Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I live really close to the house and I can confirm that this music actually started early yesterday afternoon. It then went quiet until around midnight and from thereon it has been blasting out and continues to do so now. I have had hardly any sleep as all. The MC kept me awake screaming over the tunes, the bass was so high my windows were rattling and loads of people were hanging outside the house and I am frankly really hacked off.


A note was put through my door (and probably many other of my neighbours) telling me that they were going to celebrate a birthday on Sat night. I am not a party pooper, I am fairly sociable myself and I like a night out. However, I really couldnt take any more of this and at 5am this morning I decided to call Southwark noise team. Well, you really couldnt make up what they told me. I was informed, politely and quite embarrasingly that no-one was on duty from 4am-8am. However, I could have logged my complaint and someone would call me back. I politely declined as I have many experiences of leaving messages for the council and no-one ever rings you back.


So I decided to leave it as being a pessimist and myself working for another council, I know there isnt a lot that they can do. All that would happen is a environmental officer will come out and measure the noise, then ask them to turn it down and guess what, they usually leave and then the music is turned right back up again.


So Sam MG if you want to complete this process you can ring 020 7525 5777. Southwark website states


Noise must be kept to a reasonable volume at all times

You are not allowed to have a party where people pay to come in or to have a party that is too noisy.

If you do want to have a party, it is best to tell your neighbours beforehand and tell them when it will finish. Keep the music down and ask people to be quiet when they leave.


I wish you good luck and I am going to keep my fingers crossed that I get some sleep tonight!!

There are still people hanging around outside the house and sitting on the street corners. I don't think any of us can take another night of no sleep! We were woken up at about 2.30am by people parking their cars in our street; shouting and generally acting antisocially. That was now 15 hours ago. Has anyone called the police?

Try asking the DJ or party goers to have the music turned down first. Yes, that is the right thing to do but ask only once. Put your complaint in writing in a trio of letters to the police, the Southwark anti social behaviour unit, phone 0207 525 1248 9-5 mon-fri and the noise team. Get their addresses and get it logged.


If you smell dope, get the law in

And you come across as a right Gary.


SO many NIMBY?s on this forum, people try and have some fun and all you lot do is cry about it.


You should have knocked on their door and joined them, you might have discovered


1. They?re nice people

2. You enjoyed yourselves.


But no, you come on here to cry and moan.


Mate, you are a proper loser.

So it appears that both times the loud music has disturbed the peace has been on Sunday night. The next day is Monday which is a working day for most people. People who go to work need to have a good night's sleep or they cannot do a proper job . Therefore it stands to reason, common sense, basic human consideration for others that when we live on top of each other we bear these things in mind. The reason there exists the Council noise team is because a lot of people have no consideration for others and think they will do what they want at whatever time they want. If people want to party on work nights they should go to a non-residential area and do it there or face the consequences- i.e. get your sound system confiscated.

Get real Longboy.(and if they were nice people they would have forewarned the neighbours and invited them)

Longboy Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Cheese toasties?! Wht are you talking about you

> daft moo.


I assumed your calling Jeremy "a right Gary" was some kind of rhyming slang.


Unless you are too young to remember the Breville sandwich maker, the fact that you were unable to keep up suggests that you, not I, are the intellectually challenged of the two of us, and as such, the "daft moo".

Longboy Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Listen to you lot! What a bunch of misery guts,

> whoever it is just having a party. Have any of you

> lot every actually enjoyed yourselves, or are you

> too pre-occupied with moaning ALL THE TIME?

>

> GET A LIFE


**********


I should imagine the residents within hearing distance of said 'party place' enjoy themselves as much as they can. I'd say they're pre-occupied with getting a decent night's sleep so they can do a decent job, and pay their taxes which means people who are pre-occupied with partying during the working day don't have to...And no-one on here has displayed the NIMBY attitude.

Posting stuff just to wind people up and put a cat amongst the pigeons strikes me as a sad waste of time, therefore Longboy you need to get a life. The people on here are making a fair point, you are attempting to rile them by exchanging mild insults and dry disagreement, frankly its the stuff of someone who has no life of their own and gets their kicks from tring to be controversial in a very beige and bland way. At least come up with another line, get a life is tired. Oh and if your idea of having a life and having fun is posting on this forum...you're prob not the best person to comment.

Well said Jenny. You often find that these people who "have a life" partying all hours are not getting up for work the next day but we are keeping them!!! Paying their rent, council tax etc. What makes me really angry is that as the innocent party, you have to ring Southwark Noise Team and then wait up to an hour for them to call you back and ask the question "is there still noise" and finally they will deem to turn up. They then confront the residents causing the disturbance who turn the music down for a brief time before turning it back up with a vengence by which time you have lost about three hours of sleep and cannot get back to sleep at all.


It is nothing to do with getting a life. We have to sleep with our windows closed in the height of summer (yes I know this year's weather is an exception) because cars fitted with speaker systems that fill their boot play loud music in the early hours of the morning and drive slowly around the streets waking everyone up. Nothing is done about it. Not only does it disturb residents but it is unsafe to drive around with such loud music because as a driver you cannot hear anything outside the vehicle and what about those mini motor cycles that make that horrendous noise and wake you up in the middle of the night. I could just go on and on. The reality is that these people creating this noise and disturbance are, in the majority of cases, unemployed and do not have to get up for work like the rest of us.


I am sick of it.

Oh dear soya. Please lets not turn this into East Dulwich snobbery.


Celia said at the beginning that notes were put through doors, so these people aren't completely inconsiderate and it was probably a one off. The party got out of hand and people had more fun than the owners expected. Perhaps if a few of the neighbours had gone round to speak to them, when it continued the next day, the noise would have died down a lot earlier. I live on a junction with Dunstans and hadn't heard a peep - but can imagine how annoying it was.


However... we all live in London and near to people with vastly different lifestyles. I embrace that, even when I'm tripping over buggies and trying to relax in the sun while the dad down the road has a ridiculously loud water fight with his kids *yes, that was annoying too*


Hope that party has stopped now!

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

    • why do we think we have the right for the elected local council to be transparent?
    • Granted Shoreditch is still London, but given that the council & organisers main argument for the festival is that it is a local event, for local people (to use your metaphor), there's surprisingly little to back this up. As Blah Blah informatively points out, this is now just a commercial venture with no local connection. Our park is regarded by them as an asset that they've paid to use & abuse. There's never been any details provided of where the attendees are from, but it's still trotted out as a benefit to the local community.  There's never been any details provided of any increase in sales for local businesses, but it's still trotted out as a benefit to the local community.  There's promises of "opportunities" for local people & traders to work at the festival, but, again, no figures to back this up. And lastly, the fee for the whole thing goes 100% to running the Events dept, and the dozens of free events that no-one seems able to identify, and, yes, you guessed it - no details provided for by the council. So again, no tangible benefit for the residents of the area.
    • I mean I hold no portfolio to defend Gala,  but I suspect that is their office.  I am a company director,  my home address is also not registered with Companies House. Also guys this is Peckham not Royston Vasey.  Shoreditch is a mere 20 mins away by train, it's not an offshore bolt hole in Luxembourg.
    • While it is good that GALA have withdrawn their application for a second weekend, local people and councillors will likely have the same fight on their hands for next year's event. In reading the consultation report, I noted the Council were putting the GALA event in the same light as all the other events that use the park, like the Circus, the Fair and even the FOPR fete. ALL of those events use the common, not the park, and cause nothing like the level of noise and/or disruption of the GALA event. Even the two day Irish Festival (for those that remember that one) was never as noisy as GALA. So there is some disingenuity and hypocrisy from the Council on this, something I wll point out in my response to the report. The other point to note was that in past years branches were cut back for the fencing. Last year the council promised no trees would be cut after pushback, but they seem to now be reverting to a position of 'only in agreement with the council's arbourist'. Is this more hypocrisy from 'green' Southwark who seem to once again be ok with defacing trees for a fence that is up for just days? The people who now own GALA don't live in this area. GALA as an event began in Brockwell Park. It then lost its place there to bigger events (that pesumably could pay Lambeth Council more). One of the then company directors lived on the Rye Hill Estate next to the park and that is likely how Peckham Rye came to be the new choice for the event. That person is no longer involved. Today's GALA company is not the same as the 'We Are the Fair' company that held that first event, not the same in scope, aim or culture. And therein lies the problem. It's not a local community led enterprise, but a commercial one, underwritten by a venture capital company. The same company co-run the Rally Event each year in Southwark Park, which btw is licensed as a one day event only. That does seem to be truer to the original 'We Are the Fair' vision, but how much of that is down to GALA as opoosed to 'Bird on the Wire' (the other group organising it) is hard to say.  For local people, it's three days of not being able to open windows, As someone said above, if a resident set up a PA in their back garden and subjected the neighbours to 10 hours of hard dance music every day for three days, the Council would take action. Do not underestimate how distressing that is for many local residents, many of whom are elderly, frail, young, vulnerable. They deserve more respect than is being shown by those who think it's no big deal. And just to be clear, GALA and the council do not consider there to be a breach of db level if the level is corrected within 15 minutes of the breach. In other words, while db levels are set as part of the noise management plan, there is an acknowledgement that a breach is ok if corrected within 15 minutes. That is just not good enough. Local councillors objected to the proposed extension. 75% of those that responded to the consultation locally did not want GALA 26 to take place at all. For me personally, any goodwill that had been built up through the various consultations over recent years was erased with that application for a second weekend, and especially given that when asked if there were plans for that in post 2025 event feedback meetings (following rumours), GALA lied and said there were no plans to expand. I have come to the conclusion that all the effort to appease on some things is merely an exercise in show, to get past the council's threshold for the events licence. They couldn't give a hoot in reality for local people, and people that genuinely care about parkland, don't litter it with noisy festivals either.   
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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