used to the wonderful, now Grade II listed, stations on the Piccadilly Line, but its hard to imagine what people must have thought in staid and respectable Palmers Green as the new art deco-inspired station emerged at the tail end of 1932, on land which had til recently been countryside.

The new Underground station wasn’t the first ‘Southgate’. Palmers Green station was known as Palmers Green and Southgate until the 1970s, and New Southgate had been opened in 1850 (though it was originally known as Colney Hatch). Plain old ‘Southgate’ also wasnt the only option  on the table prior to opening. Other suggestions included ‘Chase Side’ and ‘Southgate Central’.

IMG_3132The stations on the Piccadilly, as well as many on other parts of the underground, were designed by Charles Holden, a man who can truly be said to have changed the face of London. Notoriously modest – he refused a knighthood on two occasions, arguing  that architecture is collaborative work, not of one individual –  Holden described his stations as brick boxes with concrete roofs, but behind his modesty was an obsession with form and function combined with remarkable attention to beauty and detail in everything from structure down to fixtures and fittings.

Holden’s background was far from privileged. Born in 1875, he had left school at 13 to become a railway ticket clerk, before becoming an apprentice to a Manchester architect and graduating from Manchester Technical College. In 1899 he came to London and the employ of H Adams, architects.

Holden was initially influenced by the arts and crafts movement before becoming increasingly drawn to a kind of classical, stripped down, modernist style in which his prime interest was solving functional problems – for example, in the case of 55 Broadway, how rainwater could be harnessed to clean buildings.

IMG_3141Holden first met with London Underground managing director Frank Pick in 1915 when both became founder members of the Design and Industries Association (DIA), set up with a mission to improve standards of design in public life with a mantra of ‘nothing need be ugly’. His first commission for London Underground was a redesign of the façade for Westminster station, and in 1924 he was commissioned to design stations on a new southern extension to the Northern Line, from Clapham Common to Morden. He ultimately became involved in the remodelling or design of over 50 stations and as well as designing London Underground’s HQ at the aforementioned 55 Broadway, which, at 10 stories, dwarfed the buildings around it when it opened in 1929, a kind of first sky scraper.

In 1930 Holden and Pick embarked on an architectural tour of Northern Europe, prior to beginning work on the Piccadilly Line.  The buildings they saw in Holland, Sweden and Germany influenced the development of an instantly recognisable style, one that  was to be crucial in the next phase of LU’s quest to establish itself as a modern company, pushing forward to a new future.   The architecture of the Piccadilly line was used to publicise the  newly opened line, which was promoted as a tourist attraction – ‘come and look’, said the posters.

IMG_3128Last year, despite some opposition from local people, the tatty roundabout in front of the station was restored to its 1930s appearance, setting off the station once again.

Holden’s station still appears weird and wonderful today, though its vision of the future is very much of its time, and would be at home in Metropolis (1927) or the original Flash Gordon films (1936).

Says RIBA’s excellent micro site on Holden

At night, Southgate station emanated an eerie glow and with its dramatically lit canopy and futuristic beacon on the roof, looked more like an alien space ship than an Underground station.

Love it or hate it – and I hope you love it – this amazing piece of architectural history is ours.

More information

Bright Underground Spaces: The Railway Stations of Charles Holden

London Underground By Design

Underground, Overground: A Passenger’s History of the Tube

London Underground archive video of the creation of the Piccadilly line extension. http://www.ltmcollection.org/films/film/film.html?IXfilm=FLO.0004&_IXSESSION_=pZHBpNg1DHH

Modernism in London – page on Southgate http://www.modernism-in-metroland.co.uk/southgate.html

RIBA’s micro site on Charles Holden and his work with London Underground http://www.architecture.com/LibraryDrawingsAndPhotographs/Exhibitionsandloans/VARIBAArchitecturePartnershipexhibitions/UndergroundJourneys/UndergroundJourneys.aspxntastic mG

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Palmers Green

I dont want to be pampas but …

….what thought process lead to this?

“What shall I do with  these giant fronds of pampas grass?”

“Shall I put them in the green recycling bin?”

“I know, I will lug them all the way down to Palmers Green station, and dump them on the station.”

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