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Place matters: it's time we acknowledged it.
The Ecologist, December 2005
Today was the first true winter day of the year.
It was cold and crisp, the sky was ice blue, and
yellow leaves were skimming in gusts around the
pavement. I felt an urgent need to procrastinate
before I began writing this article, so I decided
to go for a walk along the canal.
I've always loved the Oxford Canal. In the ten
years I've known it, it's had a glamorously down-at-heel
character. It's a place of ramshackle factories,
teetering, palatial Victorian houses - all dark-red
brick and long thin gardens - old arched bridges
and dozens of scruffy residential narrowboats,
lined up bow to stern along the banks, their mooring
ropes tangled together, their chimneys belching
the sweet smell of coal smoke into the cold air.
The canal runs right through my neighbourhood,
and it makes that neighbourhood what it is. It
has a nature, a character, a personality of its
own.
Or it did have. That character is rapidly being
erased, in the name of those two trusty old soldiers,
progress and economic rationalism. Up and down
the towpath, their marks can be seen. Where once
was a long strip of 'waste' ground is now a building
site, on which high, tall new flats have risen
in less than a year, like sunflowers on a prairie.
Where only recently was a working boatyard is
now an empty acre of concrete and unused sheds,
where more executive flats will soon rise. Where
once was a line of moored residential narrowboats
is now a line of worried boaters, recently informed
that their mooring fees will be more than doubling,
and that if they don't like it they can, well,
buy one of the new flats. As if they could afford
it.
And today, the old factory is breathing its last.
All along the waterfront, its walls and windows
are shuttered with the scaffolding of demolition
crews, here to tear down what remains of its old
shell. Of everything that has happened to the
canal, somehow, and for some reason, it's the
last gasp of this industrial relic - this wonderful
and strangely disturbing old landmark - that affects
me the most.
W. Lucy and Co began operating the Eagle Ironworks,
on the edge of the Oxford Canal, in 1812. For
nearly two centuries they designed and cast whatever
the city needed, and stamped it with their name.
Drain covers, palings, church gates, street lamps
and a hundred odd, small, necessary, unnoticed
things came daily from the works, through the
cast-iron gates crowned with their Eagle-Head
Logo. Their great skulking, redbrick factory has
towered over the canal for two centuries, its
cracked and smeared windows, florid gates, cobbled
yard and asymmetrical buildings a curious, wonderful
and slightly disturbing presence.
Not any more. The Lucy ironworks, so cobwebbed
and intriguing, so distinctive and apparently
timeless, is to become yet another gated complex
of luxury flats. This quirky, entirely unique
old building is to be replaced by one that could
be mistaken for any building, anywhere: spruced
up, divided, polished, sucked clean of all dirt,
danger and character and made fit for commuters
in silver cars who work in London. As the factory
dies, so too does a part of the canal, the boatyard,
the neighbourhood and the wider city.
Something is happening here, and nobody seems
to want to talk about it.
Who cares about any of this, and why should it
matter? It's easy, after all, to lament change,
and easy too to forget that change is the only
constant. The old Lucy factory was polluting,
messy and, finally, uneconomic. New housing is
urgently needed, and it surely has to be better
to build it on old industrial sites than in the
green belt. Had I been walking along the canal
when the factory and boatyard were being built,
I would no doubt have lamented that too. If there's
one thing the English have always been good at,
it's lamenting.
Maybe. But this is not the real story, for what
is happening just around the corner from me is
probably also happening just around the corner
from you. It's not isolated, it's not irrelevant
and it's not to be dismissed. It is part of something
wider - a larger, and more significant trend,
which is sold to us as 'progress' but is actually
something very different.
Put simply, the things that make our towns, villages,
cities and landscapes different, distinctive or
special are being eroded, and replaced by things
which would be familiar anywhere. It is happening
all over the country - you can probably see at
least one example of it from where you're sitting
right now. The same chains in every high street;
the same bricks in every new housing estate; the
same signs on every road; the same menu in every
pub.
What these changes have in common is this: in
each case, something distinctive is replaced by
something bland; something organic by something
manufactured; something definably local with something
emptily placeless; something human-scale with
something impersonal. The result is stark, simple
and brutal: everywhere is becoming the same as
everywhere else.
The small, the ancient, the indefinable, the unprofitable,
the meaningful, the interesting and the quirky
are being scoured out and bulldozed to make way
for the clean, the sophisticated, the alien, the
progressive, the corporate. It feels, to me, like
a great loss - a hard-to-define but biting loss,
which seems to suck the meaning from the places
I care for or feel I belong to. It matters.
Why? Because in the name of economic efficiency,
the things that really matter in life - the texture,
the colour, the detail, the complex web of intimate
relationships between people and communities and
the landscape they inhabit - are being dismantled,
with nobody's permission. Because our landscape
is being rapidly and thoughtlessly remoulded to
meet the short-term needs of a global economy
that is built on sand. And because what we are
losing, in the name of progress, is being replaced,
in most cases, with things which are not better,
but worse.
What we are losing is something which is uniquely,
exquisitely small, local and impossible-to-define:
a sense of place. It is a sense of place that
binds healthy communities together, and distinguishes
living cultures from dead ones. It is a sense
of place which makes the difference between a
country that is worth living in and one that isn't.
And the paradox is that this galloping destruction
of local distinctiveness has very global roots
- for it is primarily the ever-expanding global
economy which is responsible.
Put crudely, a global market requires a global
identity; not just goods, but landscapes themselves
must be branded and made safe for the universal
act of consumption. A global market requires global
tastes - we all have to want the same things,
feel the same things, like or dislike the same
things. Only that way can markets cross cultural
boundaries. At the same time, an advanced industrial
economy requires economies of scale - which means
mass production, the smoothing-out of edges, uniform
and characterless development; the standardised
manufacture of entire landscapes.
In order for the consumer economy to progress,
we must cease to be people who belong to neighbourhoods,
communities, localities. We must cease to value
the distinctiveness of where we are. We must become
consumers, bargain-hunters, dealers on a faceless,
placeless international trading floor. We must
cease to identify with place, or to care about
it. We must cease, finally and forever, to belong
to the land.
This loss of a sense of place - this loss of place
itself - is both widely-felt and largely unmentioned.
While very large numbers of us of us can see this
happening, and are concerned about it, few people
join the dots - or feel they are allowed to. In
every local paper, in every local pub, in every
community centre, every week of the year, people
will be discussing these issues - at a very local
level. This new housing development, that new
megastore, this street market closing down. People
know something is wrong; they just don't know
quite what, or why, or what to do about it. And
if they complain, they are told by the political
classes, and often by the media and its associated
pundits, that none of this really matters.
They are told that these are small, insignificant
local issues, of no import in the grand scheme
of things. They are told to think about something
more important: economic growth, perhaps, or the
War on Terror. And if they persist, they are called
'nimbys', and pigeonholed as reactionaries or
nostalgic idealists. No-one, runs the subtext,
has the right to take up arms in defence of their
place, their sense of belonging, their attachment
to a locality. We should all have better things
to do.
But there are surely few better things to do.
And the good news is that an increasing number
of people seem to know it; and are starting to
say it, loud and clear.
Some of this good news is on show back on the
Oxford Canal. A few hundred yards down from the
shivering shell of the old ironworks lies Castlemill
Boatyard. Owned, like the canal itself, by the
government body British Waterways, Castlemill
has been the site of a fierce local battle for
over a year.
British Waterways, against the will of the local
community and virtually all the boaters on the
Oxford canal, has closed Castlemill, which operated
vital repair and maintenance services for canal
boats, and wants to sell the site for - yes, you
guessed it - luxury housing, and a slick waterfront
restaurant. It had already struck a deal with
a housing developer, Bellway Homes, before it
closed the yard down. Planning permission was
to be just a formality. British Waterways, supposed
guardians of the canal network, would pocket £2
million, and the last publicly-accessible working
boatyard in the city would be no more.
But the locals and the boaters fought back, mounting
a fierce campaign to save the boatyard. It led
to planning permission being turned down by the
city council. British Waterways appealed, and
a long planning inquiry was held, which BW and
Bellway Homes stuffed with expensive taxpayer-funded
lawyers - and lost again. Undeterred, BW moved
in and ejected the boatyard's tenant, whose lease
with them had run out - only to have the yard
occupied by the boaters themselves, who are still
there, refusing to leave and vowing to take British
Waterways all the way to the high court.
'What they are, is asset-strippers', says Matt
Morton, an ecologist and former boater who is
now leading the fight to save the boatyard. 'British
Waterways are supposed to be guardians of the
network. They're nothing of the sort - they're
scouring the canals, looking for land they can
flog off for expensive housing, to cover a hole
in their finances caused by a government funding
cut. In the process, they're destroying the character
of the whole network. They're more interested
in shareholders than boaters.'
British Waterways and Bellway, say the Castlemill
boaters, want to take this very distinctive place
- with its scruffy narrowboats, bounding dogs,
welding gear and random piles of wood and metal
- and replace it with a non-place; the kind of
'executive development' that could be seen in
any town, anywhere in Britain. They are prepared
to stand up for this place - and the nomadic,
slow, low-impact lifestyle that springs from it
- because they believe it matters. In this case,
almost everyone else, from the local community
centre to the city council, seems to agree with
them.
It is just one example - but when you start to
look around you see it is one of many, and that
the forces ranged against each other are always
similar. On one side some sprawling government
bureaucracy or corporation - or often, as in the
case of Castlemill, both. On the other, a small
but determined gaggle of locals, specialist interest
groups and people who believe, simply, that something
unique is worth fighting for. Often that is all
they have in common; but they add up to something.
All over the UK, for example, you will find communities
and individuals working to save their local pubs.
You don't get much more of a distinctive marker
of place than a local boozer, but thanks to corporate
consolidation and dubious legislation, the traditional
local is under threat as never before; according
to the Campaign for Real Ale, 26 pubs close every
month; virtually one a day.
Giant, ever-expanding Pub Corporations, with names
like the Spirit Group and Enterprise Inns, who
long ago took over ownership of pubs from brewers,
are selling them off for housing or converting
them into hip bars, identikit chains or eateries.
In response, communities all over the country
have been banding together to fight closures,
and in some cases even buy pubs themselves, to
protect them from the asset-strippers. Groups
like the Community Pubs Association and Freedom
for Pubs are growing larger as the Pub Companies
do. The local pub means too much to people to
allow it to be homogenised into history.
Pubs, boatyards, crumbling factories
people
will put up a fight for any number of weird and
wonderful local landmarks if they mean enough
to them. In London's Chinatown, a coalition of
locals calling themselves the Save Chinatown Campaign
are currently crossing swords with yet another
developer, the Rosewheel corporation, which is
busy ejecting small Chinese shopkeepers from the
area and threatening to knock down the famous
pagoda. In Herefordshire and Somerset, campaigners
are fighting to protect ancient orchards, bulging
with rare and traditional varieties of fruit,
from being grubbed up by farmers who can't sell
their wares to the ever-dominant superstores.
In Birmingham, urban black communities are working
to save their street markets from demolition and
replacement by office blocks. In Brighton, locals
are fighting to prevent the creation of yet another
Starbucks. And in Bury St Edmunds, the fight is
becoming something literal, with the formation
of a group of anonymous vigilantes, the Knights
of St Edmund, who have sworn to defend their town
against a new development spearheaded by Debenhams.
The company has 18 days to withdraw a plan to
redevelop the town centre, say the knights, or
they will unleash an ancient curse on the sleepy
Suffolk town.
Not everyone is prepared to go this far; but plenty
of people, nationally, are prepared to take a
stand - it is a long, long list, and it seems
a growing one. Place, belonging, distinctiveness,
character - in a rapidly homogenising world, these
things seem to become more and more important
in peoples' lives. Valuing common things, defending
detail, understanding culture and landscape and
fighting for its integrity in the face of an onrush
of standardisation; suddenly, the small things
seem terribly important after all.
Perhaps what we are witnessing here is the shy
emergence of something newly self-aware: a politics
of belonging. All over the country, the extinction
of that sense of place is resisted by those on
the margins of political debate and economic influence.
They are people who refuse to lie down before
the juggernaut of a spurious progress, or to sacrifice
the landscapes and cultures that matter to them
for the benefit of a global economy which is beyond
their control.
Standing up for our places - fighting for them,
refusing to let them be steamrollered by the consumer
juggernaut; making them live again - is something
which should be able to unite left and right and
everyone in-between. It something which will annoy
politicians of all stripes, and get right up the
nose of a global money machine which wants us
all to stop moaning, give up and go shopping.
In an age of global consumerism, corporate power
and the dominance of a homogenising, placeless,
economic ideology, it could be that the one truly
radical thing to do is to belong.
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