Bombsites near St Petersburgh Place – Eighty Years Later

Hot on the heels of some wonderful photographs of our area, Mik Laver has also provided a fascinating article on the architecture which appeared around St Petersburgh Place following the Blitz. Below are the first three paragraphs of the introduction and three of the included images. To read the whole article as a PDF file please follow this link.

Mik Laver writes:

London’s “classic” domestic architecture, built mostly by nineteenth-century property speculators, suffered severe damage during the Blitz. Postwar reconstruction by twentieth-century property speculators was barely constrained by urban planners, who at the time saw ageing multi-occupied Victorian housing as slums for clearance, not an architectural heritage for conservation.

So London’s vernacular domestic architecture often includes infill developments built on bombsites, which can be in stark contrast to the traditional architecture surrounding them.

I document this with contemporary photographs of eight blitz bombsites near St Petersburgh Place, Bayswater. Bayswater was rapidly developed in the mid-1850s, entirely by property speculators. They typically built grand stuccoed houses that were only briefly fashionable before transitioning to multi-occupation. These were then often very poorly maintained and by the 1950s appeared ripe either for redevelopment or for exploitation by the area’s notorious slum landlords.

Sample Images

These show a map of the eight bombsites referenced in the article, plus images of 28-30 Chepstow Place and 13-15 St Petersburgh place.

More Area Photos

The original set of images were all taken on a single day, but we now have an additional set from Mik Laver which capture some great scenes from the BRA area. Just follow this link to view them.

Mik Laver Joins BRA Committee

The BRA committee is very pleased to welcome Mik Laver to the Committee.

Mik Laver, born and raised in London, now lives in St Petersburgh Place, having spent a large part of his working life in Ireland and the United States. He takes long walks in and around the area every day, rain or shine, and always carries a camera. A keen amateur photographer, he’s mainly interested in documenting the rich visual environment of this part of London.

We’ll soon be adding some of Mik’s photos to our gallery, plus a fascinating article

Area Photos

We’ve been and out about in the BRA area taking photographs. You can see them on a dedicated gallery page via this link.

Over the coming months and years we’ll be adding to the collection, so do keep an eye on our home page news links to new galleries.

See our part of London

We could explain the boundaries that define the BRA area, but it’s so much easier to look at a image. Follow this link to view a pair of aerial views that show where we operate in West London.

A whole new look…

We’ve put together a whole new website and we have a lot planned for it. Right now there are just a few pages, but we’ll adding and expanding quite a lot over the months and years.

Do fee free to explore, you don’t have to be a member to view anything, but of course if you do want to join BRA then follow this link to do so.

Thanks for popping by.

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