Apartheid against poor London people


This video is called UK’s Poorest Families hit Hardest by Recession and Austerity.

After the racist segregation in apartheid South Africa … after segregation between rich and poor people in New York City flats … London, England.

British author H.G. Wells described in his science fiction novel The Time Machine time travel from 1890s London to where London used to be in the year 802,701. By then, humans had evolved into two different species. The Victorian leisure class evolved into the Eloi, stupid, living above ground, afraid of the dark. The working class evolved into the Morlocks, nocturnal, living underground, afraid of daylight, and eating Eloi.

We are not yet in the year 802,701. It is Friday 25 July 2014.

From daily The Guardian in Britain today:

Poor doors: the segregation of London’s inner-city flat dwellers

Poorer residents in capital’s developments forced to use different entrances and facilities

Hilary Osborne

Friday 25 July 2014 19.46 BST

Multimillion pound housing developments in London are segregating less well-off tenants from wealthy homebuyers by forcing them to use separate entrances.

A Guardian investigation has discovered a growing trend in the capital’s upmarket apartment blocks – which are required to include affordable homes in order to win planning permission – for the poorer residents to be forced to use alternative access, a phenomenon being dubbed “poor doors”. Even bicycle storage spaces, rubbish disposal facilities and postal deliveries are being separated.

The Green party accused developers of showing “contempt for ordinary people” by enforcing such two-tier policies.

This week New York’s mayor, Bill De Blasio, said he planned to take action to prevent new developments being built with separate entrances and facilities for low-income residents. His pledge followed a furore over a luxury block on the city’s swanky Upper West Side which will have what US newspapers have dubbed a “poor door” for the social housing units on the site. But while the approval for segregated entrances in just one building in New York generated headlines, they are fast becoming standard practice in London.

“When Ken Livingstone left office he was keen that all developments should have their social housing ‘pepperpotted’ – mixed in with all the other more upmarket accommodation,” said Ed Mead, a director at estate agent Douglas & Gordon which sells upmarket properties in central London. “This didn’t go down well with developers with the result that most developments now have a separate entrance and a different look.”

Tracey Kellett, a buying agent who trawls the capital looking for homes for wealthy clients, said a number of developments have separate entrances “so the two social strata don’t have to meet”. In one: “The affordable [housing] has vile coloured plastic panels on the outside rather than blingy glass.”

At one building bordering the City financial district, the Guardian discovered wealthy owners accessed their homes via a hotel-style lobby area, while social housing tenants enter through a side door in an adjacent alley alongside trade entrances.

In marketing information for another development currently under construction, would-be residents have been promised that the affordable homes will have a separate entrance, no access to car or cycle parking and that post and bins will also be divided.

As the London housing market has boomed the expectations of some of the capital’s wealthiest homebuyers have grown and many properties now have communal areas akin to those in some of the world’s best hotels.

Service charges to maintain these are high, and a separate entrance means housing associations and their tenants do not face these extra costs. However, as in New York, there are concerns that it is leading to increasingly divided communities.

Green party London assembly member Darren Johnson said: “This trend shows contempt for ordinary people, and is about developers selling luxury flats to rich investors who don’t want to mix with local people.”

He added: “The mayor and councils have been turning a blind eye to this for too long, they should simply refuse applications that have separate facilities or that refuse any affordable housing on this basis.”

A spokesman for de Blasio’s office in New York said this week : “We fundamentally disagree with (separate doors), and we are in the process of changing it to reflect our values and priorities. We want to make sure future affordable housing projects treat all families equitably.”

Developers said separate doors let housing associations keep costs down as they avoided premium service charges paid by private residents.

Peter Allen, sales and marketing director for Londonewcastle which is behind the Queens Park Place development in north London said housing associations were sometimes unable to pay for all of the facilities covered by service charges. “The simplest way from a design perspective is to have things separate.”

Side-entrance shame

The brochure for the upmarket apartments of One Commercial Street, on the edge of the City, boasts of a “bespoke entrance lobby … With the ambience of a stylish hotel reception area, it creates a stylish yet secure transition space between your home and the City streets”.

In common with many of London’s new concrete and glass residential blocks there’s a concierge, on hand 24/7 to service the every need of residents paying a minimum of £500,000 – which only buys a studio flat – to live in this booming part of the city.

But the lobby is out of bounds to some of those who live in the building. What the brochure doesn’t mention is a second door, with a considerably less glamorous lobby, tucked away in an alley to the side of the building, alongside the trade entrance for Pret a Manger. This is the entrance for One Commercial Street’s affordable housing tenants.

In a bid to ease the housing crisis, developers are obliged to provide a set proportion of affordable homes when they draw up a new project, but they are often able to negotiate this figure down with local planners. Some provide the cheaper homes in separate blocks, but in a single structure development the affordable homes are often on separate floors – with separate entrances, lifts, car parks and even rubbish bins, so that upmarket apartment buyers have no contact with those occupying the social housing in their buildings.

In some cases, developers have even used the fact they need to provide separate doors and lifts to argue against putting affordable homes on the same site as their premium apartments. Planning documents for the 56 Curzon Street development in Soho show that the developers told the local council “that on-site provision of affordable housing would result in significant design inefficiencies due to the need for separate entrances and building cores”.

Some are coy about the subject. Native Land, which is currently building Cheyne Terrace just off Kings Road in Chelsea, complete with a swimming pool and gym, refused to comment when asked if its 13 affordable housing units would be accessed via a separate door. However, the website of John Robertson Architects, which has designed the building, makes it clear this is the case.

In north-west London the developers behind Queen’s Park Place are more upfront about how its 28 affordable and 116 market-rate homes will co-exist – its marketing website says the external appearance will be uniform across all properties – or “tenure blind”. But inside the building the two types of resident will be treated very differently: “Affordable tenants will not have use of the main private residential entrance, private courtyard gardens or basement car and cycle parking. Services including postal delivery and refuse storage are also divided.”

This does not just happen where there are large numbers of affordable homes on a site. In Chiswick, The Corner Haus development which is to be completed this summer, has just two affordable units, but these are also expected to have a separate entrance.

Of course, the separate doors to these developments mean that the housing associations who run the affordable properties and their tenants do not face the service charges attached with the luxurious surroundings that wealthy buyers have now come to expect and accept. However, the stark difference between the entrances, and, in some cases their positioning, rankles with some of those who live there.

Through the main door of One Commercial Street the lights shine brightly in the hotel-style lobby. There is luxury marble tiling and plush sofas, and a sign on the door alerts residents to the fact that the concierge is available. Round the back, the entrance to the affordable homes is a cream corridor, decorated only with grey mail boxes and a poster warning tenants that they are on CCTV and will be prosecuted if they cause any damage.

Brooke Terrelonga lives here with her nine-month-old son – they moved into a social rented flat four months ago and she was surprised to find that she wasn’t allowed to use the front entrance. Her mother, who doesn’t want to be named, said she felt unhappy about her daughter returning home at night to the poorly-lit alleyway. She motioned towards two lights on the wall, either side of the door, which were the only lightling in sight. She said: “It’s like the cream is at the front and they’ve sent the rubbish to the back.”

Another tenant, Judy Brown, had also expected to be able to get to her flat through the main entrance. “I call it the posh door. I feel a little bit insulted. It’s segregation.” Brown said that the lifts kept breaking down and she often had to take the stairs to her ninth-floor flat. “When both the lifts weren’t working they did say that if you were pregnant, had a health problem or a baby in a buggy you could use the main entrance,” she said. Otherwise, the tenants said, they were “locked out” of the main lobby.

We may recoil from the idea of housing developments with separate entrances for the rich and the rest, but they are just a symptom of a much bigger problem in London: here.

CAMPAIGNERS burnt an effigy of the London Mayor for Bonfire Night in protest against social segregation in the capital. The torching of Boris Johnson was part of the Poor Doors campaign, which has been targeting a newly built housing complex in east London: here.

19 thoughts on “Apartheid against poor London people

  1. Separate entrances are well known in London’s Victorian times, then became more obsolete in the 60s, the hidden ruling elite who control the politicians, generally a body unknown to the average voting public, the controllers decision back in the 60s, to turn the clock back, to one of repression and exploitation, this decision is made by big time bankers such as Rockefeller, Rothschilds, and the lobby group of Jews who have a police association that police have to obey.

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    • I most strongly dissociate myself from this anti-Semitic theory. Selfish rich people act as selfish rich people, not as Jews (the overwhelming majority of selfish rich people being non-Jewish).

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      • Very well, we have to take into account the statistics of world population or at least the population of the first world of Jews and finance and Gentile finance, also the people who are in power, for instance the Palestinians taking in account the stats, how many Palestinians are in finance? how many are in cultural positions of power?

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        • Here, about banks in Palestine:

          http://www.theswiftcodes.com/palestinian-territories/

          Palestine is occupied territory. Not comparable in power to states like Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE. Royals from these countries, and the Saudi Bin Laden banking and construction dynasty, are among the richest people in the world.

          On a world scale, most very rich people are Christians of some denomination or other. Do Christian capitalists act like capitalists or like Christians? Most usually, like capitalists. Do Muslim capitalists act like Muslims or like capitalists? Most usually, like capitalists. Same for Jews, Hindus, Shintoists, Buddhists, atheists, etc.

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          • I have just contacted one of the banks listed and they say turn 300 dollars into 543 dollars in 15 minutes, are you kidding these banks are a list of corrupt ponzi schemes, I hope you are able to recommend something more legitimate, also I have had this before with you on the Jewish thing, what have you to say at the present situationSaudi Arabia and Bahrain are client states of repressive regimes that America and Britain support, you must know that, can you say what nationality you are? and what genetic line you are in, myself as far as I know I am lower working class stock, born in Stoke Newington, London, as far as I know I am part of the original inhabitants of Britain, that is why you become lower class, the difference between me and the lower working class is I remember and they do not as a general rule.
            I do not intend to become ascending to the middle classes, as I have a morality and culture that differs, also I do not belong to the lower or working class, as I have transcended them, I am putting this in to simple terms as this is more complex than what I am able to offer in this post.

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            • My genetic line is the origin of Homa sapiens, in Africa over 100,000 years ago. Homo sapiens evolved, with some intermediate species, from Australopithecus africanus, living in Africa about 3 million years ago.

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