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Hulme Crescents 1978

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  • čas přidán 7. 10. 2008
  • A short edited documentry about Hulme in Manchester. The housing sceme was a failure from start to finish. The estate was finaly demolished in the mid 1990's

Komentáře • 151

  • @fattypark
    @fattypark Před 5 lety +18

    I like the fact that the documentary just tells it like it is, no sugar coating, no idealism. Just facts and the truth.

  • @misskoutsofta
    @misskoutsofta Před 12 lety +30

    I'm actually quite fascinated by the whole thing, i'm from manchester and I remember "old Hulme" as a child...how on earth these planners could actually think there idea would work still baffles me!! New Hulme is a vast improvement, however I am still drawn to old Hulme for some reason, I find it interesting and quite nostalgic...

    • @roberttaylor7462
      @roberttaylor7462 Před 11 měsíci

      It was the architects that designed the crescents - states it in the narrative - and if you have ever dealt with architects they have a quite persuasive way and narratives also states that some issues were overlooked/became apparent later. These days there are crime prevention officers in every police force that look into the design of major developments because far more is known about what could go wrong. So the proposal is not entirely down to town planners!

  • @chriz1976
    @chriz1976 Před 11 lety +16

    Amazing piece of footage and history about Hulme. I used to visit the area as my Grandma used to live on 'Avenham Close.' I recall the crescents and the old 'Spinners' pub. My brother used to go to the 'Russell Club/Factory' club. Unfortunately, I never saw where that venue was located. However, I visit Hulme nearly every night as my girlfriend lives there. Whenever I am driving down there, I cannot help but think of my Gran and the many bands that played there too and of course the crescents.

  • @WeloveyouDave
    @WeloveyouDave Před 10 lety +32

    I lived here and maybe it was a combination of alot of different things, my youth, music scene, and plenty of naughtiness but I loved this place. We had the best time and we didn't care. X

    • @dsanalysis5013
      @dsanalysis5013 Před 5 lety +8

      Valium addiction the guy says. cant be that bad heh

  • @bens1972
    @bens1972 Před 2 lety +11

    Ironically, it would have been cheaper to have redeveloped all the Victorian houses that existed before and far more aesthetically pleasing.

  • @ottconsulting7
    @ottconsulting7 Před 6 lety +34

    It was worse than it looks - druggies, alkies, mental cases - and that was just the students!

    • @classicartfoundation639
      @classicartfoundation639 Před 5 lety +10

      That was just the under 5's!

    • @Genekellystand
      @Genekellystand Před rokem +4

      Those were the architects

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg Před 4 měsíci

      Wilson and Womersley actually compared their "Crescents" to the ones in Bath. I had a copy of the slim brochure that they produced for a curiously-gullible City Council.
      Many of the City's housing-projects like this giant one were only "good" for a 20-year life (at best) before they became structurally- and socially uninhabitable.

    • @jazzyjane611
      @jazzyjane611 Před 3 měsíci

      😂😂😂

  • @fluffypolarcat
    @fluffypolarcat Před 11 lety +11

    My great aunt, Joanna used to live there in the 1970s. She was a little, old lady. Unfortunately, she got mugged more than once. Lads took her handbag right out of her hand and she was defenseless. My father tried his best to help her, by doing some shopping. I think the council made a huge mistake building those cresents.

  • @SK-hellogoodbye
    @SK-hellogoodbye Před 3 lety +10

    I lived in 2 different flats in Hulme, the now demolished Lupton Walk and later Epping Walk. There's nothing to be nostalgic about the Hulme of the late 80s/early 90s, too much crime, fear filled the air especially after dark. I felt sorry for my old neighbours, and now that I'm older I understand what an awful place it must have been to be old and alone in.

    • @SK-hellogoodbye
      @SK-hellogoodbye Před rokem

      @Jerry Cornelius How good that you're replying some 2 years after post ! Good too that you have a fond memory of that place, I don't but we're all alone in this life and cherish what helps us in it.

    • @SK-hellogoodbye
      @SK-hellogoodbye Před rokem +2

      @Jerry Cornelius Actually I had a few good nights there - between the sheets. But it wasn't love. In fact an enduring memory I have of living in Lupton Walk is listening to Eurythmics 'Miracle of love' over and over again, and looking onto Bonsall Street. One day the miracle did happen but not in Hulme, but just a mile or so away in the city centre. Still together.

    • @SK-hellogoodbye
      @SK-hellogoodbye Před rokem +1

      @Jerry Cornelius We might have bumped into one another back then, started 'frequenting' Hulme in 88, moved to Lupton Walk in 89, Epping Walk 89 to 91. Sounds naff but Journey's 'Don't stop believin' is coming to mind now. I ain't rich but I have got love, it's all about what we really prioritise I think.

  • @dawnjones7577
    @dawnjones7577 Před 3 lety +6

    I lived in Robert Adam Crescent until the age of 5. I'm so glad I don't have huge memories of living there. I do remember getting stuck in the lift because it broke down. A blue van was the local shop. I look back and what an absolute hole it really was. So glad they were pulled down.

    • @NOTODIVERSITY123
      @NOTODIVERSITY123 Před 10 měsíci +1

      The blue van was called jack's van..parked outside the eagle pub

  • @hotstitch1
    @hotstitch1 Před 7 lety +12

    Hi thanks for this. My friendship group lived there and I will never forget the shock when first visiting as a teen frm a nice suburb. It was so futuristic at night. they had outdoor lifts with a wide recess in them "for coffins". A lot of the accommodation on crescents were three bedroom houses; given to single people on welfare. You got the rooms with no floor coverings; furniture or appliances. Council policy is to strip empty flats.They would struggle in one room in the cold. Flats given to single people, students, people under "Care in the Community". . People needing emergency accommodation. No tenants "well versed in running a household". You cant build a community like that. You need some people who will wash the car and maintain routines. Boring but it creates a sense of security. Same policy seen in "Pruitt Igo" documentary; same result.

  • @AsboDolche
    @AsboDolche Před 14 lety +16

    i remember watching this in geography!! i love urban deprivation studies and its such a shame that these houses failed

  • @suzannefenby3635
    @suzannefenby3635 Před 3 lety +6

    Most of the houses knocked down for this weren't slums. A lot of houses left were worse than the houses knocked down. They were mansion houses but they became run down by landlords.

  • @pauloldfield1830
    @pauloldfield1830 Před 6 lety +2

    I lived at 37 Robert Adam in the late 70s. loved it as a kid. One big adventure.

  • @GriefTourist
    @GriefTourist Před 15 lety +12

    quite easy if the designers don't have to live there themselves.

  • @DSherman50
    @DSherman50 Před 8 lety +1

    Thank you for sharing this.

  • @naomiafia
    @naomiafia Před 16 lety +3

    Hi, i grew up in hulme(John Nash crescent)from 1970-1979. The film brought back memories of my childhood. Thanks for posting.

    • @barryh.4220
      @barryh.4220 Před 4 lety +1

      I lived on there during those years too, great memories.

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Před 4 lety +1

      I lived on Charles Barry for the same period.

    • @kellyedey8573
      @kellyedey8573 Před rokem

      I too lived in John Nash, top floor.

    • @NOTODIVERSITY123
      @NOTODIVERSITY123 Před rokem

      320 Robert Adam crescent 👍

    • @imgoodatmoaning9561
      @imgoodatmoaning9561 Před 2 měsíci

      Same here for at least some of the time you were there. For all we know we might of even known each other.

  • @humanpower2533
    @humanpower2533 Před 14 lety +2

    Thanks for posting this. I read about the Hulme Crescents in "The Secret Lives of Buildings", it's interesting to actually see them. Apparently things get worse after this documentary, when they ban families from living there ...

  • @debraange
    @debraange Před 14 lety +9

    i lived on freeman walk 1;16 i remember playing rounders hide and seek waiting for mr bibby at the back was martinscroft primary and in front the gamecock pub. we were the first family to have a payphone and colour tv I'm a script writer now and hulme was a great setting for many dramas ps hated the mice and bedbugs!!!

    • @classicartfoundation639
      @classicartfoundation639 Před 5 lety

      Cool, I bet there was plenty inspiration from this hell house. I made a little film about sink estates, czcams.com/video/seBzv3bOE5w/video.html

    • @classicartfoundation639
      @classicartfoundation639 Před 5 lety

      What scripts have you written?

    • @carlturner6625
      @carlturner6625 Před rokem +1

      Hi my Nanna lived on Brindle Walk the Park on Epping Walk was right behind her Flat , her name was Alice Turner and my Uncle Stuart.

  • @bollockowithalob
    @bollockowithalob Před 11 lety

    Thanks for uploading.

  • @thelandlordsdaughter
    @thelandlordsdaughter Před 11 lety +8

    I live in an Edwardian terrace in Walworth, South London and many flats are owned by Southwark Council... Let me tell you that the appearance of the building has NOTHING to do with the problems that have been associated with Brutalism

  • @justincarr8178
    @justincarr8178 Před 5 lety +3

    I used to to the Kitchen an after hours party every Wednesday,Friday and sometimes Saturdays on the top floor after we had been the Hacienda.The Jam M.Cs DJed there and they were ace.It was sketchy as fuck but I loved it.I didn't have to live their though.

  • @TheOnecanJAN
    @TheOnecanJAN Před 7 lety +7

    i lived in one of them flats around 86/87 very depressing n i was too scared to go out after dark very grim

    • @nighttrain1236
      @nighttrain1236 Před 7 lety +8

      I used to get driven past these flats in the 80's whenever my Dad would take me into town for shopping or to go to the library. Hulme had a threatening air about it and I used to shudder at the thought of anyone having to live there.

    • @jameshiggins1703
      @jameshiggins1703 Před 4 lety +1

      Can you tell me the name of the pub what was in the middle of them flats . Remember going there in the 80’s for a pint. Dodgy as fuck !

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@jameshiggins1703 The Eagle?
      The White Horse was near the shops.

    • @happydillpickle
      @happydillpickle Před 3 lety +1

      @@jameshiggins1703 There was the Sir Henry Royce and the Gamecock... the Salutation (the Sally) was on the peripheries...

  • @ottconsulting7
    @ottconsulting7 Před rokem +1

    I lived here as a student in 1980-81. What a dump. Grim as hell.

  • @bluebus270
    @bluebus270 Před 13 lety +2

    The council only had to look over the pennines at Quarry Hill, Leeds to see what a disaster the crescents were.

  • @12volthighpeakvanlife.62

    They was nice inside , my Nan lived at Coverdale Crescent for many years until knocked down , went upstairs to bed , and a little veranda to sit at , they used to stand out talking all hours , Community back then . Rip Nan xx

  • @followthetrawler
    @followthetrawler Před rokem +2

    They destroyed a community, pulled it down again, and rebuilt it even worse. Our family lived on Hulton Street, knew every neighbour, everyone helped everyone else. They swept away the community spirit and moved everyone out to what was supposed to be nicer and more modern, but never thought of the consequences to people and community.
    These were slum areas, but they could have forced the property owners to improve their properties rather than pay them a boat load of money so they could pull them down. It wasnt the people that created the slums, it was the landlords and the council.
    Our family was moved out to Sale, to a nice new modern estate, most of those houses are now falling down...

  • @cabasse_music
    @cabasse_music Před 12 lety +7

    as an american, (even with the architectural dissimilarity) this really reminds me of what i've heard about places here like pruitt-igoe
    very interesting.

    • @thornbird6768
      @thornbird6768 Před 4 lety +3

      Absolutely the same , these high rise blocks are our version of the projects !!

    • @andyjefferson1308
      @andyjefferson1308 Před 3 lety

      @@thornbird6768. We usually call them "Concrete Jungles." But yeah! You're absolutely right. There like the Projects in America. But I'm guessing you've obviously got way more Gun crimes. I'm not saying we can't get hold of any in the UK, but its legal to own a Gun in America, with a permit. 🤷‍♂️

    • @test-tl8dt
      @test-tl8dt Před 11 měsíci

      there is ultimately no difference in european and american "projects" aside from cultural differences between countries.
      essentially merging 100 apartment buildings into one hyperdense zone is a concept doomed to fail. regular apartment buildings are usually bad enough, but anyone living in one of these projects is basically participating in a real time human experiment by governments at how cheap and dense can people be clumped together without the human rights organizations on your neck.

  • @charkay192
    @charkay192 Před rokem +1

    I read about these in Barry Woodward book ,”once an addict”. The bull rings.. seeing it is exactly how he described If not, worse.. wow.

  • @jamesmahoney2264
    @jamesmahoney2264 Před 8 lety +7

    I was born an brought up in Hulme robert adam an i had a great time an got good memorys im 41 now but maybe that era was better anyway.

    • @edwinamceachran
      @edwinamceachran Před 8 lety

      +James Mahoney Hey James, I moved to Manchester about seven years ago and am really interested in the crescents and what people thought about them before they were demolished! What was your experience of living there? Why was it bad memories?

    • @jamesmahoney2264
      @jamesmahoney2264 Před 8 lety +1

      +Edwina McEachran Hi my experience was i loved the place and people but i was born in 1974 and grew up a teenager there,there was clubs,pubs,blues to go to my memories was good although the developers got the design wrong with the flats and some of my friends from other areas of manchster said it was like a ghetto me being a teenager didnt see it that way as it had spirit,you live in new hulme?

    • @edwinamceachran
      @edwinamceachran Před 8 lety

      What was the energy like? I imagine it was full of young people enjoying the rawness of it all. I live in whalley range, and walk past the site most days and always wonder what it was like. So many different opinions, the older generation seem to loathe the memory of it, younger people like yourself seem to have embraced it for what it was, and have much happier memories of it! Shame there seems to be hardly any pubs left in Hulme, all knocked down or empty!!

    • @jamesmahoney2264
      @jamesmahoney2264 Před 8 lety

      +Edwina McEachran The energy was vibrant for me personally i seem to have so much to do,maybe because i was young and it had a community spirit,it wasnt a nice place to look at like hulme now but the hulme now dont have spirit like it did though it was run down,i live in salford now 10 years and when ever i go back to hulme it doesnt feel like hulme though its all new and done up and i do think people will have different views on the place maybe contrasting as thats probably what it was.

    • @jamesmahoney2264
      @jamesmahoney2264 Před 8 lety

      +Edwina McEachran The energy was vibrant for me personally i seem to have so much to do,maybe because i was young and it had a community spirit,it wasnt a nice place to look at like hulme now but the hulme now dont have spirit like it did though it was run down,i live in salford now 10 years and when ever i go back to hulme it doesnt feel like hulme though its all new and done up and i do think people will have different views on the place maybe contrasting as thats probably what it was.

  • @matelot95
    @matelot95 Před 15 lety +2

    I remember watching this on World In Action

  • @shyannedianne1962
    @shyannedianne1962 Před 11 lety +5

    omg at the orange buses lol cockroach crescents,wouldn't mind but when they ripped these down they threw new buildings up without treating the land so I bet they've still got cockroaches,you had to turn the light on wait for the cockroaches to bugger off before you could go into that room,just going to the loo at night was great fun

  • @jason71g
    @jason71g Před 12 lety +7

    i watched your vid and realised the bit thats missing is where they interview my mum in our old flat about the cockroach infestation it would be funny to see the whole version if you have it cheders

    • @stephenmartindale1739
      @stephenmartindale1739 Před 7 lety +4

      Jason Glinka Im 48 and remember an interview with a lady cooking tea and saying the roaches would drop in the chip pan.yukkk

  • @PDHulme61
    @PDHulme61 Před 14 lety +1

    Hulme lives on !

  • @GriefTourist
    @GriefTourist Před 10 lety +1

    There is a book about the Yorkshire Ripper that quotes from this documentary. One of his victims lived [very briefly, in late 1977] at Lingbeck Crescent, although I don't know if that Crescent is on this. His other Manchester victim was also from Hulme [Greenham Avenue]

    • @js5533
      @js5533 Před 3 lety +2

      Its true. Her body was found by Coronation St star Les Battersby on zn allottment opposite St Berbadettes Church, Princess Parkway. Her name was Jean McDonald a mother of two

    • @NOTODIVERSITY123
      @NOTODIVERSITY123 Před rokem +1

      Vera Millward lived on grenham AVE Hulme .that's where Peter suctliffe originally picked her up and drove to Saint Mary's royal infirmary..

    • @NOTODIVERSITY123
      @NOTODIVERSITY123 Před rokem +1

      Lingbeck crescentt was next to moss side precinct and Medlock court tower block

  • @melanie6260
    @melanie6260 Před rokem

    My sister actually lived in one of those when she was a student, took me ages to find where she lived

  • @OoYesIKnowOoYesIKnow
    @OoYesIKnowOoYesIKnow Před 8 lety +3

    1:38 The architect's reason was their brief by their client !

  • @angeladeen6168
    @angeladeen6168 Před 5 lety +2

    As the great gladys knight sang...
    Try to remember
    We look back and we think the winters we're warmer.
    The grass was greener.
    The skies were bluer!
    but we kids from the crescent..
    Our smiles were bright.
    We didn't no any better. 😕

    • @giuseppe397
      @giuseppe397 Před 4 lety +1

      I love Gladys knight. She is a true beauty.

  • @bendickinson6264
    @bendickinson6264 Před 5 lety +2

    4:25-4:39 pretty much sums up why it failed!

  • @leemaragh319
    @leemaragh319 Před 12 lety +3

    ive watched this video a few times, now i feel like i should leave my own comment, i think the video details are a little bit far fetched i livd here , i lived in william kent 530, cant believe i still remember my door number, i do remember alot more most of it good, but hey i was only 7yrs old, but you never forget

  • @MrRlazarus
    @MrRlazarus Před 8 lety +2

    HELL HOLE IT WAS OPEN BEFORE 1969 MY DAD ENDING HIS DAYS IN 1969 IN HULME BOG…………….

  • @HALO-JONES
    @HALO-JONES Před 3 lety +2

    This was a no go area if ya didn't live there

  • @atilllathehun1212
    @atilllathehun1212 Před rokem +1

    In only slightly different circumstances I could have found myself living in Hulme, thank god that didn't happen..

  • @blindpink
    @blindpink Před 4 lety +2

    "Viddy well little brother"

  • @heathstjohn6775
    @heathstjohn6775 Před 3 lety +1

    Who helped to destroy the estates ? "Helped", not entirely to blame, but "Helped": many of the residents themselves.

  • @JapanJohnny2012
    @JapanJohnny2012 Před 12 lety +2

    That's a fair comment, but it's not always just about where you are, it's sometimes also about the trajectory you're on. I also had a mate who lived there... he was also a student at Madchester Uni and in a fairly successful band. I hope you're doing well now. Hulme does have a lot of character though, for sure.

  • @emmakin7871
    @emmakin7871 Před 4 lety

    Where was this documentary aired? What channel and what year please? Would like to reference it in my essay about high-density social housing, thanks!

    • @GT380man
      @GT380man Před 3 lety +1

      1978, World in Action. Google the Tv channel

    • @NOTODIVERSITY123
      @NOTODIVERSITY123 Před rokem

      You can't get it from itv someone bought the film rights and won't share the full program with anyone ...

  • @johnhutch5678
    @johnhutch5678 Před měsícem

    Is this what was classed as the bull ring or was that mosside?

  • @timjohnson689
    @timjohnson689 Před 7 lety +2

    Not too bad when you were actually in the flats, though. Shame about everything else when you stepped out...

  • @flybazman
    @flybazman Před 12 lety +2

    I worked there several times as a telephone engineer in the 70's. I saw the original designer sketches for it too which looked great in their pastel colours. As stated in the commentary they were designed to recreate the terraced houses but the decks created isolation. Went to a few 'blues' parties there which were always colourful! I saw them being demolished in the early 80's. I'll never forget the sight of black smoke billowing out of the glassless windows as the buildings collapsed and

    • @juliacameron8007
      @juliacameron8007 Před 6 lety

      shabeen

    • @classicartfoundation639
      @classicartfoundation639 Před 5 lety

      I made a music video about these type of places, hope you live somewhere better now czcams.com/video/seBzv3bOE5w/video.html

    • @BIGSMOKE-bu6gq
      @BIGSMOKE-bu6gq Před rokem

      It wasn’t the 80’s when it was demolished it was 1992

  • @generalzod3753
    @generalzod3753 Před měsícem

    Ha I've spent alot of time in Bath can't see the resemblance 😅

  • @redbeki
    @redbeki Před 3 lety

    Truly truly shocking ...

  • @karlmeadows4986
    @karlmeadows4986 Před měsícem

    Shocking place but I did like going to the eagle psv and kitchens

  • @RM-fs4dj
    @RM-fs4dj Před 5 měsíci

    And now it's got nice council homes you'll struggle to find a British family living in one. Same for Moss Side.

  • @patsk8127
    @patsk8127 Před 5 lety +2

    Somehow fascinating however impossible to live area

  • @yaopasha
    @yaopasha Před 15 lety +1

    charles barry ruled,hi tania!!

  • @stepehenhulbert6583
    @stepehenhulbert6583 Před 2 lety

    I remember it like yesterday it was ok till night fall

  • @theninjawarrior4780
    @theninjawarrior4780 Před 11 měsíci

    I lived on 534 Charles Barry Cresent my dad sonny was caretaker their .recently passed away in march

    • @ep1929
      @ep1929 Před 11 měsíci

      Sorry to hear that, bet he had loads of stories to tell being a caretaker on the crescents.

  • @thornbird6768
    @thornbird6768 Před 4 lety

    13,000 people , wow !! Are these flats still standing ?

  • @STEVEFINNERTY
    @STEVEFINNERTY Před 14 lety

    safe as houses...!. I was there, top night

  • @charliebramley
    @charliebramley Před 6 měsíci

    6:45 "There is no sense of ownership. No sense of property or belonging"

  • @kollusion1
    @kollusion1 Před 2 lety

    Lifts? They never worked.
    Them decks were nice & smooth for skateboarding though!

  • @francesheaney5253
    @francesheaney5253 Před 9 lety

    I used to live in them cresdents b4 i moved to ardwick rudcroft close

  • @mrkallen
    @mrkallen Před 15 lety

    It sure did, along with Hulme Library, The Zion Centre and the ascencion Church, i live at 114 Charles barry from 78 (a baby) to 87.

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Před 4 lety

      Did you know Maureen and Moon from 108?

    • @mrkallen
      @mrkallen Před 4 lety

      Yeah, She had a dog called Dillon. It used to terrorise me and my mates! Did she have a son called Mick?

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Před 4 lety

      @@mrkallen no. No kids. Dillon was a one-off. lol
      He used to eat oranges, and his farts reeked.
      We were very good friends, and used to live upstairs on the 300 level.

    • @mrkallen
      @mrkallen Před 4 lety +1

      Haha. My mates would call for me and Dillon would see them from across the balcony & would run after them, one of my mates actually jumped off the balcony to escape. Needless to say, it got to the point where no1 would come and knock on for me to play out.

    • @slayerrocks2
      @slayerrocks2 Před 4 lety +1

      @@mrkallen I think he was winding you up. I never felt threatened by him. He was top dog though, I think he knew how to flex. lol

  • @marshrabbit7565
    @marshrabbit7565 Před 2 lety

    Why is the Govenment so loving?

  • @MrRlazarus
    @MrRlazarus Před 9 lety

    HELL HOLE FOR OLD .MY DAD LASTED I YEAR .IN 1969……………………...

    • @MrAlwaysBlue
      @MrAlwaysBlue Před 8 lety +1

      +Reuben Lazarus It wasn't opened until 1972

    • @MrRlazarus
      @MrRlazarus Před 8 lety

      JACKSON CRESENT WAS OPEN OPEN BEFORE 1968 WENT TO THE MOVIES IN JACKSON CRESENT UNIT 4.CINAMA MAM AND DAD LIVED
      IN NUMBER 15 JACKSON CRESENT ... AREA BECAME A BOG NOT LONG AFTER………

  • @jeffreylmAu
    @jeffreylmAu Před 3 lety

    As an ordinary peasant raised in public housings in Hong Kong I don't understand a single thing in this video...

  • @mellymel245
    @mellymel245 Před 3 lety +1

    Icie tagged Hulme to death.1983/90.🖍️

  • @geoffedwards-tb4kp
    @geoffedwards-tb4kp Před 6 lety +1

    All this Hulme crescents shit,they were called the bull rings.Get it right.

  • @seanmcclearn9563
    @seanmcclearn9563 Před 8 lety

    Etties party on John Nash crsnt was a top night £1 in £1 dumplings.and |Tania Marie!!!. (come with me ) Tune!!! back in the eighties. was an awful place...5 floors of boxes, but we worked with what we had.

    • @edwinamceachran
      @edwinamceachran Před 8 lety +1

      +Sean McClearn Hey Sean, I'm interested in the crescents, and have been trying to find people who lived near or around the area before they were demolished! What were the club nights like? Did you live there or just went for parties?

    • @Paulwilliamsukmusic
      @Paulwilliamsukmusic Před 7 lety

      i lived there for most of my child hood

  • @geoffedwards-tb4kp
    @geoffedwards-tb4kp Před 6 lety +4

    I wonder if it was the first major building contract the councilor's could get a bung/back hander of the contractors​ for a while, nothing to do with mobilising working classes at all, Bath crescents my arse.Could tell at a glance it was a brutalist fake famous french architect (forget his name ha)corveir or something,nightmare made on the cheap but charged the earth for quick gain housing scam catastrophe.Thanks G.M.C.

  • @craignunnallypurcell
    @craignunnallypurcell Před 5 lety +1

    Oh yeah... kit of parts - machine logic applied to cities.
    No sense of what cities are about.

  • @rangerjones5531
    @rangerjones5531 Před 4 lety

    still a bunch of apt buildings that , from a picture, looks like Russia.

  • @misternorwood
    @misternorwood Před 13 lety

    funny shit this...

  • @falseprogress
    @falseprogress Před rokem +1

    Decay is also about the innate qualities of many people living in these places, which cannot be discussed in woke circles. Good distraction: 4:28

  • @purpleturkey1792
    @purpleturkey1792 Před rokem

    Awful, awful place ....
    Used to live there from 8 year old 1959 ...
    Shit hole on a good day.
    The outlook for the area is black ... 🤔 Mmmmm

  • @swaldron5558
    @swaldron5558 Před 4 lety +1

    Every time I get a bus (86) from Chorlton ( where I live from 1965 to 2010) to Manchester town , the black youths come in from Hulmes , everyone frozen cos they started rioted, abusive, threatened at us for no reason, so it’s stopped when the whole crappy council flats demolitions order by Tory’s Micheal Heseltine. so nutters disappeared. Happy memories!

  • @celtickshatriya4306
    @celtickshatriya4306 Před 3 lety +1

    Even the cockroaches didnt want to live in the bull ring./remember as a kid watching a guy throw a dog over the balcony from the 4th floor,

    • @rickhardman7376
      @rickhardman7376 Před 3 lety

      did it live?

    • @celtickshatriya4306
      @celtickshatriya4306 Před 3 lety

      @@rickhardman7376 no it was 5 floors up.

    • @perky26hughes
      @perky26hughes Před 2 lety

      That's vile, hope that someone has since done similar to him.

    • @NOTODIVERSITY123
      @NOTODIVERSITY123 Před rokem +1

      It was a man called cha cha threw his dog off it survived and eventually cha cha was found dead in his flat on Charles Barry with his loyal dog that had eaten half his face away..true story .if you lived round there you would remember this???

  • @penelopeputtanesca
    @penelopeputtanesca Před 7 měsíci

    Hi I'm wondering if there's a contact I can get in touch with for using this footage in a short youtube documentary