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Camden is very desirable, a magnet for tourists and has lots of cool stuff. These blocks look a bit scruffy but there's something cool about the style. I wouldn't mind living here.
I do live there (not exactly there, I live in a home just off-camera) so I can confirm that the photo doesn’t do it justice and it’s actually really nice.
Bet you take the same photo on a sunny spring/summer day and people would praise it. Also pretty cool architectural style to allow for each unit to have a balcony .
People do praise it, constantly, as an example of social housing done right. The architects definitely had the tenants’ well-being at heart when designing these flats, and the people that have lived here have been generally positive about the experience.
The UK has extensive public housing. I'm not from there, but to my knowledge it's typically called "council housing", and people live in "council flats" or small apartments. Many council developments were built post WW2 through the 60s, as a result of the huge economic impact the war has on the country. They're by no means glamorous, but they're several steps up from my understanding of what to expect from Section 8 housing, the US equivalent.
It's been absolutely decimated over the past 40+ years, we have had a massive housing crisis in the past couple of decades because the govt allows people including landlords to buy council housing. I would absolutely disagree with calling it extensive, there are multi-year waiting lists to get social housing (I live in London, its the same across all boroughs).
This is largely due to [Right to Buy](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_to_Buy), a policy that lets council house residents buy the home they are renting at a big discount. This means that council housing is constantly vanishing, becoming private properties that then get rented out or sold. Basically the government creating and subsidising landlords.
Yeah, it sucks really hard. I live in a former council flat/right to buy place bought by a landlord, and instead of a family here it's just every room being converted into a bedroom to maximise profit.
Yeah council housing here isn't quite like the US version. Generally it's just normal houses and apartment blocks that were originally built by the local councils and owned by them. However starting with the Thatcher government there has been a "right to buy" so a lot of them are now privately owned.
Honestly, I love the idea and think on a nice day it would look much better. You can tell it comes from that 60s/70s "concrete cube with a few tiny windows" era but the architect clearly tried to make something cheap that still has visual appeal.
I generally hate brutalism but this development is actually a place I would want to live in. A picture of most cities on a grey, winter day will make any of them look depressing.
The barbican estate is lit the epitome of brutalism but it’s a wonderful place to live, and the fundamentally human-centric design still works incredibly well.
Concrete is hard to keep nice looking in a rainy country. But it is quite nice at a ground level:
[Alexandra Road Estate - London : r/UrbanHell (reddit.com)](https://www.reddit.com/r/UrbanHell/comments/1721be0/alexandra_road_estate_london/#lightbox)
[Alexandra Road Park - jlg-london](https://jlg-london.com/Alexandra-Road-Park)
The North Peckham estate it is not.
Is it very different from Camdem Town?
I lived a bit North in Archway for like 4 years, and I liked Camdem Town as an area to go out, but always found it a bit sketchy. I went there mostly after dark (except when I went to the market), so maybe that didn't help, haha.
I'm reading a book about it right now called "Modernist estates and the people who live in them".
This place seems like it's really nice to actually live in.
I was gonna say. Take a picture of this in the spring or summer and I bet it looks lovely.
All those trees, nice big walkable avenue between the buildings, little gardens and balconies. It's got great shared spaces too, I bet you really get to know your neighbors there.
this is [Alexandra & Ainsworth Estate, Borough of Camden](https://www.reddit.com/r/UrbanHell/comments/1csg75i/alexandra_ainsworth_estate_borough_of_camden/)
I also feel like this is where one of the last scenes in the bodyguard is from. I don’t want to spoil anything but he’s in a sticky situation here. Could be 100% off tho, just looks similar
It’s so weird looking that it’s used on dozens of films, tv shows, and music videos. It’s very ugly but the amenities are good and it’s very expensive and quite middle class now.
It's weird looking, but those balconies provide pretty ample outdoor space. I'd wager with a power washing and some more vibrant paint, it would look pretty luxury.
Honestly I saw 3 knife crimes and one gun crime when I lived there and it was always in places nicer than these dives.
Fortunately, in London, most people don't like to shit on their doorstep so living there might be safer than most rofl.
Well you say that but I have stabbings and shootings every few months opposite the barrier block in Brixton.
However you never see phone theft or muggings. Those happen in nicer areas.
This has won multiple architectural awards and is really rather nice for social housing as well as being on the West Hampstead/St Johns Wood border so the private ones are bloody expensive.
They really are, they are some of the last flourishes of social housing where design was prioritised over simply cramming as many people into a tower block as [possible](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_Road_Estate).
agreed, I don't think OP knows this place really well and is basing judgement on a crappy photo taken at a crappy time of the year. It's a wonderful structure
I've noticed many trad accounts post pictures of buildings from an angle that nobody would ever see them from. They never consider pedestrian/resident experience.
They're probably insanely jealous but don't even realize it themselves with the lack of self awareness and critical thinking. This is a great place to live, end of story.
On the one hand I’m like 80% sure I remember a scene where they’re in those appartments at the beginning of the movie.
On the other hand there’s no way I’m rewatching the movie to be sure.
I live a minute's walk from the A&A estate and walk past it virtually every day and it's a glorious building.
A brilliant design.
Ultimately, it's Brutalism, so you're likely to either love it or hate it.
Another angle: \[img\]https://i.imgur.com/cLhJVOL.jpg\[/img\]
BTW, what you're seeing here is the Alexandra Road (or Rowley Way) part of the estate and it's very safe and peaceful with a good sense of community, but to the right - out of shot, past the blue-caged playing field) is the Ainsworth part of the estate that face Boundary Road.
I imagine that many people would find these buildings much more aesthetically agreeable (imposing, 1940s-built, in a classic red-brown brick '30s neo-deco style) with large areas of green space and plenty of large trees.
However, this part of the estate is as dodgy as fuck.
So, looks can be deceiving.
https://www.google.com/maps/@51.5384443,-0.1836885,3a,90y,293.73h,88.65t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1so-yZru\_FZ7U01fdIjdvl8g!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fpanoid%3Do-yZru\_FZ7U01fdIjdvl8g%26cb\_client%3Dmaps\_sv.share%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26yaw%3D293.73100008418464%26pitch%3D1.3460340887404953%26thumbfov%3D90!7i16384!8i8192?coh=205410&entry=ttu
If you ever get a chance to visit Toronto, we have quite a bit of Brutalism in the downtown area.
[https://www.instagram.com/torontobrutalist/](https://www.instagram.com/torontobrutalist/)
[https://www.theglobeandmail.com/real-estate/toronto/article-a-brutal-trek-through-torontos-brutalist-architecture/](https://www.theglobeandmail.com/real-estate/toronto/article-a-brutal-trek-through-torontos-brutalist-architecture/)
There is certainly more interesting areas of the city to hangout and experience, but I always dug that area for the architecture.
These look pretty well designed from an american perspective: near transit, places to walk and ride a bike, right by a park, plenty of trees, no giant parking lots, everybody gets a nice view of the sky and cloud cover. Aside from the fact that it's a crappy day, that looks downright pleasant.
Yeah, not 'hell' by a long way: https://www.themodernhouse.com/past-sales/rowley-way-london-nw8/
A one-bedroom flat (that needs done up) is currently going for offers over £350,000: https://www.purplebricks.co.uk/brochure/1221983
£350,000 is insanely cheap in that part of London. The average property price in Camden is more than double that.
This thread wants people to think that estate is some hot commodity but clearly the housing market doesn't think so.
That aerial pic doesn’t make it justice. I stayed in this area October last year and it was a quite nice neighborhood, very walkable and enjoyable compared to other London's areas.
I actually don't mind it - I went to the outer territories in Hong Kong - the outside of the massive apartment complexes looked dystopian... Until you went inside one - a home... Lovely cooking, lovely families and fun. I am sure the buildings here that look so bad, have awesome insides...
I like the idea of terraces, that way the lower apart can receive as much sunlight as the upper ones.
All it needs to look cool is a good power wash and lots of greenery, since the whole complex seems to be lacking in that aspect.
Paired with its brutalist architecture, it would look like a solar punk landscape.
actually really cool municipal architecture - and generally it seems people really like living there, it's in a fantastic location just next to Camden Town / Primrose Hill - [http://alexandraandainsworth.org/history/](http://alexandraandainsworth.org/history/)
Weirdly, I'm sure that's the street I used to take down to the train station. When I lived in Enfield over a decade ago I always thought it was quite lovely.
Time and perspective.
I think most architecture from the mid-1960s to the early 1990s is ugly.
This is no exception, but it does look like a pretty nice place to live overall.
You picked a blurry picture on a muggy day. Honestly, these buildings aren’t my favourite but walking around this area is fine.
My most hated parts of London are probably the North West (dual carriageways everywhere), Elephant and Castle (I hate the Faraday memorial and the ring road cutting through all pedestrian areas), and Canary Wharf (shiny but pretty soulless).
I personally think this is beautiful, just needs maybe a bit more street art or like DIY personalization to give it a more lived-in feel. But the form, greenery, and central pedestrian street is lovely
Oh, how terrible, everyone gets natural sunlight, they don't have anything obstructing the view directly outside, walkable path right outside and main road on the back, plus a park/sports area on the other side.
How can they live like this!
This place was designed for the working class and sets a standard that today's housing cannot match. But something like 30% of the flats have been bought by trendies with cash because they think it's cool and brutalist. Their entitled attitude is wrecking the community feel because they are not working class people and they don't do friendly working-class solidarity. They just pose. The more flats they buy, the more they will wreck the community. END RIGHT TO BUY before it's too late.
It was in the spy movie few years back, golden circle something etc was the second movie name.
There main character lives in one and escape from there jumping around.
Fuck everyone get a patio. Like have an area of cool party peeps and have banging patio parties in the summer. Rent a splash pool and air slide and all kinds of shit. Would be lit AF
**Do not comment to gatekeep that something "isn't urban" or "isn't hell"**. Our rules are very expansive in content we welcome, so do not assume just based off your false impression of the phrase "UrbanHell" UrbanHell is any human-built place you think is worth critizing. Suburban Hell, Rural Hell, and wealthy locales are allowed. Gatekeeping comments may be removed. Want to shitpost about shitty posts? Go to /r/urbanhellcirclejerk. Still have questions?: Read our [FAQ](https://www.reddit.com/r/UrbanHell/wiki/index). *I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please [contact the moderators of this subreddit](/message/compose/?to=/r/UrbanHell) if you have any questions or concerns.*
It's actually in a really nice part of London.
Camden is very desirable, a magnet for tourists and has lots of cool stuff. These blocks look a bit scruffy but there's something cool about the style. I wouldn't mind living here.
I do live there (not exactly there, I live in a home just off-camera) so I can confirm that the photo doesn’t do it justice and it’s actually really nice.
Bet you take the same photo on a sunny spring/summer day and people would praise it. Also pretty cool architectural style to allow for each unit to have a balcony .
People do praise it, constantly, as an example of social housing done right. The architects definitely had the tenants’ well-being at heart when designing these flats, and the people that have lived here have been generally positive about the experience.
This is public housing? Never would’ve guessed that.
The UK has extensive public housing. I'm not from there, but to my knowledge it's typically called "council housing", and people live in "council flats" or small apartments. Many council developments were built post WW2 through the 60s, as a result of the huge economic impact the war has on the country. They're by no means glamorous, but they're several steps up from my understanding of what to expect from Section 8 housing, the US equivalent.
It's been absolutely decimated over the past 40+ years, we have had a massive housing crisis in the past couple of decades because the govt allows people including landlords to buy council housing. I would absolutely disagree with calling it extensive, there are multi-year waiting lists to get social housing (I live in London, its the same across all boroughs).
This is largely due to [Right to Buy](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_to_Buy), a policy that lets council house residents buy the home they are renting at a big discount. This means that council housing is constantly vanishing, becoming private properties that then get rented out or sold. Basically the government creating and subsidising landlords.
Yeah, it sucks really hard. I live in a former council flat/right to buy place bought by a landlord, and instead of a family here it's just every room being converted into a bedroom to maximise profit.
My three guesses on who began that policy (without ever clicking your link) are: Thatcher, Thatcher and Thatcher
Yeah council housing here isn't quite like the US version. Generally it's just normal houses and apartment blocks that were originally built by the local councils and owned by them. However starting with the Thatcher government there has been a "right to buy" so a lot of them are now privately owned.
Honestly, I love the idea and think on a nice day it would look much better. You can tell it comes from that 60s/70s "concrete cube with a few tiny windows" era but the architect clearly tried to make something cheap that still has visual appeal.
I was just thinking the London weather makes this look much worse than it is
I generally hate brutalism but this development is actually a place I would want to live in. A picture of most cities on a grey, winter day will make any of them look depressing.
The barbican estate is lit the epitome of brutalism but it’s a wonderful place to live, and the fundamentally human-centric design still works incredibly well.
I like it even just from this photo.
A quick powerwashing would have these flats looking shiny af.
Concrete is hard to keep nice looking in a rainy country. But it is quite nice at a ground level: [Alexandra Road Estate - London : r/UrbanHell (reddit.com)](https://www.reddit.com/r/UrbanHell/comments/1721be0/alexandra_road_estate_london/#lightbox) [Alexandra Road Park - jlg-london](https://jlg-london.com/Alexandra-Road-Park) The North Peckham estate it is not.
Yeah like this place would look a lot nicer if the side walls had a mural on it and there were more trees between the two strips of buildings.
I’m betting this pic would look a lot nicer taken in summer when the greenery’s out in full
The flats are nice up close too. A lot of greenery and I like the unusual design
Is it very different from Camdem Town? I lived a bit North in Archway for like 4 years, and I liked Camdem Town as an area to go out, but always found it a bit sketchy. I went there mostly after dark (except when I went to the market), so maybe that didn't help, haha.
It’s right on the border of Camden and Westminster. The nearest ‘famous’ places are probably Abbey Road Studios and Lords.
I'm reading a book about it right now called "Modernist estates and the people who live in them". This place seems like it's really nice to actually live in.
I was gonna say. Take a picture of this in the spring or summer and I bet it looks lovely. All those trees, nice big walkable avenue between the buildings, little gardens and balconies. It's got great shared spaces too, I bet you really get to know your neighbors there.
this is [Alexandra & Ainsworth Estate, Borough of Camden](https://www.reddit.com/r/UrbanHell/comments/1csg75i/alexandra_ainsworth_estate_borough_of_camden/)
Isn't this where that first scene from the first Kingsman film was shot?
I knew it looked familiar
I also feel like this is where one of the last scenes in the bodyguard is from. I don’t want to spoil anything but he’s in a sticky situation here. Could be 100% off tho, just looks similar
The show The Bodyguard right? Cause I recognize this
ANNND **IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII EEEEEEEEE-IIIIIIIIIIIIIII** WILL AAALWAAYS LOVE... ... Oh. The show. Right.
What is Whitney Houstons favorite kind of coordination? HAAAND EEEEEEYYYYYYYYEEEEE
Thank you for my new dad joke
Yeah that’s what I’m thinking of
Im sure it was
tons of shows are filmed there.
It’s so weird looking that it’s used on dozens of films, tv shows, and music videos. It’s very ugly but the amenities are good and it’s very expensive and quite middle class now.
It's weird looking, but those balconies provide pretty ample outdoor space. I'd wager with a power washing and some more vibrant paint, it would look pretty luxury.
Eggsy has entered the chat.
And a scene from Line of Duty I think
I love it
It is
Literally my first thought
[ Removed by Reddit ]
> I'd have stabbed someone You'd have fit right in
Twas intentional
The question is, would you be willing to *get* stabbed to live here?
Honestly I saw 3 knife crimes and one gun crime when I lived there and it was always in places nicer than these dives. Fortunately, in London, most people don't like to shit on their doorstep so living there might be safer than most rofl.
I used to live close to a maximum security prison - someone told me that was a safe place to live!
Been a while since I've seen a good 'rofl' Reminds me of simpler, happier times. Thank you.
Well you say that but I have stabbings and shootings every few months opposite the barrier block in Brixton. However you never see phone theft or muggings. Those happen in nicer areas.
Can 100% believe that in Brixton. Too many rivalling gangs
>Twas You will not win me over with your use of 'twas. - Captain Raymond Holt
Twasn't trying to.
This has won multiple architectural awards and is really rather nice for social housing as well as being on the West Hampstead/St Johns Wood border so the private ones are bloody expensive.
Not familiar with this area but the design of these houses seem really nice and well thought
They really are, they are some of the last flourishes of social housing where design was prioritised over simply cramming as many people into a tower block as [possible](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexandra_Road_Estate).
No dude its “hell” /s
The guy has never lived in average British attached house. Horribly cramped, small rooms, cold and humid.
I've lived in various houses in Britain and have never felt cramped, cold or humid. Where are these cramped, cold and humid houses?
This is one of the coolest places there is. Is this a shit stirring post of sorts?
agreed, I don't think OP knows this place really well and is basing judgement on a crappy photo taken at a crappy time of the year. It's a wonderful structure
I've noticed many trad accounts post pictures of buildings from an angle that nobody would ever see them from. They never consider pedestrian/resident experience.
They're probably insanely jealous but don't even realize it themselves with the lack of self awareness and critical thinking. This is a great place to live, end of story.
Americans love to jerk off to our awful suburbs where everyone has a 1/2 acre of neglected grass lawn they swear they need for the kids.
I swear if exactly this picture wouldve been labeled as china or something people would bash this place
Isn’t this where eggsy originally lived in the first Kingsman the Secret Service ?
Yes.
Apparently nice enough for the princess of Sweden to live here. Dammit Kingsman 2 was such a bad sequel
In K2 Eggsy and the princess live in Harry's home.
On the one hand I’m like 80% sure I remember a scene where they’re in those appartments at the beginning of the movie. On the other hand there’s no way I’m rewatching the movie to be sure.
Oh right, Eggsy's birthday scene. But that happens at the house of one of his friends.
I still enjoyed it
Depressing 9 months a year. Otherwise https://municipaldreams.wordpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/p1010155.jpg https://www.thetimes.com/imageserver/image/%2Fmethode%2Ftimes%2Fprod%2Fweb%2Fbin%2Fe28fd9b0-e368-11e7-b046-23180179278b.jpg?crop=5890%2C3313%2C0%2C307&resize=1500
Could use a layer of paint, but otherwise looks cool
Or just a power washer.
Yeah, no painting, just some power washing and it's perfect
Oh so like the rest of the U.K. then
I live a minute's walk from the A&A estate and walk past it virtually every day and it's a glorious building. A brilliant design. Ultimately, it's Brutalism, so you're likely to either love it or hate it. Another angle: \[img\]https://i.imgur.com/cLhJVOL.jpg\[/img\] BTW, what you're seeing here is the Alexandra Road (or Rowley Way) part of the estate and it's very safe and peaceful with a good sense of community, but to the right - out of shot, past the blue-caged playing field) is the Ainsworth part of the estate that face Boundary Road. I imagine that many people would find these buildings much more aesthetically agreeable (imposing, 1940s-built, in a classic red-brown brick '30s neo-deco style) with large areas of green space and plenty of large trees. However, this part of the estate is as dodgy as fuck. So, looks can be deceiving. https://www.google.com/maps/@51.5384443,-0.1836885,3a,90y,293.73h,88.65t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1so-yZru\_FZ7U01fdIjdvl8g!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fpanoid%3Do-yZru\_FZ7U01fdIjdvl8g%26cb\_client%3Dmaps\_sv.share%26w%3D900%26h%3D600%26yaw%3D293.73100008418464%26pitch%3D1.3460340887404953%26thumbfov%3D90!7i16384!8i8192?coh=205410&entry=ttu
I'm one of those weirdos that loves brutalism, when done well, and this one is done pretty well.
Same, this and the Barbican are some of my favourite examples.
If you ever get a chance to visit Toronto, we have quite a bit of Brutalism in the downtown area. [https://www.instagram.com/torontobrutalist/](https://www.instagram.com/torontobrutalist/) [https://www.theglobeandmail.com/real-estate/toronto/article-a-brutal-trek-through-torontos-brutalist-architecture/](https://www.theglobeandmail.com/real-estate/toronto/article-a-brutal-trek-through-torontos-brutalist-architecture/) There is certainly more interesting areas of the city to hangout and experience, but I always dug that area for the architecture.
I normally hate brutalism, but this is well done. There are windows, plants, and natural light.
Its always seemed pretty nice for central London when I’ve been there.
This is actually a benchmark on how to build a housing estate, you should see it spring/summer time.
I think it’s cool
These look pretty well designed from an american perspective: near transit, places to walk and ride a bike, right by a park, plenty of trees, no giant parking lots, everybody gets a nice view of the sky and cloud cover. Aside from the fact that it's a crappy day, that looks downright pleasant.
Brutalist and pretty cool.
Not this shit again. This is next to hampstead heath you idiots!
Yeah, not 'hell' by a long way: https://www.themodernhouse.com/past-sales/rowley-way-london-nw8/ A one-bedroom flat (that needs done up) is currently going for offers over £350,000: https://www.purplebricks.co.uk/brochure/1221983
£350,000 is insanely cheap in that part of London. The average property price in Camden is more than double that. This thread wants people to think that estate is some hot commodity but clearly the housing market doesn't think so.
lol this block of flats is essentially a landmark in London..
I think a lot of you people just don’t like cities
Yea this actually a decent design for dense housing. Every floor gets outdoor space and sunlight. I've seen buildings in Chicago like this.
Take a bad photo on a shitty day and yeah, it looks awful.
I like them.
I would kill to live here That’s in a nice part of London (Abbey Road). Flats cost upwards of half a million.
Mmmm. Utilitarian.
That aerial pic doesn’t make it justice. I stayed in this area October last year and it was a quite nice neighborhood, very walkable and enjoyable compared to other London's areas.
Everyone is saying Kingman but Camden just reminds me of Withnail and I
This looks like a nice place to me. I'd live here.
This is so cool, i want to live there
I actually don't mind it - I went to the outer territories in Hong Kong - the outside of the massive apartment complexes looked dystopian... Until you went inside one - a home... Lovely cooking, lovely families and fun. I am sure the buildings here that look so bad, have awesome insides...
I like the idea of terraces, that way the lower apart can receive as much sunlight as the upper ones. All it needs to look cool is a good power wash and lots of greenery, since the whole complex seems to be lacking in that aspect. Paired with its brutalist architecture, it would look like a solar punk landscape.
Looks better in spring, summer and autumn.
It's beautiful.
OP has either just found this photo online or clearly has no clue about this really interesting architecture in London.
[Google Streetview](https://www.google.com/maps/@51.5390913,-0.186461,3a,75y,86.3h,82.78t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1sp8-2n-zFEBNjn-d5acyYuA!2e0!6shttps:%2F%2Fstreetviewpixels-pa.googleapis.com%2Fv1%2Fthumbnail%3Fpanoid%3Dp8-2n-zFEBNjn-d5acyYuA%26cb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile.gps%26w%3D203%26h%3D100%26yaw%3D357.2888%26pitch%3D0%26thumbfov%3D100!7i16384!8i8192?coh=205409&entry=ttu)
You wish you had the money to live there.
It's just winter man, the Alexandra Road Estate is actually iconic and kinda slaps
Either this is a sarcastic post or OP lives in Blue Ridge mountains, West Virginia, USA and has never been to a city
actually really cool municipal architecture - and generally it seems people really like living there, it's in a fantastic location just next to Camden Town / Primrose Hill - [http://alexandraandainsworth.org/history/](http://alexandraandainsworth.org/history/)
Its quite nice in spring/summer, but not that nice late autumn/winter.
28 Weeks Later
Weirdly, I'm sure that's the street I used to take down to the train station. When I lived in Enfield over a decade ago I always thought it was quite lovely. Time and perspective.
Looks peng
It's nowhere near Penge!
I think most architecture from the mid-1960s to the early 1990s is ugly. This is no exception, but it does look like a pretty nice place to live overall.
I don’t mind
Every modern building look fancy and futuristic till it starts decay
It's actually a great estate, just a shitty picture
This isn't so bad for inner city life. These places have lots of light and little balconies for air.
It's beautiful, though!
I wish I could live in an apartment like those.
Functional good quality state funded housing with in built space for vegetation. This shit is an architectural marvel.
It's actually not a bad place to live these days as it's become so iconic.
Are these the flats that Eggsey from The Kingsman lived in?
This actually looks cool as hell to me
Looks like a place where people live
Nope. This place is awesome and it's exactly the kind of thing London needs more of. Bring on the planning reform and mass housebuilding.
It just needs some powerwashing influencers to do it for free.
Is that the West Coast line to Euston I see? Often wondered how people living in those buildings fared…
They look like they'd be really cool if they were newly built and maintained nice.
We have “The Line” at home…
You picked a blurry picture on a muggy day. Honestly, these buildings aren’t my favourite but walking around this area is fine. My most hated parts of London are probably the North West (dual carriageways everywhere), Elephant and Castle (I hate the Faraday memorial and the ring road cutting through all pedestrian areas), and Canary Wharf (shiny but pretty soulless).
It actually feels nice in there if not pictured from drone
Density is a good thing
That looks epic though
If you said to me that this pic was photographed in Eastern Europe, I would seriously believe you
I personally think this is beautiful, just needs maybe a bit more street art or like DIY personalization to give it a more lived-in feel. But the form, greenery, and central pedestrian street is lovely
If it is cheap, why not. Having this sure as hell beats being forced to share a flat with other people.
I always saw these on the train coming in. They are grim in reality, tiny windows with no light on the train side.
Is this like the projects of London? In USA here.
There’s greenery, there’s a train connecting, it has sports facilities. Its pedestrian friendly… yea not so much hell in my opinion
I feel like if they just slapped some colours on it it'd turn it into an attraction instead
terrible post op
Oh, how terrible, everyone gets natural sunlight, they don't have anything obstructing the view directly outside, walkable path right outside and main road on the back, plus a park/sports area on the other side. How can they live like this!
Nuke the fucking place
Lol why it looks like soviet architecture
Wait, is this the location where Eggsy's house was filmed in the movie Kingsman?
This place was designed for the working class and sets a standard that today's housing cannot match. But something like 30% of the flats have been bought by trendies with cash because they think it's cool and brutalist. Their entitled attitude is wrecking the community feel because they are not working class people and they don't do friendly working-class solidarity. They just pose. The more flats they buy, the more they will wreck the community. END RIGHT TO BUY before it's too late.
I had a friend in one of them, it's not that bad!
# G L O R I O U S
Walkable, close to green space, unique character, communal feeling outdoor living space. Idk man seems kinda nice.
Wasn't this in A Clockwork Orange?
Clockwork Orange was filmed in 1970, mainly filmed around Thamesmead and a bit in Wandsworth
It was in the spy movie few years back, golden circle something etc was the second movie name. There main character lives in one and escape from there jumping around.
Kingsmen
I've seen that estate in various Brit TV shows. I think Line of Duty was one of them.
One of the residents tried to burglarize jude law's office in Breaking and Entering (2006)
It would look amazing if there was the sun and more plants.
Isn't this also the place where [Foals' Mountain at My Gates video](https://youtu.be/l_EIE5f2t6M) was recorded?
Is each cross section an apartment (level 1, 2, 3, 4) Or is it kind of mixed? They look like they would be kind of cool if each section was a house
Better than suburbia at least
This looks like a Satisfactory build
Looks like Clockwork Orange.
There was a movie about a lending guy doing retaliation, for this community.
Fuck everyone get a patio. Like have an area of cool party peeps and have banging patio parties in the summer. Rent a splash pool and air slide and all kinds of shit. Would be lit AF
Very Easter Blockesque.
When only using 1 tile zoning
That’s an exclusive view on tourism (train tracks), £1,5m
It looks like a railgun
This estate has been used for so many dramas and films.
Believe it or not... All that needs is a good softwashing.....
For me it beautiful, if they put some green on rooftops and paint it little bit it would marvellous