Things That Should Not Have Been Built in Britain
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI suppose they had to do something with those two abandoned chalk pits either end of the Dartford Crossing, (in itself quite an impressive feature, even though a blot on the previous landscape). Hence Lakeside and Bluewater. But have you seen what they've done to once-beloved St Mary Cray, saly, on the NE outskirts of Orpington? It's a kind of nightmare vision of the future: a once cosy Kentish village, Georgian and mediaeval half-timbered houses clustered around a Norman churchyard, exiting onto a massive shopping and industrial estate, out of all scale to the original, complete with supermarkets, takeaways, storage facilities, (there's even a Waterstones), huge parking facilities interspersed with mini soft landscaping crossable only by the most daring on foot, skirted by a jewel carriageway!
I know St Mary Cray S-A because a dear old Aunt had a retiremnt flat there, before she was shunted off into a home. Ths was bcause a new daughter in law turfed her out of the family home in a nice road in PettsWood.
And our bus to Orpingon, which I haven't travelled on for about ten years now, goes through Foots Cray and Crittell's Corner. I visited local cousin's grandparents there in the 1930s when they had a little cottage
with a pretty garden.
Sorry for others, who don't know what I'm talking about but many thanks to S-A for updating me. x
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Originally posted by mercia View Postfunny old place St Mary Cray with that huge railway viaduct towering over, and a faint aroma from the Sunblest bread factory
I used to play the organ in the RC church there
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Originally posted by mercia View Post
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Originally posted by mercia View Post
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Originally posted by mercia View Postoops, not Sunblest but Tip Top
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_Mary_Cray
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostAs you walk across the bridge to the South Bank, a horrible excrescence has appeared on the roof of the Royal Festival Hall, sticking out on the left front of the building.
It's a cantilevered glass and metal structure,apparently built on short stilts, with a glass balcony. Apparently this is a B & B ! Or at least it's an expensive hotel room, whatever it is it completely destroys the aspect of the building. With the South Bank's deficit being what it is, I suppose they need the money !
and is this rather wonderful project ........... as mentioned before
There always was a roof garden on the RFH
BUT it was closed many years before the restoration due to the height of the balustrade
now it has been reopened
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I used to think they were quite beautiful, & essential, but when I was coming back from Rome we flew* quite low over some, & it was obvious how much damage the infrastructure - roads, foundations etc - did. So I'm now not so sure about them. And when they are so ubiquitous that I can stand at the highest point in my local park & see them wherever I look their beauty becomes somewhat diminished. As for the ones at sea, the damage the construction and foundations do to the seabed must also be not insignificant.
*There's a moral in this somewhere
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View Post. As for the ones at sea, the damage the construction and foundations do to the seabed must also be not insignificant.
I think we should reopen Battersea power station WITHOUT filters (or pigs ) on the chimneys , build a nuclear power station in Regents Park and dig an open cast coal mine in Greenwich ..........Last edited by MrGongGong; 06-12-12, 16:27.
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