Jump to content

Recommended Posts

jimbo1964 Wrote:

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

> I love the P13.


I've cycled out to obscure areas of south London that don't even appear on maps in the past.


If you wait around long enough, a P13 will go past.


It quite possibly stops on every road in south London.

I am not sure the developer was necessarily so 'greedy' in this instance. I recall the broken-down house that stood derelict and vandalised on ths site for years. It must have cost a small fortine to have demolished this and then prepared the site for building the new flats. I can quite believe that two flats - even at the high prices of a few years back - would not have made the development viable. The flats are/were advertised as having cycle storage. I think digging out all that superfluous lawn on the Underhill Road side could perhaps have supplied off-street parking but for whatever reason they did not go with this. None of this denies how horrible the building is of course.

They don't look very nice to me. 'Luxury'? Pah!


The windows are, IMO, way too big and hellish to get curtains for. You'd have all and sundry gawping through 'em unless you kept blinds or curtains drawn. The property developers could have at least got ready made blinds for these flats. Talk about being overly exposed!


There's no way I would pay anywhere near ?200,000 for flats that are so oddly shaped and with such bizarre windows as these.

SimonM Wrote:

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

> I am not sure the developer was necessarily so

> 'greedy' in this instance. I recall the

> broken-down house that stood derelict and

> vandalised on ths site for years. It must have

> cost a small fortine to have demolished this and

> then prepared the site for building the new flats.

> I can quite believe that two flats - even at the

> high prices of a few years back - would not have

> made the development viable. The flats are/were

> advertised as having cycle storage. I think

> digging out all that superfluous lawn on the

> Underhill Road side could perhaps have supplied

> off-street parking but for whatever reason they

> did not go with this. None of this denies how

> horrible the building is of course.


From what I remember this house sufered badly from subsidance and had to be shored up for some time. It was also on top od a hill. They had to dig very deeply to set the foundations of the new flats which, I guess is partly why they are so expensive.

Brendan Wrote:

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

> Well I suppose the falts do have aspirations,

> aspirations to be something more than poky,

> uncomfortable boxes of glass and laminate built by

> the lowest bidder.


Run a spellcheck over your Freudian slips, you missed out a 'u'!

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

    • We're are just about to get ready for sale, a 2 bed flat, very close to Peckham Rye park.  It has been rented out for sometime, so is in need of some TLC for it to look its best, before it goes on the market.  Would be interested to know others thoughts on whether its best to just have the place painted completely white throughout, probably with new grey flooring, or if it might be more appealing to add some colour/interest (nothing too drastic), perhaps something alittle 'warmer', with some nice (potentially dark) feature walls maybe? Wondered whether the days of going completely white might now have passed ..... It might be useful to know that its not a period or conversion property, but rather a flat in a private purpose built block. 
    • It's a Microsoft . pub file, and it does open OK, but that's a discontinued program which used to be part of the full Office suite. I've got an old machine with old software and it's still on that.  This is a .pdf version (I hope)April 2025 Dulwich Hill Newsletter.pdf
    • Even with Acrobat pro - it does not open even though it is an acrobat doc.   Error: "Adobe Acrobat could not open 'April 2025 Dulwich Hill Newsletter.pub' because it is either not a supported file type or because the file has been damaged (for example, it was sent as an email attachment and wasn't correctly decoded). To create an Adobe PDF document, go to the source application. Then choose Save as Adobe PDF from the PDF dropdown in the Print dialog."  
    • I got my hair cut there and was very happy with it. I thought the pricing was fair - less than Blue Tit which is where I used to go. Jonny used to cut my hair years ago. I went to book him but ended up with Gabriele who did a great job. Will use them again. Also their junior price goes up to 17. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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