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| Photo by Chris Dorley-Brown |
The picture above gives a historic view of the area (it was taken in 1988) - when the four towers of the estate were still standing. Built between 1966 and 1971, it lies to the north of Hackney Road between Queensbridge Road and Kingsland Road.
Because of the footprint of the buildings the estate earned the nickname 'The Snake.
Its buildings were all named after trees Silverbirch, Pine, Rosewood among others, with the four towers called Rowan, Cedar, Lomas and Grange.
Like so many estates of the time the construction wasn't that great. Even worse was the layout of the buildings. "At the foot of the towers are 16 five-storey deck-access blocks; at the fourth-floor level these are connected by one continuous, quarter-mile-long 'street in the sky'. This has been a dream rat- run for the estates' many muggers and a nightmare for most residents. Those living on the fifth floor have been robbed by burglars who have punched their way through flat roofs," said a report in the Independent.
One resident said: "I remember walking around corrdiors and not even seeing daylight for at least 20 minutes."
Despite these problems it was initially seen as a desirable place to be. "Holly Street was not a bad place to live in those days but slowly it declined and never recovered. The parks which were always full of young children became empty, the flats became shakey and some of the newer residents brought mayhem," said another resident.
There were widespread reports of prostitution and drug deal and all the menace that comes with it. The estate even had its own gang The Holly Street Boys, who still hang around the area to this day finding ways to harrass the neighbouring London Field Boys.
Luckily for the estate it was on Tony Blair's hit-list of places to improve (no doubt fuelled by the fact that he used to live in a house on nearby Mapledene Road) and the prime minister himself came there to express his concerns.
"I got used to the society of fear in the Eighties canvassing on the Holly Street estate in Hackney, now thankfully greatly improved, when people were too scared to open the door and the letterboxes had burn marks around them where lighted rags had been shoved through them," he said.
By that point 80% of the residents themselves said they no longer wanted to live in the estate, so armed with money the council began demolition of all but one of the towers.
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| The Holly Street Estate post demolition |
And here is the masterplan, as designed by Levitt Bernstein Associates to mimic traditional London streets. You can see the one remaining tower to the right which was fully renovated for housing for the elderly.
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| Levitt Bernstein Associates |
The new estate opened in 2003.
It wasn't an immediate success. Residents reported continuing anti-social behaviour of various kinds, brought to a head in 2006 by the murder of Stevens Nyembo-Ya-Muteba.
The father of two girls, aged five and eight at the time, was stabbed through the heart and lungs by 19 year-old Joseph Ekaette in Evergreen Square - an open space in the middle of the new estate.
Ekaette, who was with a group of other youths who filmed the attack on a mobile phone, has been jailed for life.
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| Evergreen Square |
Work is now ongoing to finish the final phase of the regeneration of the estate, Queensbridge Quarter.
It's style is unique for Hackney and a welcome relief from the blandness of the rest of the regenerated estate.











hello,
ReplyDeleteI am doing a dissertation on the successes of the redevelopment of the holly street. In the near future would it be possible to contact you with reference to the photographs above?
many thanks
jonathancochrane7@hotmail.com
I remember the towers being built, great photos of the original snake blocks; another of them was called Sycamore Court which was near the adventure playground.
ReplyDeleteI was one of the lucky ones who got away from holly street in 1995. I agree you could walk around the hall ways for 20 mins without seeing day light,I lived in willows court, some of the flats that had a cupboard on the outside next to the front door, burgles used to break there way though the cupboard door, than break though the thin wall to the flat, other flats used to have a fire door leading from their flat to the outside hall way, but the doors were very thin and unsafe, one good push and the door would be opened, that's how a lot of the flats were robbed. my dad had to build a bookshelf covering the fire door, which kept us safe for the first 10 years, but when we had a fire ourselves in 1994 we couldn't get out. we wasn't moved far after the fire, in fact in was only 5 doors down from our old flat, because if that cupboard door we was broken into 13 times in that one year, I moved in 1995 after i was robbed myself i couldn't go back into holly street. but I did go back once to watch the blowing up of one of the tower blocks, great day.
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