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City policy after WW1 was to build housing estates in the green
outer suburbs acquired in 1911, and to provide good transport services
between them and the industrial inner ring. There was demolition
of the worst slum courts but little replacement of dwellings : Ashcroft
Estate and a few council houses off Mount Street were exceptional.
However in 1937 267 acres of D. and N. were designated as a redevelopment
Area : this was less than a third of the total acreage, but more
than half of the residential districts, and it included many houses
considered unfit for habitation. They were crammed together without
open space at densities up to 80 per acre, not counting the factories
among them. Work had not begun when the WW2 broke out.
The Town & Country Planning Act of '44 (the 'Blitz and Blight
Act' ) permitted comprehensive redevelopment and a start was made
three years later on plans prepared during the war.
A new radial road with limited access, Nechells Parkway, was to
cut the area into two self-contained neighbourhood units, each with
its centre and amenities. The worst slums were to be cleared first
and open space to be provided at once. As some 200 acres were to
be green only half the former number of inhabitants could be rehoused,
though most dwellings were to be multi-storey.
Of the old streets some were to disappear and others to be truncated
to give limited access to the centres. A flatted factory was built
on Dartmouth Street to house many small displaced firms : industry
and housing were to be strictly segregated. The name 'Nechells Green'
was chosen in a competition.
N.G. extends from the Digbeth Branch to include all the residential
area east of the gas works and railway yards, and is bounded by
the G.J. line. St. Clement's Redevelopment Area, defined in '55,
includes the rest of N.'s housing and the former demesne of B. It
is now largely cleared but rebuilding has only begun, south of N.
Baths, in. markedly different style from N.G. That was the first
of the City's new towns, and so much of it is a dramatic landscape
of towers amid the green so beloved of post-war planners. St. Clement's
post-dates the rejection of tall flatblocks, whose social disadvantages
outweigh their visual appeal. It will be a district of short terraces
and walkways, still with plenty of green, but necessarily having
more ground covered by dwellings than has N.G., where they are piled
spectacularly on top of each other.
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