Castle Vale
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Castle Vale is an area of the City of Birmingham, in England, originally created as an overspill housing estate in the 1960s.
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[edit] History
[edit] Pre Castle Vale
The area was originally known as Berwood, from the Saxon ‘Bearu’ meaning 'the woods'.
In 1160 the Manor of Berwood was given to the Cannons of Leicester Abbey. A moated house, St Mary’s Chapel, a hermitage, a bake house and farm buildings were built for them. A later house (Berwood Hall) was built outside the moat, which was eventually the site of Berwood Hall Farm. A Soap Factory was built near here in the 1930’s. Home Farm was in the north west corner, near Tyburn House. This farm had a large orchard, but its main function was to spread sewage brought from the City of Birmingham over the rest of the land. In 1898 filter beds were constructed as the volume of sewage was becoming too much. The rest of the land was farmland or swamp, surrounded by forest.
The area was a flat plain when it became Castle Bromwich Playing Fields. It was then used as the Castle Bromwich private aerodrome, when the first aeroplane in the Birmingham area flew here in 1909. It became a stopping place during early air races. The War Office requisitioned it for use by the Royal Flying Corps and flying schools in 1914, when proper roads and buildings were established. The British Industries Fair (the pre runner to the National Exhibition Centre) was a large complex of buildings built on land between the airfield and the railway in 1920. In the inter war years the aerodrome had a dual military and civilian function. In these early days it was the busiest airport in the area due to its passenger, post and railway air business. In 1937 more hangars and a Squadron Headquarters were built for the Royal Air Force. In 1939 it was extended further to become a fighter station, a base for other units and a dispatch site for aeroplanes built at Castle Bromwich Aircraft Factory on the other side of the Chester Road. Various units used the airfield post war and there was a famous annual display to mark the anniversary of the Battle of Britain. Civilian flights returned, including the first scheduled helicopter service from London. The airfield closed in 1958 and in 1960 the site, the BIF site and nearby farmland was sold for construction of the overspill estate which started in 1964. The last hangars were demolished in 1992 for an industrial site.
All that remains now from these times is a memorial, a stained glass window in the church, streets and housing with aviation names, a row of ex RAF houses along the Chester Road, and the Sentinel Spitfire Memorial.
[edit] Construction
The estate was the largest tower block estate in the UK with over thirty huge tower blocks in one small area. Being built on the site of an airfield, it seemed fitting when many of the streets and blocks of flats took their names from aircraft and airfields. Birmingham council owned around 5,000 homes on the estate and they included 34 multi-storey blocks of flats, although there was a substantial amount of privately owned homes in the area - especially in the north-east of the estate around Turnhouse Road. By the end of the 1960s, Castle Vale was completed with a population of 11,000.
[edit] Decline
However, Castle Vale began to decline during the 1970s and by the 1980s it was one of the most troubled housing estates in the country. More than 20% of people living on the estate were unemployed, the local bank had closed (leaving many people on the estate with no resort but loan sharks), homes were falling into disrepair and crime levels were soaring. Joyriding was one of the biggest problems on the estate - the wide roads on Castle Vale were popular with thieves driving stolen cars. Teenagers would stand on the top of the estate's tallest block of flats - 20-storey Concorde Tower - to watch joyriders speed through the estate.
The 'Centre 8' tower blocks (Shawbury Tower, Kemble Tower, Northolt Tower, Lyneham Tower, Cosford Tower, Abingdon Tower, Bovingdon Tower and Cranwell Tower) in the centre of the estate between Tangmere Drive and Yatesbury Avenue were probably the most troubled grouping of high-rise flats in Birmingham. They were riddled with damp, vandalism and graffiti and many of their occupants were known to the police for criminal activities.
[edit] Regeneration
In 1994 the tenants of the Castle Vale estate voted for a breakaway from Birmingham City Council and their homes were controlled by a Housing Action Trust, known locally as "The Hat", with a twelve-year plan for regeneration.
The Housing Action Trust's initial plans were to demolish 17 of the 34 tower blocks and renovate the other 17. 24 of the estate's 27 maisonette blocks were earmarked for demolition. But a change of plan resulted in 32 of the estate's 34 tower blocks being demolished by the end of 2003, and there are now just two multi-storey blocks of flats in the area. All 27 maisonette blocks were demolished. New homes have sprung up from the rubble of the demolished properties, built for freehold and leasehold occupation.
The 'Centre 8' tower blocks were favourites for demolition when the redevelopment plans were first drawn up, as were nine smaller other blocks - Valiant House, Meteor House, Hermes House, Ensign House, Oakington House, Hercules House, Andover House, Ternhill House and Albert Shaw House. The 17 blocks earmarked for renovation were the 14 Farnborough Road blocks (Hawker House, Hampden House, Auster House, Trident House, Avro House, Comet House, Vulcan House, Pioneer House, Argosy House, Lysander House, Viscount House, Vanguard House, Javelin House and Kestrel House) as well as Concorde Tower, Chivenor House and Topcliffe House.
The first phase of the demolition began in 1995 with the clearance of the vilified Centre 8 blocks. Valiant, Meteor, Hermes and Ensign Houses followed soon after.
By 1999, all 27 maisonette blocks and Albert Shaw House had been cleared, as had eight of the 14 Farnborough Road tower blocks which had been originally earmarked for renovation. The six remaining blocks on Farnborough Road were demolished the following year.
Concorde Tower, the tallest block on the estate, had been originally earmarked for refurbishment but this proved to be a costly business and the block was demolished in 2000 as an economy measure. Also in 2000, Sainsbury’s and the new shopping centre opened.
2001 also saw the demolition of the estate's 114 one-bedroom bungalows which were replaced by newly constructed two-bedroom bungalows.
By 2002, only six tower blocks remained on Castle Vale. In 2003, four of these blocks - Oakington, Ternhill, Hercules and Andover Houses - were demolished, leaving just two high-rise blocks standing - these were Topcliffe and Chivenor Houses.
The Housing Action Trust refurbished the two remaining tower blocks and the era of high-rise living in Castle Vale was all but over. When the HAT was created, more than half of the homes of Castle Vale were high-rise flats. A successful transition from high-rise to low-rise living across the estate was completed and the nightmare stories about the Centre 8 blocks are now consigned to history.
The site of the 14 tower blocks on Farnborough Road has been redeveloped as a mixture of private and rented new housing, some of the roads in this area take their names from the old tower blocks - these include Avro Way, Lysander Boulevard and Trident Boulevard.
The site of Concorde Tower was redeveloped as a cul-de-sac called Concorde Drive.
The Centre 8 site was partly developed for housing and a section of the land was converted into Centre Park - which opened in 2003 and is Birmingham's first new park during the 21st century.
In place of the badly insulated maisonettes which were expensive to heat, low-rise flats and houses were built for tenants to rent off the HAT.
In October 2003 tenants were balloted on whether administration of the estate should be returned to the City Council or be administered by a housing association. On a 78% turnout, 94% of tenants voted in favour of Castle Vale Community Housing Association.
As of 2006, Castle Vale is a reasonable housing estate of quality private and rented homes in an area with a relatively low crime rate - a far cry from the crime ravaged estate littered with sub-standard housing that it was 15 years ago.
[edit] The voice of some Castle Vale tenants
When Castle Vale was built during the 1960s, it was a modern and well-equipped housing estate occupied mostly by families rehoused from slum clearances in inner city Birmingham. One tenant, who moved to one of the Centre 8 blocks in 1969, said that it was like 'Utopia'.
Within 20 years, the voice of Castle Vale tenants had a very distant tone. A former solider who arrived on the estate in 1986 said that he lived like a hermit for two years and did not know anybody in his tower block except the three other tenants living on his floor.
A single mother living in a maisonette on the estate during the early 1990s said that her flat was so cold and expensive to heat that she and her two children spent entire winters in the living room. She also used to bath the children in a paddling pool because the bathroom was so cold.
In 2005, a book about the estate was published and its title 'No Longer Notorious' was fitting to describe how a sink housing estate had been transformed into a modern and attractive place in which to live.
[edit] Points of interest
To celebrate the area's connection with the Supermarine Spitfire fighter plane - almost 12,000 of the aircraft were built at Castle Bromwich Aerodrome Factory between 1940 and 1945 - a large metal sculpture entitled Sentinel designed by Tim Tolkien was erected on the A452 roundabout located between the estate and the Jaguar factory in 2000. The roundabout was subsequently renamed "Spitfire Island".
[edit] Significant addresses in Castle Vale
[edit] Addresses remaining from 1960s
- Farnborough Road
- Tangmere Drive
- Yatesbury Avenue
- Turnhouse Road
- Hawkinge Drive
- Sopwith Croft
- Valencia Croft
- Topcliffe House
- Chivenor House
[edit] Post 1990s addresses
- Northolt Drive - on Centre 8 site
- Mere Avenue - on Centre 8 site
- Shawbury Avenue - on Centre 8 site
- Cosford Crescent - on Centre 8 site
- Abingdon Road - on Centre 8 site
- Phoenix Court - on Centre 8 site
- Avro Way - near Farnborough Road
- Lysander Boulevard - near Farnborough Road
- Trident Boulevard - near Farnborough Road
- Javelin Avenue- near Farnborough Road
[edit] Defunct addresses
- Abingdon Tower
- Bovingdon Tower
- Cosford Tower
- Kemble Tower
- Northolt Tower
- Lyneham Tower
- Shawbury Tower
- Cranwell Tower
- Argosy House
- Avro House
- Comet House
- Lysander House
- Trident House
- Viscount House
- Vanguard House
- Vulcan House
- Pioneer House
- Javelin House
- Kestrel House
- Hawker House
- Hampden House
- Auster House
- Concorde Tower
- Hermes House
- Valiant House
- Meteor House
- Ensign House
- Andover House
- Hercules House
- Ternhill House
- Albert Shaw House
- Oakington House
[edit] Significant structures
- Castle Vale Shopping Centre
- Reed Square Shopping Centre - Now demolished & replaced by The High Street
- Castle Vale Secondary School
- Chivenor Primary School
- Topcliffe Primary School
- Josiah Mason College
- Spitfire House
- Castle Vale Library
[edit] Radio
The origins of community radio in Castle Vale date back to 1995 when a group of young residents staged the first Vale FM temporary licence broadcast (RSL) from a tower block on the estate with funding from Castle Vale Housing Action Trust.
A further broadcast took place in 1996, firmly establishing local support for a community broadcasting service in Castle Vale. Community Radio was seen as a way to meet the information needs of the local community and strengthen a positive sense of identity in an area which had experienced decades of disadvantage and deprivation. This lead to the creation of Castle Vale Community Radio (CVCR).
In 1998 the organisation located to its own premises. The facilities, amongst the best in the sector in the UK, include two broadcast studios, a training room, digital recording facilities and office space.
Since 1997 the organisation has run five Radio skills training programmes for over 75 unemployed participants in partnership with East Birmingham College, part of City College Birmingham. In addition, a further 5 Restricted Service Licence (RSL) broadcasts have been staged, averaging an audience of 25% of all local residents. Further to this, a number of community - wide initiatives have been organised in conjunction with local organisations to facilitate the involvement of 350 young people in community radio activity.
The station has recently been granted a Community Broadcast Licence by OFCOM, and will begin broadcasting under the name Switch Radio, in early 2007.