An elderly man died after a collision at the zebra crossing in Wanstead High Street on Tuesday morning.
The incident happened just before 9am during heavy rain and strong winds. Some hours later investigators were still at the scene and the High Street remained closed for most of the day. A small car was removed from the crossing.
Google StreetviewWe’re just daysthree weeks away from the start of the next round of Blake Hell Road, the 20-week long roadworks which will – it feels fair to say – bring chaos to Aldersbrook and beyond.
The replacement of the “gas governor” – the gas main beneath the road – is the cause of the disruption, but it’s the management of traffic which causes as much frustration as cars, buses and other traffic attempts to enter or leave the junction with Cambridge Park.
National Grid, which is replacing the main, has agreed working hours with Redbridge Council, which are Monday – Friday 7.30am to 6pm, and on Saturday 8am-4pm. There will be no major work on Sundays or overnight.
The work will include
Three-way temporary traffic lights being introduced at the junction of Blake Hall Road, Bush Road and Overton Drive for at least eight weeks.
Overton Drive itself being closed at the junction of Blake Hall Road from the beginning of August for two months, and the width restrictions on the road will be removed to make sure people can reach their houses.
Tennyson Ave being closed for three weeks in October.
Felstead Road being closed for three weeks in November.
National Grid is running a drop-in session at Wanstead Library on Tuesday 7 June from 9am to 9pm for people to find out more about the work and to ask questions. Work itself is due to start on 20 June.
And in the meantime, Wansteadium is delighted to introduce a new Twitter account, @blakehellroad, for a “polite and acccurate” record of the work and the disruption caused. It will be featured on the front page of Wansteadium from today.
So, every other friend I have in Aldersbrook is a builder. How difficult can it be to erect a monorail across Wanstead Park? @blakehellroad
Falcon Way, one of the roads near to overground Central Line
The news that night Tubes are to make their belated start in August will come as bittersweet for many of those living next to the above-ground Central Line.
Trains running every 20 minutes throughout Friday and Saturday night will mean people living next to the overground Epping branch – which includes Hollybush Hill, New Wanstead, Sylvan Road, Eagle Lane, Osprey Close, Alexandra Road, Foxdene Close and other roads  – having to get used to the new overnight noise.
Tfl last year issued a statement about trying to minimise the noise from the night tube, which is pasted below. Trains are due to start on 19 August and details about the new service are here.
So the questions will start about who might move in to the spot. Wansteadium has its own favourite theory about who would be best suited, which for the time being we will keep close to chest. But feel free to discuss the issue in comments below.
Longtime readers will remember our anguish at the undignified end the old Andrews sign had (ie a skip), but there’s always the make-your-own memento which is still good for whiling away a few minutes.
Bravo to Wanstead singer Hannah White whose single Sunny Day is doing well in various charts – this week topping the Sweet Rhythms chart on Solar Radio. Â You can hear the song below (or if you’re using an iPhone, tap here).
This is the first single Hannah has released in her own right, though in the past she has done backing vocals for Kenny Thomas, Ringo Starr, Ronnie Wood and Alexander O’Neal.
Wansteadium reader Neil Davies is the latest to spot a Wanstead-made coin-operated mechanism on his travels around the world. So far we’ve had two sightings from New Zealand and refuse to let this one drop until we have all five continents covered.