Occupy York Gardens

5 mins read
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Protesters who occupied York Gardens since February to block Wandsworth Council project to destroy the park have been evicted on Friday and now most of the mature trees have gone. They will make space for three buildings up to 14 storeys, with a mix of shared ownership, social rented and private owned accommodations.

“Tonight I’m going to camp in York Gardens. It’s not me, I’m 50-year-old, I have a young son, I don’t do camping. But I think I must do it to help them, Dmitri convinced me”, said Emma Buckley (a local resident living near Lombard Road) over the phone last month. We were April 21st. It was an unusually cold night for the season, she did not sleep more than 30 minutes, she said the day after.

Protesters occupied the park of Winstanley and York Road estates for nearly a month, from April 18th, to stop Wandsworth Council plan to destroy most of the trees in the area, in order to build a range of towers to house a mix range of Council, affordable and private dwellings. On May 13th, they were woken up at 1.30am by security sticking eviction notice on their tents and guards installed several layers of fences around the area. with no warning and before the court hearing!

WhatsApp Image 2021-05-13 at 08.37.41

fencing

Dmitri Barsoukov, who lives in Penge House, just in front of York Gardens, has been protesting against this housing development plan for months. On Thursday at 10:30am last week he was facing a trial held remotely by the High Court. While campaigners claimed the occupation was legal under Section 6 of the Criminal Law Act 1997, which makes forced entry into the premises a criminal offence, Wandsworth Council and lawyers for the Winstanley and York Road regeneration project brought the legal action by issuing a claim form for the possession of property.

At 2pm that same day the judge decided against the protesters and even before the court case was closed, chainsaws came into action to fell the trees, protesters still up on some of them! They stopped after cutting about 6 trees and came back the day after, Friday 14th,  to evict the remaining protesters still in the trees and destroy their camp. By 4.30pm the job was done and all the mature trees in pieces.

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All trees gone thanks to Wandsworth Council!
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Work in progress to make space for tower blocks

The protest began at dawn on Monday 22 February when three tree protectors climbed into a 100-year-old black poplar tree in support of a long running campaign by local residents to save it from being cut. They arrived overnight on Sunday 21st/Monday 22nd February, and two of them have been in the tree continuously since then despite numerous attempts to evict them: Four security guards used barking dogs and bright lights to keep people awake and removed their possessions out of the tree, including food and personal items. Fortunately, they received plenty of food later once the police allowed it again.

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After a few weeks, the police came back on Friday 12th March to remove the last occupier and developers started to cut the tree immediately after.

York Gardens-2021-03-12 at 17.38.28

The tree occupants have received overwhelming support from the local community. John, a local resident, supported the stand against having the tree chopped down and said:

“The only thing that people are driven to, is to protest this way!”

The protest has revealed that the Council has been claiming false support

According to Wandsworth Council (PR January 2020), “the Winstanley and York Road plans were developed following extensive consultation with local people“. They have also mislead the GLA, making them write that “Demolition was supported by the majority of residents at the initial event and ongoing consultation and engagement has maintained this“.

In reality, Wandsworth Council systematically dismissed all concerns and ignored local residents for the past 11 years. We demonstrated that in our article: Consult, then ignore. Make policy, then ignore = the full process of planning decisions in Wandsworth!

The Council has approved plans to rip off greenery and most of the trees for decades

We have published a full case against the current plans for redevelopment of the estates. According to the Council approved plans, the current York Gardens will be bulldozed (and should give place to a 31-32 storey tower at least), Ganley Court freehold terraced houses should be destroyed (with their gardens) and a new smaller green space created.

At the centre of the masterplan is the newly designed park

The truth is that the new open space will be smaller and only likely to be completed around 2035. York Gardens is totalling 3.68 hectares (Google map measurement – 2.52 ha according to Planning Officer’s report 2019/0024) and the press release revealed that the new open space will be only 2.49 hectares (-32%) while the number of homes should grow by 236%! The 2019 report from Wandsworth Council says (p31):

“The development would result in some loss of area. It is proposed that 0.86 ha (8,600 sqm) of York Gardens Park would be completed within the detailed proposals, with the remainder being completed later in the programme up to 2031”.

This is confirmed in the report, which states:

“During the demolition and construction works, the majority of [York Gardens] would be cleared, resulting in the applicant’s opinion “temporary moderate adverse effects”.

The Council is hiding the scale of the destruction

Initially, the developers claimed that over 173 trees, a staggering amount of 124 were marked to be chopped down (most of them being large mature and semi mature trees). Those figures are available on page 284 of the 2019 report, and show that 71% of the existing trees should be removed!

To make things worse, the protesters who occupied York Gardens, and who are supported by XR Wandsworth, initially thought the plans would see at least 124 trees cut down, but , discovered, after reading planning documents, that the total number of trees to go would be significantly higher at 413

Protesters say that the Council is destroying millions of pounds worth of trees here, when they could and should have built around them

  • Wandsworth Council and Taylor Wimpey have already started to flatten York Gardens but activists have published a new petition (with nearly 200 signatures already) to keep some of the remaining trees until construction starts. You can sign the petition HERE.

The current destruction of the park will make space for 3 buildings

Block 5: three buildings referred to as 5A (14 storeys – 65 shared ownership accommodation), 5B (6 storeys – shared equity and social rented accommodation for decant) and 5C (12 storeys – shared equity and social rented accommodation for decant)

The report highlight that the construction of Block 6 is still dependent on equity increase from Council and Taylor Wimpey as  it requires significant CPO related cost (however, Block 6 is actually replacing the Battersea Baptist Church needed to be destroyed and rehoused in phase 0 by end of 2021).

See more media coverage on the protest:


UPDATE: 19/05/2021: Taylor Wimpey has confirmed to protesters that they won’t remove the remaining trees and bushes along York Road before the start of phase 4, scheduled to be 2022 at the earliest (probably later as everything is running a few years late at the moment).

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2018 phasing plan

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CJI editor and Clapham Junction Action Group co-founder and coordinator since 2008, Cyril has lived in Clapham Junction since 2001.
He is also funder and CEO of Habilis-Digital Ltd, a digital agency creating and managing websites and Internet solutions.

2 Comments

  1. Cyril, thank you for keeping us in the picture, but what a sad picture it is. I haven’t been speaking to Cllr Belton for some time. Did the Battersea Society protest?

    Glad that Philip is now arranging another Planning group meeting, but we probably could not have properly done anything, since York Gardens is not in our area of interest.

    A bientot, David

    • It shows that the regeneration project if not consensual and is brutally pushed through, without the broad local support that the Council is claiming.
      Originally Shirley Passmore commented on the plan (in 2013) on behalf of the Wandsworth Society and rejected the full redevelopment preferring a modest change:
      https://cjag.org/2013/12/16/option-1-would-be-a-good-compromise-says-wandsworth-society/

      Later, Philip was on the panel at the public meeting organised in York Library to talk about redevelopments in York area:
      https://cjag.org/2015/11/07/public-meeting-york-area-the-videos/

      It is stretching the usual “patch” of the Society but I think it is a global matter of interest and will have a a noticeable impact if this brutal scheme is not drastically amended.
      To my knowledge, the Battersea Society responded to the 2019 outline planning consultation stating that the mass of documents was impossible to decipher and that they will have to comment on the separate applications.

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