Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Dr Stephen Rainey Tutor, QUB Comes Out In Support OF Gustave Wolff Cottages

The Magic Jug will never be. The 300 plus members a Facebook group set up to oppose thoughtless public art rejoice. Officially, the suspension of the project is due to 'budgetary constraints' and not negative public reaction. Public reaction is similarly off the agenda just a short distance from the city centre in Sydenham. The stakes here are not what is being built, however, but what is being torn down.

A major part of the Titanic Quarter Development involves trading upon the heritage of Harland and Wolff and the Titanic itself. As host to the largest shipbuilding industry in the world, along with related industries, Belfast’s maritime and engineering heritage is notable.

Such is the enthusiasm of the civic authorities for this project, it has received no small amount of public funding: “Helping Belfast rediscover that ‘Titanic Town’ heritage, Titanic Quarter, Belfast Harbour Commissioners and the Northern Ireland Executive have committed £65m to create the £90m landmark Titanic Signature building at the head of the Titanic’s slipway,” states the development website.

However, there are a great number of residents of historic Belfast neighbourhoods that needed no reminding of their heritage. Indeed, these neighbourhoods have been proud of their Titanic Town heritage for generations. They seek to secure this heritage for subsequent generations: “History belongs to us and our children to give them something to look up to and respect, let them see how great Northern Ireland industry was and how it leads the world in shipbuilding, ropemaking, Aircraft and Engineering, we are only a small nation of six counties but a world leader in so many fields. We need to protect our heritage now to enable us to leave it to our children,” reads one entry in the Palmerston Residents’ Association website (PRA).

However, the residents of the Sydenham area in particular are to be denied the chance to mark the role of their neighbourhood in maritime history. The feeling among the residents of Sydenham is that the imperatives of developers – and the politicians in awe of them – have been allowed to trump the lived lives of communities. Continuity, substance, integrity, authenticity have been denied in what feels like conquest rather than development.

Between October 2007 and February 2008, the PRA were involved in an exchange of letters with the Department of the Environment, the Northern Ireland Environment Agency and the Office of the First and Deputy First Minister trying to secure the future of an important site in their area. That site housed two cottages and all that remained of ‘The Den’, a residence of Gustav Wolff, co-founder of the Harland and Wolff shipyard and Belfast Ropeworks.

Despite having a building protection notice (BPN) issued on the building on July 17th 2008, the cottages were demolished without further contact between DoE/NIEA and residents. Moreover, residents learned of a meeting having taken place just two days prior to the cottages’ destruction involving one resident of the Station Road in Sydenham, the developer of the site and an MLA. Terry Hooey of the PRA was left asking: “Who was at that meeting? Why did a heritage office that wanted to preserve these properties change overnight on the say-so of one person? Why was that allowed to happen?”

Despite repeated requests for full disclosure on just what happened, the residents never received an explanation of the reversal of the BPN. The Association smelled a rat, but the dirty work had apparently been done.

When contacted by Naomi Long, on behalf of the residents, Sammy Wilson explained the decision in terms of building regulation in the form of PPS6: “The structures were indeed part of [Wolff’s] now gone estate known as ‘the Den’. However…though of interest, this was not sufficient grounds upon which to protect the buildings. It did not make the buildings objects of special historical interest”.

The question is – to whom were these features not relevant? Sammy Wilson? The Lisburn-based developers who then owned the site, Somerton Limited? Certainly they were relevant to the residents: “You should have seen those cottages. They were beautiful. It took craftsmen to create them, and in a matter of an hour they were gone,” said Terry Hooey.

At various consultation meetings, the residents group assembled to defend their area. They were met with incredulity. The residents were dismissed, simply being told that they were standing in the way of progress. The residents were being managed as a problem, not engaged with as relevant parties. With no reference to wider consultation, we cannot know how much further afield such interest might have stretched. Indeed, the PRA believed that: “In those cottages we had a potential heritage site for a global audience, right on our doorstep. They could have been incorporated into the main Titanic Project at the Harland and Wolff site and could have helped to put the great area of Sydenham, back on the world map.”

The only representative working for the residents, in their eyes, was The Alliance Party's Naomi Long, who unflinchingly took their views as her starting point. This was something Sammy Wilson of the DUP was felt to have failed to do. Subsequently, and following further separate development scandals involving DUP top brass, Naomi Long went on to oust Peter Robinson as MP for East Belfast after his 30+ year reign. One can only speculate as to whether these events were related.

Apart from the Wolff cottages in Sydenham, there is also the deeply felt pride over the heritage of the ropeworks, not to mention the aviation and engineering history of the area. These six counties led the world in shipbuilding, rope manufacture and aviation. The idea that developers seem to have is that heritage is detachable from communities as a commodifiable economic resource. Links to heritage are merely to be exploited as marketing tools. This is what risks actual heritage. The risk is a developer’s idea of heritage unlinked to reality – an economic centre devoid of texture or substance.

Local artist and commentator Daniel Jewesbury is an outspoken critic of unreflective development. “It’s all about this whole neoliberal imperative to unlock the potential, the capital potential, of the built environment. We’ve got more and more complicated financial instruments for turning property development into spectacular returns and you can get a much more impressive return through building something new that nobody particularly wants, necessarily,” he said.

What are the driving qualities of development that shows such scant regard for actual history and culture? Is development aimed at creating retail areas – economic zones – or at improving and building upon existing legacies of the past and the rightful pride of living, breathing, organically developed communities?

Professor of urban geography at Queen’s University, Steve Royle, sees parallels with the present in the past: “We had this when they did Lanyon place. The people of The Markets said ‘is this for us, are we going to get jobs? Can we make anything of this?’ The answer was basically ‘no’. There was nothing for the Markets people in the Hilton Hotel and all the other stuff round there. So, it’ll be the same in the Titanic Quarter,” he said.

In the eye of the developer, cities and communities are blank canvasses upon which ‘visions’ can be realised. In reality, they are homes, workplaces, leisure areas – social settings with history. Who benefits from the imposition of a vision on an area thought of as blank? Surely not those uprooted and displaced. Those who remain, meanwhile, are left feeling slighted. They feel disenfranchised— that without the stories to tell their children of the history, their children have been disinherited somehow. What’s more, when the people go, the tangible ties to the past – the heritage – goes with it.

The damage can be more than architectural, moreover, according to Rita Harkin of the Ulster Architectural Heritage Society: “I think it’s giving a sense of history, but in terms of our mental well-being it’s that sense of continuity that things aren’t just disposed of. That you’re building up layers and layers and layers of memories and that’s where your sense of a connection to a place comes from,” she said.

With nothing to evidence the pride that an area such as Sydenham has, how can future generations feel connected to an area? Why, when not connected would they care for an area? As the flags fly from various residences in East Belfast, it seems clear that the vacuum left by the disrespect for this hugely significant part of Belfast’s history will be filled by the easy yet dangerous identifications with tendentious accounts of the past. The pride of world leadership in engineering and manufacturing will be alien to the next generation, replaced by the usual thrill of throwing bricks at the other side.

The broader context of shipbuilding, ropeworks and the associated industries includes where the workers lived, worked, played. The past isn’t just that one harbour region – that’s a developer’s artifice. Moreover, Harland and Wolff wasn’t just the Titanic. However there is simply no appetite, owing to the economic imperatives of retail-led development, to genuinely reinvigorate communities or to pay homage to the past of an area. There is just the drive to zone and build, to unlock the economic value of the region whether that comes at the cost of other values or not.

In terms of retail-led development, diluting the traffic is to be avoided and it’s what would happen if the area – not just the site – were to be promoted. If the heritage were respected and faithfully developed rather than the idea of it formed through an economic lens, retail models projected for the development site could indicate certain lower than optimal returns. The link with Berry Street in the city centre is illuminating.

Originally, the Berry Street wall was built to divide west from east Belfast as a security measure. However, despite the ‘new dispensation’ following paramilitary ceasefires, the DSD keeps the dividing wall as a result of retailers’ stated fears over ‘leakage’ from predictable shopping routes. Were the wall to fall, established models of consumer activity might need to be reformulated. How much more stark an illustration of the influence of private retail imperatives on public bodies, their willingness to acquiesce under such influence and the limits this syndrome place upon the possibilities for individual choices could there be?

“Nobody has really had to learn how to run a city just because all any of us have ever had to learn was what flag was flying where. So to give them anything else like how to run a city how to run a council, they’re lost in that. They cannot think for themselves,” says Terry Hooey of our politicians.

Into this gap, moreover, fall the developers, the retailers, the consultants. Nowhere in the list of concerns for these privately interested parties is the public good. Elected representatives are supposed to do what Naomi Long does – represent the people and what’s good for their interests. What we have illustrated in this Sydenham debacle is the cavalier and ill-informed manner in which those at the top fail to do this.

Given the recent revelations regarding DRD and NI Water; amid whisperings of NIE failings and many more to come, this seemingly indicates a capability deficit at the height of power in Northern Ireland, both at the individual and departmental level. It will be future generations that suffer the consequences.

Years of political violence have yielded to years of feckless leadership. A cultural void could result in another lost generation as rootlessness creates disaffection. Without capable leadership, consultation at the local level is even more important than when the people at the top are the brightest sparks. Only through public opinion taken seriously can the lie of the land be determined and accountability maintained. Only with accountability does legitimacy arise. Without clarity on the processes of planning and the working of agencies such as DSD and DoE, there can be little hope that what Terry Hooey regards as the crime of Wolff’s cottages’ demolition won’t be played out again and again, in your place and mine.

 

Dr Stephen Rainey
Tutor, QUB

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Gustav Wilhelm Wolff Site Belfast Northern Ireland Is Up For Sale Again Questions Need To Be Answered Who Let The Cottages Be Demolished?And Still Lie Where They Fell

 

DSCN0809 DSCN0145 DSCN0143 DSCN0139 This is the site where two cottages once stood at 2-4 Station Road Sydenham Belfast Northern Ireland, the last remaing part of the Gustav Wilhelm Wolff estate known as the Den. Northern Irelands Shipbuilding History lies in a heap once cottages that could have become part of the shipbuilding history of Northern Ireland and part of a major tourist industry were demolished at 7-00am one morning to make way for apartments that have never been built, the Developer has never been back to the site to clear it or to ensure it is made safe by removing the rubble that was once two historical cottages of the like that has never been seen before in Northern Ireland.

Gustav Wilhelm Wolff was born in Hamburg, Germany in November 1834 Wolff was taken on as a full partner of Harland in 1862 the name of the Belfast Shipyard Changed to Harland and Wolff. the cottages were an asset to Northern Ireland, the decision taken to allow them be demolished was very short sighted even though the connection was there, questions have to be answered as to why two cottages that held so much history for Northern Ireland were demolished and left in a pile of rubble, as can be seen in our photograph above what was the urgency to demolish the cottages at 7-00am in the morning, then leave the cottages as they fell,who gave the go-ahead to let this happen,why was the go-ahead given before residents in the area were told it was going to take place.

The cottages meant so much to the community of Sydenham and was part of the history. why was the community not involved in any decisions taken to demolish the cottages removing the only remaining link to Harland and Wolff  shipbuilders and Gustav Wilhelm Wolff, the cottages were also a vital link to our children's history the Sydenham Community want answers.The Shipyard of Harland and Wolff has meant so much to the larger Sydenham area as so many fathers and sons from the Sydenham area worked for the company that vital link has now been broken, and the need to have our children's history safe guarded is the main aim of the Palmerston Residents Association.We look at the Titanic Quarter as not having a shipping history it may take the name of a liner that was built in the shipyard but that is all it achieves.

Harland and Wolff has built many ships and liners they were the world best they employed a lot of Northern Ireland people yet this is not marked in any way at the Titanic Quarter, so many people worked and died at Harland and Wolff none of which have been remembered in any way at all, even to have named  buildings after Sir Edward Harland, Gustav Wilhelm Wolff and William James Pirrie.  Great ships were built but are no part of the Titanic Quarter, names we should never forget the  SS Canberra, Seillean and Olympic, yet they are forgotten. We also seem to have forgotten the names of the Passengers and the workers who lost their lives on the Titanic.

2-4 Station Road would have been the community museum of Harland and Wolff for our children's history, yet it lies in ruins the Palmerston Residents Association chairman Terry Hoey would like to meet with Sammy Wilson of the DUP to talk over some of his concerns regarding the demolition of the cottages to enable the Residents Association to get the answers they need.  

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Sydenham Community Station Takes 3rd Place At Ulster In Bloom Festival 2010

DSCN0269 The 2010 Ulster in bloom festival was held in August, once again Sydenham Station was entered in the contest for un manned Station Halts, last year Sydenham came 2nd place pushing Carnalee into 3rd place but they came back fighting this year with lots of  involvement from the community Schools, we are very pleased they gained 2nd place this year as our Community Garden has taken up the most time, we are looking forward to next year when we hope to make 1st prize for the Station and the Community Garden.  we thank all the companies who have all ready given us their support for the garden by way of Equipment Loan ,Plants,Grant aid and Sponsorship,we could not have managed to get as far as we have without their support.

The Station has come on well since being community adopted 2years ago by the Palmerston Residents Association for the whole Community of Sydenham, the intention is to turn the station into a visitor attraction and show visitors and everyday commuters who use the station that we care for where we live, and that the Community are proud of their station and surrounding area. We would hope to have a Christmas Tree at the station this year to help bring a festive and community atmosphere to the area.

Once More Thank you to everyone who has supported us this year and we look forward to the Trans Link,Tourist Board, Ulster in Bloom Festival 2011

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

George Best Belfast City Airport And The Loss Of Ryan Air Is Northern Ireland Sleep Walking Into The Abyss Do Our Politicians Know What They Are Doing

George Best Belfast City Airport some people like it and some people do not, but one thing is for sure when you hear the noise of the aircraft you can be sure that Belfast is open for business, it shows we are like any other capital city people arrive and people depart, yes I know it is hard to believe out there is a big world and people like to travel,  it works both ways we travel to other parts of the world and people on the other side of the world visit us. Believe it or not that is how as a country makes money, when planes are landing they are bringing people to Belfast to spend money in our shops.

We have seen so many projects in Northern Ireland that would have helped the economy being lost due to bad decisions, unfortunately we just seem to accept it as if it does not matter. We will never become a big player if this is the attitude, there are to many countries trying to get themselves out of the dark ages and  governments are fighting for every inch that will make their country and their people prosper,Our government spends tax payers money going to St Patricks day in America to entice companies to invest in Northern Ireland, what is the point we as a country could be saving this money and spending it somewhere else for the good it is doing us.

Northern Ireland has lost so many opportunities it is mind blowing, we only have to look at the Olympic games every other country in the world is fighting to have the games brought to their country as they see the benefits, it brings Jobs,visitors,media, and money,We have had so many opportunities to get on that band wagon and show the rest of the world that Northern Ireland has really forgot the past and yes we are open for business, but as we all have seen this just was not the case for Northern Ireland, the loss to the economy is mind blowing to think what it would have brought to a part of Northern Ireland that is crying out for jobs and business to invest.

Our politicians cannot seem to grasp the idea they are in power  to govern Northern Ireland and make decisions on behalf of the people who elected  them, they are in power to make our economy grow and become stronger to give the people of Northern Ireland a more prosperous life with better jobs and better wages,  we are also seeing the John Lewis store that would also bring jobs and money to the Northern Ireland economy, once again we see they cannot make a decision on this  we must ask the question if our MLAs are in power to govern why do they not do it. Will we see yet further job losses and damage to our economy before we start asking the vital questions like when will they make the proper decisions for the people of Northern Ireland and its economy.

We now she just how bad its becoming for Northern Ireland and its people the decision that Ryan has taken should not come as a big shock to people, what company in their right mind would give as much time as Ryan Air has, For a decision on a extension to a runway of just 500mtrs, other cities are expanding their airports and willing to do so because they know it is right for the economy of the Country, yet we see once more our politicians cannot seem to see it is vital to extend the runway to enable  companies like Ryan Air to bring more business to Northern Ireland, our tourist industry is crying out for more tourism, the country is crying out for more jobs and yet our Politicians cannot make the decision.

George Best Belfast City Airport should and must be given all the support it needs from our politicians  to expand the runway or the airport as it is vital to the economy of Northern Ireland.  We hear cries that we have the international airport and planes should be diverted to there, just what is the thinking behind this we should be excited by the fact that we now have two major airports in Northern Ireland as it proves we need them both, there must be a need if both airports are moving passengers through them,  Some times decisions have to be taken by politicians that the electorate will not like but this is why politicians are in the job to take leadership and make decisions for the good of the country.  Extending a runway should be the decision of our politicians and not to hide behind the planning service,  they must look at the bigger picture and that must be for all of the electorate and the economy of Northern Ireland.

The politicians must show leadership they cannot sit back and expect others to make the hard decisions for them in case it may not go down well with their electorate, that is what politics is all about, the decision to let Ryan Air give up its slots to the UK were wrong and will effect the economy and jobs in Northern Ireland.  A meeting should be called by the Northern Ireland Assembly to clear the road blocks to make the runway extension happen for the good of the economy of the whole of Northern Ireland, and remove the damage that has already been done by having a major company like Ryan Air pull out of an airport like George Best Belfast City Airport.