Thursday, April 7, 2016

Noel Park Estate: a so-called Victorian garden suburb



Whilst other philanthropic housing companies such as the Peabody Trust and the Improved Industrial Dwellings Company focused on multi-storey, inner-city blocks of flats, the Artizans, Labourers & GeneralDwellings Company aimed at building low-rise housing in open countryside alongside existing railway lines. The company was dedicated to providing decent accommodation for the working classes at a time when overcrowding and squalid living conditions were rife amongst the poor. A location near a railway station would allow workers to live in the countryside and commute into the city.

The Noel Park Estate was designed to provide affordable housing for working-class families wishing to leave the inner city. As a break from the norm every property had a front and rear garden. It was planned from the outset as a self-contained community close enough to the rail network to allow its residents to commute to work. In line with the principles of the Artizans Company's founder, William Austin, no public houses were built within the estate, and there are still none today. Noel Park is known as one of the earliest garden suburbs in the world, although it predates the Ebenezer Howard Book Garden Cities of tomorrow. As such it is a predecessor of the Garden City Movement and one of the founts of inspirations for it.

In 1882 the Artizans, Labourers & General Dwellings Company acquires Ducketts Farm near Wood Green. This 40 hectare estate belonged to Dovecote Manor (later styled Duckett Manor) and stretched from the Moselle River southwards to Ducketts Common and Turnpike Lane. This project, the third for this dwellings company, was named after its president Ernest Noel, also liberal MP for Dumfries in Scotland. Building work started in 1883 and lasted until 1902. The layout is again a grid of long parallel streets running most of the length of the site. All the streets are named for board members of the Artizans, Labourers & General Dwellings Company. The same is true of the small park southeast of the estate known as Russell Park. This park is sometimes mistakenly referred to as Noel Park.

This late-19th-century planned community consists of some 2.200 model dwellings, all designed by Rowland Plumbe in the Gothic Revival Style. Plumbe designed the estate with five classes of houses. Although the houses were built to the same five basic designs, each street was given a distinct style of design and ornamentation. Varying mixes of red and yellow bricks, and variations in window design and ornamental motifs were used to give each street a distinct identity. Corner houses were given distinctive designs and turrets. The housing provided included semidetached houses, terraced family houses and small "one up-one down" apartments.

The original concept was to combine new housing for a mix of social classes with social facilities such as meeting rooms, school rooms, a wash house and baths, and to provide integral open space. To avoid the social problems caused by cheap alcohol a pub wasn't included. Near Wood Green two churches, a Community Hall and a primary school were built. The dwellings in the highest class are located here. On the High Road the company built several shops.



This model dwellings estate shows a typical Victorian grid layout. The northern edge is formed by the partially culverted Moselle River (M). On the opposite side  Russell Park (RP) is located. The focal point is located on one side of the estate near the former village of Wood Green and the High Street with two churches (C), a Community Hall (H) and a primary school (S). Between the highest class housing around the churches and the former railway sidings (RS) a number of railway cottages (R) were developed as part of the estate. The non-original building substance is shown crosshatched, most constitute WW2 bombsites (B).

After 1888 when the train company refused to carry cheaper fares for workers, the development of the estate halted. There were at the time already 7.000 people living here though. After 1900 the southern section of the estate was completed. By 1935 the whole estate was surrounded by other developments, mainly suburban housing estates. This was the result of the extension of the underground railway to Wood Green in 1932. In 1965 the area within the Municipal Borough of Wood Green in Middlesex was incorporated into the newly created Greater London Borough of Haringey.

In 1982 most of the estate was given Conservation Area Status as an example of philanthropic model housing of the Victorian Era.

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