Ada Lewis House is a handsome old building, currently useful and loved, but about to be demolished along with its mature garden and trees. #RetroFirst 🍃💚🍃
Thank you so much for signing our petition. Please ask your friends as well. #retrofirst Save Ada Lewis House - Sign the Petition! https://t.co/mHRzbUMXvW via @UKChange
We did mention it @lbhf@SouthernHsg_UK but you ignored. Now we have an ugly new building that is considerably higher than its surroundings, in a conservation area. #retrofirst
Cette parcelle arborée du 12e arrondissement n'avait jamais été construite. L'anomalie est rectifiée : le jardin a été complètement rasé et le chantier d'un immeuble de 6 étages, lancé.
NEWS // We're pleased that permission has been refused for the demolition of Orchard House in Crockham, Kent, following a strong objection by C20.
Designed 1924-26 by Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott, one of Britain's most prominent Arts & Crafts architects, it is a distinguished example of his Kentish Weald style dwelling.
Public space being sold for development. Residents not informed so couldn't object. Now they have made justified objections to the planning application they are being ignored by councillors and officers who refuse to even call it in to committee.
What sort of a system is this?
@ChelFulhamBen You abandoned us though. Gave planning permission to @SouthernHsg_UK for a completely unsuitable modern block in the middle of a Conservation Area, taller than every house around it.
Except in @lbhf where they destroyed 5 mature trees to build a big concrete lump taller than the surrounding houses in a conservation area. https://t.co/VdFm2b7IiE @SouthernHsg_UK
Genuinely ecstatic that Wellingborough tree campaigners have won today in High Court! This vindicates climbing a tree to stop felling: it was not only the morally right thing to do, it was preventing *illegal* destruction of nature by developer & council
https://t.co/4mtRsSU2lh
@AdaSave@LBHF Nor will it be @NorthNorfolkDC, which loves nothing better than a totally unnecessary demolition, particularly if there's a good interwar building involved.
Is Westminster the first council to realise that London’s developers run a carbon factory which needs strict policing? Westminster council unveils plans to become a ‘retrofit-first’ city | News | Housing Today https://t.co/l2zq9iINP0
As I travel a lot with my work, I see a lot of new build housing estates. Rarely do I see new tree planting schemes that survive past the first year. The country seems to be littered with skeletons of newly planted trees.
As a landscaper, it frustrates me that in this industry, there’s a complacency around the establishment of newly planted trees/shrubs/hedging and their management in the first 2 years. It’s a waste of resources and in my opinion, money would be better spent on planting younger and native specimens, which haven’t spent years in a fertile container of compost, only to be put into (more often than not) heavy clay soils or builders rubble and be expected to flourish.
Out of these 10 specimens at the end of my road, only 3 still have some leaves on (the rest have died) are in decline and will probably not survive past next year.
The industry needs a reform to ensure that the efforts made to plant new trees isn’t a waste of time/resources.