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Argyle Street, Norwich

Coordinates:52°37′18.9″N1°18′10.7″E / 52.621917°N 1.302972°E /52.621917; 1.302972
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Street in Norwich, formerly squatted
Argyle Street
Argyle Street Alternative Republic
Argyle Street in winter 1981
Argyle Street, Norwich is located in Norwich
Argyle Street, Norwich
Location within Norwich
Maintained byNorwich City Council
Coordinates52°37′18.9″N1°18′10.7″E / 52.621917°N 1.302972°E /52.621917; 1.302972
Construction
Completion1873
Demolished1986
Other
Known forSquats in the 1980s

Argyle Street was a Victorian terraced street inNorwich, Norfolk. It became asquat lasting from 1979 to 1985. The street was then demolished in 1986. Some of the newbuild houses were subsequently demolished in 2015.

History

[edit]

Argyle Street was a Victorian street consisting of smalltwo-up two-down terraced houses. According to Morant's map, it was partly built in 1873.[1] In 1883-4 there were 106 families, primarily manual workers with a significant number of men employed by the railway.[2] The Jarrold & Sons Directory of 1889 lists one shopkeeper.[3]

The street was saved fromslum clearance in the early 1960s, after the nearby area of Richmond, or the "village on the hill", was completely demolished.[4]

Squatted

[edit]

TheUniversity of East Anglia planned to buy the Victorian terraced housing of Argyle Street fromNorwich City Council for student homes in 1979. However, on 6 December 1978, fortysquatters moved into fourteen empty houses and one of Britain's largest and longest running squats had begun. The other fifteen empty houses were quickly occupied and eventually the street had 120 squatters.[5][4]

The squatters termed the squat the "Argyle Street Alternative Republic".[5] The lamp posts were painted to look like giraffes and the pavements were embellished with rainbows and peace signs.[6]

In 1980 the squatters formed aco-operative which was backed by Norwich City Council, which at the time includedPat Hollis. Together they applied for a grant from the Government-funded Housing Corporation. In 1981 a £1 million grant was agreed for a major renovation scheme, but in 1982 theDepartment of the Environment blocked Norwich City Council's plan to sell or lease the houses to the co-operative.[7]

Redevelopment

[edit]

In 1984 Norwich City Council decided to demolish the street and redevelop the area for sheltered homes. The final eviction of squatters from Argyle Street occurred in February 1985.[7]

Some of the redeveloped houses, built in 1986, were judged to be at risk of subsidence in 2009. The tenants were evacuated and the buildings were finally demolished in 2015 after standing empty for six years and becoming an eyesore. The only option left to the council was to demolish the homes for £230,000 and turn the area into a park.[8]

Film

[edit]
Main article:Memoirs of a Survivor (film)

In 1981, Argyle Street became the setting for scenes of afilmed adaptation ofDoris Lessing'sdystopian novelMemoirs of a Survivor.[9]

In 1985, Al Stokes made a film about the eviction of the squatters, calledStreet of Experience.[5] Stokes and his crew filmed the leaving party on the night of 19 February and the eviction the following day.[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Two copies of the map of the City of Norwich by A. W. Morant, City surveyor, printed".National Archives. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  2. ^Eyre Brothers (1883).Norwich Directory. Norwich.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^Jarrold & Sons (1889).Directory of the City of Norwich. Norwich.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  4. ^ab"The Beginning".Norch. Archived fromthe original on 24 April 2019. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  5. ^abcFreezer, David (7 October 2011)."Banned squatters' film is to be shown in Norwich at last".Norwich Evening News. Retrieved24 April 2019.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^"Photo gallery: Remembering 30 years since the end of the Argyle Street Alternative Republic".Eastern Daily Press. 20 February 2016. Retrieved24 April 2019.[permanent dead link]
  7. ^abStokes, Al (2012)."A Brief History of Argyle Street". Retrieved24 April 2019.
  8. ^Grimmer, Dan (24 October 2015)."Eyesore Norwich homes finally set for demolition after standing empty for more than five years".Eastern Daily Press. Retrieved24 April 2019.
  9. ^"Memoirs of Survivor". 28 May 2023.
  10. ^"Video: The final hours of Norwich's Argyle Street Alternative Republic".Eastern Daily Press. 21 February 2015. Retrieved24 April 2019.
Influences
Squatter symbol
Squatter groups
Legalized squats
Former squats
Notable squatters
Legal framework
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