In some places they pull them down and team up with a developer to build brand new apartment blocks. Half of the flate go to council tenants and the other half are put up for sale. What happened the other day is truly awful but the whole line about council tenants or "the poor" being treated like **** and hard done by is *******s.
A bit of 'social cleansing' was it, f?
Absolute tradegy in any case.
I seem to remember The Address going up in similar fashion near the Burj Khalifa in Dubai.
Cladding was blamed then iirc (for being ****ing flammable).
I think they also concluded it acts as a conduit for the flames to lick up the building.
“Other clubs never came into my thoughts once I knew Arsenal wanted to sign me.”
Landlord is the local authority, and as everyone has been saying, it looks like the cladding may have been the conduit for the fire to spread. All the towers by Archway tube station near me have just been clad to look better. It's happening everywhere. If they've been using flammable cladding in these places then that is madness. Not without reason was London constructed of brick and stone after 1666, and more recently concrete and glass.
I dunno how long ago that was when you were there WES, but if it was 20 years or so then it will have changed. I've walked past that block twice in the last couple of years and like so much of London now, it is mixed. Grim but slightly improving council estates nestled alongside streets of million or multi-million-pound houses. Ladbroke Grove, Notting Hill and Holland Park are only minutes away.
I have seen 2-bedroom flats in the block advertised for £1,600 a month. Not sure how many poor people can afford that.
On the "sustainability" comment, what on earth makes these cretins think that sustainable materials are inflammable?
Because it's clearly a mixture of council flats and people who bought their council flats and are selling/renting them.
London is getting absolutely ridiculous with this renting stuff.
I think that if you are buying to let you should be discouraged by being taxed more imo. Then again this won't work as they'll just put the rent up a bit more too.
can't win.
Yes. One way of easing London rents would be to get all government offices out of London, maybe even move Parliament and the Queen up north.