As Activists Shine Light on British Empire, Historic Dockyard Set to Vanish Under Luxury Apartments

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As Activists Shine Light on British Empire, Historic Dockyard Set to Vanish Under Luxury Apartments

In the 17th century, King Charles II commissioned 30 warships to beef up the Royal Navy after an embarrassing attack by the Dutch fleet. But the London dockyard where many of them were built is about to vanish under a multi-billion pound luxury housing development funded by a Hong Kong-based company.

Naval heritage enthusiasts are fighting what appears to be a losing battle to protect one of England’s oldest and most historic dockyards from disappearing beneath the glass and steel of a luxury development in London.

Deptford was the first shipyard to receive a Royal Charter. Richard Endsor, a shipbuilding historian and author of The Restoration Warship, described it as “one of the earlier British royal dockyards, founded by King Henry VIII in 1513” and there is archaeological evidence dating back to Roman times.

​But this corner of south east London – nowadays known as Convoys Wharf – is set for a £1.75 billion revamp with Hong Kong-based Hutchison Whampoa planning to build 3,500 apartments, a hotel, restaurants and a river bus pier. The tallest luxury apartment block will be 42 storeys high.

But Julian Kingston, director of a community-based charity, the Build The Lenox project, said the developers had made “barely a nod” to the area’s naval heritage.

As Activists Shine Light on British Empire, Historic Dockyard Set to Vanish Under Luxury Apartments

The Lenox, which was built at Deptford dockyard

Deptford was the leading naval dockyard in England up until 1869 – when it was replaced by shipbuilding facilities further downstream – and was visited by the Russian Tsar, Peter The Great, who came there in the 1690s to learn about shipbuilding.

Queen Elizabeth I knighted naval hero-cum-Black Lives Matter target Francis Drake on board the Golden Hind in Deptford in 1581.

​After the dockyard closed in the 19th century the Convoys Wharf site was owned by the Ministry of Defence but leased out to various users, including Rupert Murdoch’s News Group, which imported huge amounts of newsprint for The Sun and The Times.

In the 1990s Murdoch bought the site from the MoD for £15 million and planned to redevelop it himself. But he later sold it on to Hutchison Whampoa for what is believed to be a huge profit.

​In 2015, Hutchison Whampoa wrote to the then Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, demanding he “call in” their outline planning application, claiming Labour-controlled Lewisham Council was taking too long to make a decision.

Johnson – who later became Prime Minister – did so and granted outline permission for the development, which is expected to take 15 years to build.

The chair of Lewisham Council’s planning committee, John Paschoud, was quoted on the 853 website earlier this month: “We might have all thought that Boris made some of his worst political decisions in 2015, but subsequent history proved us wrong, hasn’t it?”

That 2015 permission included a Section 106 agreement to provide eight acres within the 40 acre site for the Build The Lenox project, a group of local enthusiasts who want to reconstruct one of the Royal Navy’s earliest major warships.

In 1667, a Dutch fleet sailed up the Medway river in Kent, sank 13 English warships and captured another two boats.

​It was a shocking and humiliating defeat for the Royal Navy and spurred King Charles II into ordering 30 new warships, to be built at the King’s Yard in Deptford.

One of those ships was the Lenox, and the plan was to build a working and seagoing replica as well as a heritage museum.

But Mr Kingston claimed the developers had ignored his organisation and were seeking detailed permission for the rest of the complex without any proper consultation with the local community.

Mr Kingston said the developer was fully aware of the vast historical and cultural significance of the site but was “choosing to completely ignore it.”

He said the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement and the re-examination of Britain’s imperial and colonial past was reflected in the project’s vision document and he would welcome further involvement from Depford’s BAME community.

Mr Kingston said: “To the best of my knowledge no slave ships were built at the King’s Yard and I can find no record of de-commissioned naval ships being used for the slave trade.

“It is certain that naval ships will have protected slave ships on occasion just as in later years, post-abolition, they were used to intercept slavers. Certainly neighbouring private yards would have built slave ships and re-purposed and re-fitted other commercial vessels,” he added.

Mr Kingston went on to say: “Our vision document confirms our desire for a Deptford-centric museum giving space not found in the National Maritime Museum to black history and slavery.

Mr Kingston said the Build The Lenox Project had been dealt a “curve ball” by Boris Johnson’s “badly drawn Section 106 agreements.” 

He asserted: “We had to pass a feasibility study conducted by an agency of HPG’s choosing. Miraculously we did. Then we had to produce a viable business plan to be vetted and passed by HPG but without any goodwill in the process.”

Earlier this month, Lewisham Council’s planning committee sat until after midnight discussing Hutchison Whampoa’s detailed planning application for the Convoys Wharf site.

Paul Bell, the council’s cabinet member for housing, said the levels of affordable housing agreed by Boris Johnson back in 2015 were “truly pitiful” and he added: “It is a disgraceful legacy of Boris Johnson, although he’s attempting to see the population culled at the moment.”

As Activists Shine Light on British Empire, Historic Dockyard Set to Vanish Under Luxury Apartments

Convoys Wharf from the viewpoint of the Thames

Afterwards a Hutchison Property Group (HPG) spokesman said: “We are delighted that Lewisham Council has backed our plans to transform Convoys Wharf. HPG will now start work on unlocking future plots across the wider site, thereby unlocking a package of community investment worth £60 million. There is also the potential to create nearly 2,000 full time jobs and 1,200 construction jobs.”

HPG said it had also undertaken an extensive archaeological investigation into London’s Royal Dockyards and consulted widely with the local community.

They added: “That collaboration will continue going forward to ensure the plans meet the needs of the local area and celebrate Deptford’s rich heritage. HPG is here for the long haul.”

Sourse: sputniknews.com

As Activists Shine Light on British Empire, Historic Dockyard Set to Vanish Under Luxury Apartments

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