Snaresbrook… you’re fired

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Snaresbrook will cease to exist – at least as a formal local government entity – following revised proposals on Redbridge’s council boundaries.

The proposal from the Boundary Commission will mean that what has until now been Snaresbrook ward will be divided between South Woodford and a new Wanstead Village ward. The previous set of proposals published earlier this year would have meant “South Woodford and Snaresbrook” being a new ward, but that idea has now been dropped.

Streets around the south end of Hermon Hill as far up as Snaresbrook primary school will now be part of Wanstead Village rather than South Woodford. And roads towards Charlie Brown Roundabout will now be part of South Woodford rather than Wanstead Village.

The dividing line between the two wards is a bit fiddly, but this map indicates where it comes.
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One aspect of the proposal which has not been welcomed is the size of the council. Wansteadium reader and local government watcher Clive Power has tweeted that since Redbridge has seen a 19% increase in population over the past five years it needs an increase in the number of councillors.

The full details of the proposal can be seen here at the Local Government Boundary Commission website.

Goodbye winter garden collections

img_3072It looks like the weekly year-round door-to-door garden waste collection will soon become a thing of the past.

The collection in the winter months was introduced just two years ago, but proposals to be discussed by Redbridge next week could revert to the previous situation where waste was collected in summer months only. If agreed, collections would stop in December and not begin again until March. In future years collections would run only between March and November.

Councillor John Howard, Cabinet member for Environment and Sustainability, said: “In 2013 the Council extended the Green Garden Waste collection so that it continued all year round.  This was possible thanks to £1.1m of funding from the Department of Communities and Local Government.

“This funding has now run out and we need to adapt to this and the other financial pressures we face.  We don’t want to scrap the service because we know residents really value it so we propose to make it available at the times of the year when there is the greatest need.”

At the time it was introduced, Wansteadium did wonder how much green garden waste was actually produced by gardeners in the depths of winter, though having the door-to-door collection of Christmas trees was undoubtedly welcome.

If the proposals are agreed though, a collection of Christmas trees will still take place in the first two weeks of January, on the same day as normal rubbish and recycling.

Inside Harvey’s

In a new regular feature for Wansteadium, design writer Rohini Wahi looks at some of the people who are changing the way Wanstead looks. She starts by talking to the team behind the new greengrocers, Harvey’s.

When I moved to Wanstead nine years ago as a budding design journalist from the depths of Essexscreenshot-2016-11-07-11-14-42, we had two really great interiors businesses on the High Street. The first at the Snaresbrook end was Horsfall and Wright, a vintage inspired gift shop with a charcoal grey facade that wouldn’t have looked out of place in Spitalfields. The second, placed conveniently at the Wanstead end provided the aspirational offerings of The Orange Tree. Aside from the Farrow and Ball style draw of The Larder, there wasn’t much of note in terms of good design in between.

As of this month, the last of these beloved interiors shops is no more, both moving their businesses online (I am devastated about this does anyone want to start one with me?). However, elsewhere on the High Street and beyond – magazine-worthy fishmongers, bars, cafes, bistros, butchers, greengrocers, barbers, diners and pubs have fast been populating our High Street with no end of stopping in sight. Suffice to say Wanstead’s design landscape has changed significantly in the past decade.

In this column I will be taking a deeper look at the stylish interiors old and new in the town we are lucky to call home.

First stop, the newest addition to our High Street Harvey’s the greengrocers which has been adding some industrial allure to our daily shop. As soon as we got a peek of this space midst renovation, its doors open on a warm Saturday in August – all exposed bricks, smokey grey facade and a sea of industrial light-bulbs glittering from the ceiling – we knew we were onto a winner.

A family-run business, I spoke to the owner Sinan and his wife Ania about interiors and just some extra stuff out of nosiness.

image00 image01 image02 image03What is the name of your store?
“Harvey’s. We had thought about calling it Wanstead Fruit and Veg but after 47 years as Harvey’s – we decided to keep the name with the previous owners’ permission.”

What do you sell?
“Fruit and veg, organic grocery herbs, olive oils, cans of food, dried fruit and nuts.”

Who are the faces we will see most days and what are your backgrounds?
“I, Sinan, am the owner and used to work as a taxi driver and whilst I enjoyed driving, the traffic proved too stressful. I was inspired to start the business by my brother-in-law Selcuk who has always worked on fruit and vegetable wholesale, he is our product and delivery expert –  he really knows his stuff. Salman, my brother who can be seen working quietly in the background and keeping a very low profile, is a very skilled mechanic. We will also often be accepting a helping hand from young Boran – Salman’s son. Ozgur looks after the presentation of the shop.”

What are your opening hours?
8am – 7pm Mon-Sat
10am – 5pm on Sundays

What was the inspiration behind the interiors? Who designed the space?
“I designed the space myself and built everything including the till area with the help of friends. I was inspired by minimal and natural interiors I have seen around London.

“We extended the space back into the former storage room and stripped all of the walls, laid a wooden floor with wide planks, built wooden shelves all across the back wall and pallets using pale wood for produce and painted the front dark grey which matched the original striped awning.

“The industrial light-bulbs that hang from the ceiling are similar to the functional lighting found in night produce markets. We wanted to preserve a sense of history from the previous grocers and the original shutters operate now as a backdrop to the till, the original awning as mentioned compliments our shopfront and the familiar green shopping baskets are still with us. We use crates, baskets, pallets and anything wooden and natural to display and store our goods.”

  • Rohini Wahi’s clients include Elle Decoration, Living Etc, Houzz and Design Sponge. She is currently working on residential and commercial interiors in and around the area, and she runs design blog The Beat That My Heart Skipped. She can be contact by email or Facebook.

Armed police chase in Wanstead street

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Dozens of police, many armed with machine guns, hunted three men in Wanstead on Tuesday night following a chase in which they crashed a car into a garden wall.

Witnesses said the men ran out of the car, in which there was a gun. One of the men escaped into a house on Elmcroft Avenue. Armed officers and dogs searched gardens and surrounding streets while a police helicopter circled above. Unconfirmed reports said a shot had been fired.

One eye-witness told Wansteadium: “Armed police with machine guns currently all over Elmcroft Avenue with Limes Avenue. Their car had smashed into a garden wall during a chase. At least 15 police cars here. Two young men arrested and searching for a third. It is chaos.”

The witness added that though he had not heard the shot himself, he said someone living near the crash had told him she had heard it.

One report speculated on a link between the chase and an incident at the Our Lady of Lourdes primary school playground this afternoon in which police chased two men, but this is unconfirmed. The children apparently had to be kept in one of the school buildings until the chase was over. [Update Weds: This incident is now thought to be unrelated to the Elmcroft Avenue one.]

  • Got more information or pictures? Send them to info@wansteadium.com

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