A large section of Battersea Fields, also known as Pig
Hill, near the Thames was acquired in 1872 by the Artizans, Labourers &General Dwellings Company for the realisation of their first socially mixed
housing estate. The estate occupies a flat area of land at the edge of the
flood plain just north of the slope rising to Clapham Common. Historically the
poorly drained common land of Battersea Fields was used for pig herding. Two
large ditches cut across to drain the land into the River Effra and Falcon
Brook.
At the same time the housing co-operative was planning
their house-building activities, the social reformer and peer, the 7th Earl of
Shaftesbury was pushing legislation through parliament to improve the living
and employment conditions of working people and was sponsoring philanthropic
efforts to provide schooling for their children. Under Shaftesbury's
guardianship new so-called Ragged Schools were established providing free
education in 1844. In 1872 Lord Shaftesbury, as president of the Ragged School
Union, laid the foundation-stone of buildings at the estate, thus giving it it's
name.
The street plan and house designs were by the Dwellings
Company's architect and surveyor, Robert Austin, formerly a carpenter with the
company. However, financial difficulties, caused by poor accounting, led to
replacement of the directors of the company and a change of approach during the
construction of the estate. The initial idea was to build small housing
projects for sale, the profits of which would be invested in larger estates of
affordable rented housing. Rents and lease prices were raised, excluding many
lower paid workers who were originally intended to benefit, and the planned
area of open space - Brassey Square in the centre of the estate- was built
over. Greenery was thus limited to the small back garden and the small fruit
trees lining the streets.
The estate is located behind Lavender Hill (L). The streets are laid out
on a grid pattern of long parallel streets with shorter cross streets. At the
centre a large public garden (green outline) was planned on Brassey Square (B),
but this was built over. It is here that we find the primary school (PS), a
large former hostel (H), a block of flats (F) and a block of shops with
apartments (S). A former Victorian secondary school (SS) is located just
outside the estate.
The estate was built between 1873 and 1877 along a
grid of wide tree-lined streets and comprises about 1.200 two-storey houses
with gardens. The houses of the Shaftesbury Park Estate are of four basic types
or classes distinguished by the number of rooms. Only the highest class
originally had bathrooms. The street elevations are varied slightly to avoid
monotony, creating generally attractive street frontages in a gothic revival
style so typical of the Victorian Era.
The buildings are consistently of stock brick with red
brick dressings and pitched slate roofs, which with the common architectural
style, gives the estate a strong sense of identity and distinctiveness. The
grid layout, with streets of varying lengths but always straight (except
Eversleigh Road, which is aligned with the railway embankment), allows for easy
movement throughout the estate. There is a sense of formality in the townscape
arising from the grid layout and the repetition in the building frontages.
At present the Peabody Trust owns most of the estate,
but many homes are already privately owned, and the number keeps rising as the
Trust gradually releases more units for sale.
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