Wondermare
Member
I'm a Greenwich resident. And a horse owner. I also have a ticket for the Cross Country event, but I'm so angry about the way us locals have been treated that I no longer want to go. The ticket was a gift so I'm not in a position to sell it on, otherwise I would.
I deliver drugs education to young people, and have to use a car to travel to north and central London schools with equipment, etc. The park has been closed to traffic for a month nearly and our journey has already become unbearable.
The park is closing to the public next week and won't re-open to traffic until October.
They were going to try and keep the Observatory open but they've decided that's no longer an option.
The area is gridlocked. Passing through at midnight last Sunday, the traffic was at a standstill and the queues went all the way back to East Greenwich.
Worst of all is the feeling that it's a privilege, somehow, and we should be grateful.
If there was any kind of legacy, fine, I'd shut up. But there really isn't. There are acres of wasteland in Erith, in Slade Green, in parts of south east London with 20th century road systems where they're desperate for any kind of re-generation. When I think of the environmental waste, all the cross country fences torn down, all the stabling torn down, the 26,000 seat arena (whose construction involved the removal of precious park topsoil), the surface, where's it all going? What a tragic waste. (Although if anyone knows what's happening to the temporary stabling, do let me know as I could do with a new field shelter).
Here's just a little example of how us locals are feeling:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/save_greenwich_park/7456512478/
Moan over.
I deliver drugs education to young people, and have to use a car to travel to north and central London schools with equipment, etc. The park has been closed to traffic for a month nearly and our journey has already become unbearable.
The park is closing to the public next week and won't re-open to traffic until October.
They were going to try and keep the Observatory open but they've decided that's no longer an option.
The area is gridlocked. Passing through at midnight last Sunday, the traffic was at a standstill and the queues went all the way back to East Greenwich.
Worst of all is the feeling that it's a privilege, somehow, and we should be grateful.
If there was any kind of legacy, fine, I'd shut up. But there really isn't. There are acres of wasteland in Erith, in Slade Green, in parts of south east London with 20th century road systems where they're desperate for any kind of re-generation. When I think of the environmental waste, all the cross country fences torn down, all the stabling torn down, the 26,000 seat arena (whose construction involved the removal of precious park topsoil), the surface, where's it all going? What a tragic waste. (Although if anyone knows what's happening to the temporary stabling, do let me know as I could do with a new field shelter).
Here's just a little example of how us locals are feeling:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/save_greenwich_park/7456512478/
Moan over.