The manor of Addington was first attested in the
Doomsday Book (1086) and included several farms and woodland. It lay south of
the village of Addington in Surrey. Historically the parish of Addington was
part of the Wallington Hundred. It is now part of Croydon, a former market town
that became part of Greater London in 1965 as the London Borough of Croydon.
In 1935, as part of the push for suburbanisation
inspired by the principles of the Garden City Movement, the First National
Housing Trust (FNHT) acquired over 142 hectares of land known as Fisher's Farm
to lay out an new garden village. This idea was fiercely supported by Croydon
Council who saw the new garden village as an ideal way to resolve bad living
conditions and overcrowding in its inner-city areas. The FNHT was a subsidiary
of Henry Boot PLC a large construction company that constructed more houses in
the inter-war years than any other company or developer. Charles boot (son of
Henry) imagined well-built affordable houses away from the overcrowded cities
in new garden village satellites and new garden cities. The garden cities he
proposed in Dagenham and Waltham Abby never came to be, but several garden
village satellites were completed. One of these was New Addington.
The layout of present-day New Addington clearly shows
three spatial ideas expressed in the pattern of streets. This is matched by the
way the buildings are placed, but these have not been included for clarity. The
initial garden village stands out by its layout of streets but also inclusion
of a central green zone. The two subsequent expansions of the garden village
become more and more removed from the characteristics of the garden village
culminating in the northern council estate planned along the lines of CIAM principles.
The site of the new garden village consisted of a deep
valley with steep hillsides on either side. Fisher's Farm stood on the edge of
the North Downs, hence the uneven terrain. Work on New Addington started in
1936 and came to an abrupt halt in 1940 after the outbreak of war. By this time
1.024 houses and 23 shops had been constructed in a fan of streets in between
the central access road and Addington Vale. This part of the garden village is
also known as the Boots Estate. Although the spacious layout and good quality
housing provided proved popular with residents, the pace of house building
didn't match the development of amenities. So most residents had to travel to
find, for instance, employment, entertainment, leisure and schooling.
After the end of the war building work resumed.
Croyden now had 55,000 people on the waiting list for housing. At the same time
planners tried to curb and direct the growth of the metropolis by designating
development areas and green belts. Croydon Council bought the unused land off
the FNHT and quickly developed council housing here (more or less along the
lines of the original layout for the garden village with a central open space)
and expanded the facilities by finishing Central Parade with its shops. Also
schools were built to cope with the exploding birth rate. What was neglected in
this frenzy to provide housing was to better connect New Addington to the rest
of the Borough. The nearest train station still lay 2,5 miles away. A small
industrial estate was included though, but this wasn't enough to provide for
the majority of residents. The result was a suburban satellite comprising of
four housing estates and an eccentrically placed centre that followed the
spatial conventions of the Garden City Movement.
Croydon Council had great ambitions in providing social
and affordable housing. It therefore acquired 100 hectares of the Castle Hill
Farm directly adjacent to the garden village planned by the FNHT with the aim
to develop more housing here. The first housing built on site took the shape of
230 prefabs for homeless families. This temporary accommodation stood on Castle
Hill Avenue and was finished in 1948. The layout of this Castle Hill Estate was
a slight break from the spatial conventions of the garden village as it basically
consists of two loop roads with an infill of curved and straight streets. In de
1950s building work started in earnest with the erection of terraced housing
and some apartment blocks. The closes and cul-de-sacs that formed an integral
part of the garden village where abandoned in this new section of New
Addington. There was however great care
taken to provide schools and churches. Development of the Castle Hill Estate
was completed by 1963.
At that time there was still a housing shortage in
Croydon, so the Council sought permission to expand New Addington even further
towards the village of Addington. On 22 hectares the Fieldway Estate was
developed. This housing estate was a clear break from garden city ideals in
both layout, type of housing and amenities to be included. By 1968 1412 houses
had been completed along cul-de-sacs that ran off a winding, wide loop road.
Most of these houses where terraces, but middle-rise and high-rise apartment
building were also included. The buildings are placed with no spatial relation
to the main access road in a so-called "urban field" comprising of
gardens and public green spaces with footpaths connecting the short side streets.
At the heart of the development a small concentration of shops was provided
with a pub included for good measure. The whole is a typical example of a
spill-over estate.
New Addington comprises of the old garden village with
the oldest housing located n the Boots Estate (1) next to the Central Parade
(2) with shops and amenities. Addington Vale (3) separates this area from the
Rowdown Estate (4) which itself connects to the Milne Park East Estate (6).
Milne Park (7) separates this estate from the Milne Park West Estate (8). A
small industrial estate (5) has been inserted on the edge of the garden
village. Along Hutchinson's Bank a small-scale addition (9) was made with
housing similar to the large Castle Hill Estate (10). The Fieldway Estate (11) forms
the edge of New Addington towards the village of Addington.
The residents became more isolated with the expansion
of New Addington as the facilities provided didn't keep pace with the number of
residents. So all who had the opportunity left and were replaced by less well-off
people and immigrants, both with little opportunities or prospects. This meant
that New Addington, and the Fieldway Estate in particular, gained notoriety as
a place of systemic unemployment, low education, drug abuse, domestic violence,
teenage pregnancies and high crime rates. The opening of the Tramlink to
Croydon in 2000 - finally - lifted the longstanding isolation of New Addington,
thus addressing the single biggest failure in the planning of this suburban
satellite.
Very interesting article! Would love to know your sources to find out more?
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