Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Worth a look as the proposed conservation area covers a slice of East Dulwich.


I can't see who wrote the Southwark Document, but some of the structure and text is very similar to the English Heritage report of 2009.


Ths post is not an endorsement of English Heritage errors.


John K

Bumping this because the Southwark conservatiom area proposals affect East Dulwich residents, and as this thread is in the fast-moving lounge it was already buried on page two.


Way back in 2009 when English Heritage published their Historical Assessment all you had to do was send them an email and they'd post you a "FREE" hard copy of the report. By nearly return post you got a very well produced A4 size book printed on good quality paper with all the colour illustrations. If it were a commercially published book it would retail at around ?30.


English Heritage has suffered severe budget cuts and I don't know if they still provide this "free" service. Nevertheless it might still be worth a try in case they have some space copies stuffed in the back of a cupboard.


John K

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Is Gigi spayed & microchipped?
    • was the price not displayed on the menu?
    • Perhaps Gooseygreeny was not familiar with the wildlife before Gala was imposed on the park, since when its value to wildlife has deteriorated. The Park had never been disturbed before, as the council had respected it as a Site of Importance for Nature Conservation, so only the Common was licensed by them as a site for events. The first time Gala held their event, there was a tree with woodpeckers nesting in it right in the middle of the main field they used and thrushes, blackbirds and great tits nesting within the shrubs and trees immediately surrounding the field. The woodpeckers were thriving on ants from the anthills in the grass. To those of us who used to enjoy watching the wildlife, it was very obviously a Site of Importance for a variety of birds. Despite being accessed by the public and their dogs, it had been relatively undisturbed,  which was one of the main reasons why it was so special and why I have been opposed to the Gala festival being held during the bird nesting season.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...