London County Council cottage estates explained

London County Council cottage estates are estates of council houses, built by London County Council, in the main between 1918 and 1939.

Council-built housing

The City of London Corporation built tenements in the Farringdon Road in 1865,[1] but this was an isolated instance. The first council to build housing as an integrated policy was Liverpool Corporation,[2] starting with St Martin's Cottages in Ashfield Street, Vauxhall, completed in 1869.[3] That year a royal commission was held, as the state had taken an interest in housing and housing policy. This led to the Housing of the Working Classes Act 1890 (53 & 54 Vict. c. 70),[4] which encouraged the London authority to improve the housing in their areas. It also gave them the power acquire land and to build tenements and houses (cottages). As a consequence London County Council opened the Boundary Estate in 1900, a block dwelling estate of tenements in Tower Hamlets.

The first four cottage estates were at Norbury, Old Oak, Totterdown Fields and White Hart Lane.

Homes fit for heroes – interwar policy

In 1912 Raymond Unwin, published a pamphlet Nothing gained by Overcrowding. He worked on the influential Tudor Walters Report of 1918, which recommended housing in short terraces, spaced at at a density of 12 to the acre. The First World War indirectly provided a new impetus, when the poor physical health and condition of many urban recruits to the army was noted with alarm. This led to a campaign known as Homes fit for heroes. In 1919 the Government, through the Housing Act 1919 required councils to provide housing built to the Tudor Walters standards, helping them to do so through the provision of subsidies,

Tudor Walters Committee Recommendations!House without a parlour!!Area sq ft (m2)!Volume cu ft (m3)!House

with a parlour!Area sq ft (m2)!Volume cu ft (m3)

Parlour120ft2960ft3
Living Room180ft21440ft3Living Room180ft21440ft3
Scullery80ft2640ft3Scullery80ft2640ft3
Larder24ft2-Larder24ft2-
Bedroom No. 1150ft21200ft3Bedroom No. 1160ft21280ft3
Bedroom No. 2100ft2800ft3Bedroom No. 2120ft2960ft3
Bedroom No. 365ft2520ft3Bedroom No. 3110ft2880ft3
Total855ft21055ft2
Desirable Minimum sizes- Tudor Walters Committee

London County Council embraced these freedoms and planned 8 cottage estates in the peripheries of London: Becontree, St Helier, Downham, Watling for example; seven further followed including Bellingham. Houses were built on green field land on the peripheries of urban London.

The Addison Act provided subsidies solely to local authorities and not to private builders. Many houses were built over the next few years in cottage estates. Following the Geddes Axe of 1922, the Housing, &c. Act 1923 stopped subsidies going to council houses but did extend subsidies to private builders.

The first Labour government took office in 1924. The Housing (Financial Provisions) Act 1924 restored subsidies to municipal housing but at a lower level, it failed to make any provision for the lower paid, who were living in the worse conditions, and could not afford to pay the higher rents of the new houses, or to travel to work in Central London from these new peripheral estates.

Examples of these were built at the Downham Estate in London,[5] Blocks of flats were also built.[6]

Design of the estates

This was dictated by the topology and the desired densities.

Design of the houses

Most of the houses were brick built, but due to the shortage of bricks and wood in the early 1920s, and the availability of factories tooled up for war work some interesting experimental designs and prefabrications.

Furnishing the house

An advertisement offering to complete furnish an Atholl all-steel house in Downham for £78.17.11d, gave a full list of what was needed.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Tarn, J. N. (1973) Five Percent Philanthropy: An Account of Housing in Urban Areas Between 1840 and 1914, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press pp. 42, 61
  2. Beggs-Humphreys, M, Gregor, H and Humphreys, D (1959) The Industrial Revolution, Oxford, Routledge p. 34
  3. Web site: St Martin's Cottages municipal housing, Silvester Street, Liverpool | RIBA. architecture.com. 16 December 2016.
  4. Web site: Housing of The Working Classes Act, 1890. Irish Statutes . Government of Ireland. 24 December 2015. 1890. .
  5. Web site: Why the estate was needed - Case Studies . Ideal Homes.
  6. Chris Roberts, Heavy Words Lightly Thrown: The Reason Behind Rhyme, Thorndike Press,2006