Twenty Four Hours on The Street Where I Live

6 December, 2020 | Our Neighbourhood | 8 comments

Printed also in Fitzrovia News

Fitzrovia West Neighbourhood Forum (FitzWest) will be holding a public exhibition and consultation entitled  FitzWest Futures – Have Your Say at the Getty Gallery, 46 Eastcastle Street, London W1W 8DX from 11.00am – 8.00pm on Monday 11thh January. This will be an opportunity for people to see the progress we’ve made with the FitzWest Plan and give their views. In anticipation of this event, I’ve been garnering my own thoughts about the area. I’m using this month’s article to highlight public space.

All of us city dwellers tend to live our lives much more in the public domain, in the streets, cafes and public spaces of our neighbourhood.  My twenty four hour diary gives a glimpse of how I use our streets, not only as a thoroughfare, but as a breathing space and a meeting place.

3.00pm Tuesday

I bump into a friend.  We decide to sit on one of the benches under the trees in Candover Street for a five minute catch up.  It could be a lovely spot, but the parking, the rubbish bins and cars screeching round the corner detract from its potential.  A shame, because Candover Street possesses some of our finest arts and crafts buildings in central London, including Boulting’s Manufactory (1903 by the architect H Fuller Clark).  But if I were to step back to admire the architecture, I’d probably be run down!  The speed limit in our area is 30mph. Should it be less?
candover st

Later:

I’m off to the Yorkshire Grey for a quiet pint with my husband.  We plan to sit on the benches in Nottingham Place, but this building, like hundreds of others in our area is having a refit, so instead of a quiet corner we have builders’ mayhem.   We walk around into Riding House Street which is also full of builders gear and completely blocked off to cars.  I reckon the street cleaners have abandoned it too.
nottingham place

1.00am Wednesday morning

I’m woken by shouts in the street. An arguing couple probably don’t realise that I’m in bed only a few metres from where their voices are becoming increasingly raised. I pull the curtains aside.  There they are, under the lamp post, oblivious to the fact that all my neighbours can hear them. About 4,000 people live in FitzWest. It is actually one of the most densely populated neighbourhoods in the country.

10.30am Wednesday

I’m cycling off to do some shopping.  New Cavendish Street is to be designated as a cycling quietway, but who knows how they’ll manage it.  I take my life in my hands, it is so congested.  I think we need quiet quarters, not just a few so-called quiet streets. Are any of the through routes really necessary in FitzWest?

Some of my neighbours are still putting out rubbish, oblivious of the fact that the collection is long gone and they are all potentially in line for a £50.00 fine.  I’m disgusted when I see two open bags full of food scraps that will undoubtedly attract vermin.  But to give them their due, collections are not advertised on my street. Many people would prefer to take their rubbish to a recycling point.

Turning into Langham Street I have to negotiate another hazard.  The female Ginko trees have dropped their fruit. The council have made an attempt to clean up the pavement, but it still smells disgusting.  My heel slips on gunge.

open rubbish

1.00pm Lunch in a cafe
We all value this area because of the cafes and cosy pubs. I love the independent shops, the quirky businesses, the galleries and college activity.  But the traffic, noise, pollution and rubbish nuisance that this intensity of use causes is something we hate.  This is a beautiful area with huge potential.  I ought to be proud of living and working at the heart of this great city; not embarrassed by the mess.

The FitzWest Forum is taking some short term action.  We’ve asked for the Ginko trees to be replaced. We’ve started a dialogue with Westminster City Council, trying to find solutions to the rubbish problem and we’ve joined with The West End partnership to see if we can make change right across the West End.

Then there are the invisible menaces. Noise is one; pollution another.  The invisible pollutants like nitrogen dioxide and fine particulates are more pernicious than ever the London smog was. They are at their greatest intensity in our area, Euston Road, Marylebone Road and Oxford Street are hotspots.  More than 10,000 people die each year in London from pollution (GLA figures). It affects the young and the elderly disproportionately.   Calming the traffic and planting would help, but really we must consider restricting air conditioning and discouraging diesel vehicle trips.

In our last public meeting the forum made public space issues one of the top priorities for the FitzWest Neighbourhood Plan.  In the January exhibition at the Getty Photographic Gallery, we will be proposing new local planning policies can support this ambition.

Have your say. It’s free to join the forum here: Fitzwest.org/wordpress

By Wendy Shillam Chair of FitzWest

An edited version of this article appearsin the December 2015 issue of  The Fitzrovia News

8 Comments

  1. Jon Tarlton

    Please, please stop asking to have the ginkgo trees in Langham Street replaced. I live in Langham Street and I love them. They are beautiful well established trees and even now the colour of their leaves is wonderful. Yes, they do drop fruits and they do smell however I still use that pavement during the season they drop and I can cope with the inconvenience for a few weeks. Let’s not try to drive out all hint of the natural world from our lives.

    Please send me the details of the department of Westminster Council that you are speaking to about this so I may make my representation directly to them.

    Many thank.

    Jon

    • admin

      Dear John,

      We have been dealing with Chris Colwell Senior Arboricultural Officer, but his latest email suggests that any concerns should be directed via your Ward Councillor.
      Wendy Shillam Chairman of FitzWest Executive

  2. Chris Shaw

    Please can we remove the ginkgo tree in Langham Street (corner of Gosfield Street) that drops the very smelly fruit that rots on the pavement and street and makes the various surfaces very slippery and dangerous. The tree should be replaced with a mature tree of another species preferably something like a maple or copper beech that has good leaf colour of an interesting variety.

  3. Jennifer Kavanagh

    I rang the council some years ago about the smelly tree. I love trees,but everyone treading in this horrible smell into our houses is awful. Yes, please, a replacement. Thanks.

  4. Jennifer Kavanagh

    Other subjects:
    1. I complained about blocked drains leaving impassable lakes in our streets before the leaves began to fall and the recent rain. Please can something be done?

    2. I know the argument for removing the bins on Langham Street, but the dumping is even worse now – there seems to be rubbish everywhere. Please give us back our bins. Thanks.

  5. Gordon Tees

    As a long-time local resident, I support the removal of the Gingko fruit tree in Langham Street – providing it is replaced with a suitably mature specimen.

    Perhaps the Arboricultural team could also replace the two dead trees that blight Riding House Street at the same time: the vandalised one at the junction with Wells Street (dead since late summer) and the dead one at the junction with Middleton Place (dead for over two years).

  6. Jan Lewis

    As an occasional visitor, but great lover of nature within a city, I would be very sad to think of your ginkgo trees being destroyed. They wouldn’t replace it with a mature tree, just a spindly sapling, and if it is the same as in Sheffield, they don’t even have to put it in the same place, nor do they have to replace it again if it doesn’t survive. Also, a young tree only absorbs a fraction of the CO2 (and other pollutants) absorbed by a mature tree. Please keep your trees, and put up with the smelly fruits for the short time they are a problem. (Perhaps some people could use a hose pipe and wash the pavements near their own premises). Whatever, please value your ginkgo trees.

    • admin

      Thanks for your comments. As you live in Sheffield, which I think has a tradition of street fruit trees which people are allowed to pick from(?) I thought you might be unaware of some of the issues surrounding these trees.
      We are fortunate in this part of Fitzrovia to have a very good selection of street trees from a planting initiative that started ten years ago. Most are ornamental pear trees that have blossom and lovely autumn colour (but no pears!) Every year, half a dozen trees in the neighbourhood, out of perhaps a hundred require replacement for one reason or another. So two replacements this winter would hardly be unusual. The offending trees form a line of Ginko trees in Langham Street, most of which are male. We think the two female plants were planted in error. We have requested replacement with mature trees and we do generally get that in Westminster.
      Ginko fruiting commences in August and the fruit continues to drop all autumn and winter. As we don’t get frosts often in this part of the city the fruit tends to hang around. Members of the neighbourhood forum feels that such a continuous clean up is not an appropriate ask for people living in the affordable flats that front onto this part of the street.