Monday, June 26, 2006

olympics v local allotments

PRESS RELEASE by Julie Sumner

'GREEN' OLYMPICS TO BULLDOZE 100 YEAR OLD ALLOTMENTS FOR 4 WEEK FOOTPATH.

'Food Heroes' Hassan and Reg, featured on Rick Stein's BBC series, will be preparing food fresh from the plot alongside Islington's Moro restaurant owners Sam and Sam Clark, throughout the allotment Open Day on 2nd July, 12 noon til 5pm Manor Gardening Society Allotments, Waterden Rd, E15
(directions on the map attached).


The event is to draw attention to the campaign against plans to bulldoze these 100 year old allotments to make way for a footpath to the Olympics.

In direct contradiction to their recently launched strategies, the London Food Strategy and the Biodiversity Strategy, the Mayor and the LDA's Olympic Final Masterplan reveals the intention to destroy a working example of local food production, sustainable environment and integrated, diverse, community all rolled into one.


As Sam Clark of Moro restaurant says,
‘It’s like a small island of nature and wildlife, a paradise next to the industrial sites and busy bus stations of Hackney Wick. The water protects us from the urban wasteland and every visit brings a feeling of peace and the chance to unwind from hectic London life. The allotments are fifteen minutes from our house in Bethnal Green but once you’re there it feels as though you are in the heart of the country.’

Cleve West, gardening writer for Independent and Garden's Illustrated is outraged by the act of vandalism this represents, 'If the Olympic ideal means anything, it should apply to much more than four weeks of running, jumping and swimming. Friendship,
tolerance, vision and healthy, sustainable living are fanfared by those at Manor Garden allotments. In my book, theirs is a torch worth carrying to the ends of the Earth.'

He and Tak Hoshimo, Senior Lecturer in Architecture at the University of East London agree that, ‘The Olympic Park design represents old-fashioned nineteenth century thinking which favours hard surfacing and iconic civil engineering rather than an integrated, softer approach as embodied by say, the Eden Project.’ and that, 'most good landscape architects consider local distinctiveness a priority. The 'blank canvas'
mentality ignores the attachment a piece of ground has with its surroundings.'

As the writer and local Hackney resident, Iain Sinclair, stated on The Today Programme the morning after visiting Manor Gardening Society's last Open Day on 21st May 06, 'we don't want it (the Olympic Park Design) over-imagined. We don't want it imagining for us. We want to imagine it for ourselves. I'm worried that the soul of the place, as represented by sites like Manor Garden Allotments, will be lost.'

Professor Peter Roberts of The Academy for Sustainable Community, adviser to the
Government, made clear in a recent lecture that lack of local ownership of a development project and top-down authority-led planning, leaves people feeling alienated and dispossessed. The resulting wasted landscape inevitably leads to a need for further regeneration in twenty years time and spiralling costs.

The Millenium Dome comes to mind!


For further information please contact Julie Sumner, email aireyworld@aol.com or phone 07956 890 825


Sunday, June 04, 2006

leaflets a plenty!

The Camden Green Fair was fun. I came back home with loads of leaflets and sunburn. There were a number of interesting projects including a spoof parking ticket campaign by the Alliance against urban 4x4s, an eco-design fair and a trading system to link up communities called Just Change UK where I paid 2 quid for 80 bags of Nilgiri tea from India - it is gorgeoous. I will note down some more links and info in the next day or too.

love london 2006

With world environment day coming up on 5 June, London is gearing up for a whole bunch of activities... London Sustainability fortnight begins on 4 June until 18 June 2006. I found out about the festival from a little booklet that was popped into my vegetable bag last week by my fantastic supplier, farmaround. Sunday 4th June will see the launch of London Sustainability Weeks at the Camden Green Fair held at Regents Park from 12 noon to 7pm. The fair is the largest environmentally friendly festival in London.
The Fair aims to inspire Londoners to help make their capital a world-class Green City, letting visitors find out about the huge and growing number of sustainable companies, products, campaigns, and lifestyle choices that are available to us all, every day. Ranging from energy, holidays, transport, leisure and food to shopping, health, beauty, and gardening, the Camden Green Fair has something to discover for everyone, and with over 100 stallholders last year selling everything from herbs to electricity, it's a great opportunity to do a bit of shopping too, without it costing the earth! The Camden Bikefest combines their annual event with the Camden Green Fair. There are bikes available for you to have a go on, and various bike activities to promote and encourage cycling.
My pledges for the fortnight will be...
1 - Take lunch to work at least 3 times a week thereby saving on packaging and helping to use up more of the veg left in my fridge - not to mention saving money!
2 - Recycle my plastic containers - hunt down local plastic recycle bins.
3 - Buy new long lasting eco bulbs for my non-dimmer lights.
4 - Make sure I am using the best eco-electricity supplier
5 - Get involved in local campaign to help shape the Tottenham Hale Masterplan to insure that the impact to the environment is minimised and that creative sustainable options are considered.
6 - Write to Haringey Council in respect of accountability for sustainable targets.
7 - Have at least one buy nothing day in the fortnight