By Mark Amies (AKA @Superfast72)
Some of you may be aware of my occasional rants on Twitter
(on my handle @Superfast72) about the dear old Railway Hotel in Edgware. This
Grade 2 Historic England Listed building served the people of Edgware for
nearly eighty years, until it closed around 2008. Since then it has sat boarded
up, and unloved. In recent years its grounds have been used as a car lot, a car
wash and as a turnaround for coaches going to Eastern Europe.
I don’t know the exact year it was finished but I believe it
was the late 1920’s. I will allow the author of ‘Modernism in Metroland’ (http://www.modernism-in-metroland.co.uk/ - check it out, it is very good) to describe
it better, “…the Railway Hotel in Edgware by A.E. Sewell, the
prolific in house architect for Truman Hanbury Buxton and Co. Defiantly
neo-Tudor, with barge boards, half timbering and bay windows.
I moved into the
area in 2013 (although I knew the area well enough before then), and I was
really sad to see this once important local asset decaying and neglected, and
so I kept an eye on it , occasionally taking photos and sticking them on my
Twitter account, really just to keep it from being forgotten (if you search the
tag #railwayhoteledgware , you will see some of them. I recall talking
to the owner of the Edgware Music Shop a few years ago, and he had told me that
the building had gone through a succession of owners, many of them eventually
frustrated by the planning restrictions of the Listing Status. But you see, that is why heritage buildings
are listed – to stop them being ruined by insensitive and unsuitable renovations.
There had been
talk of it being converted into a hotel again, and with the land behind it,
that would probably have worked well….except who is going to come and stay in a
heritage hotel in Edgware these days? Back in the day hotels of this nature
served the needs of travelling salesmen, and being next to the original Edgware
station ( that sat where Sainsbury’s and Premier House now are), it would have
served very well. There had also been
shadowy rumour that in fact , what a developer had wanted to do was to demolish
the building, buy up the old Post Office next to it, the ‘Forum’ flats and shops that create an L
shape onto the Edgware Road , and the land behind ,and let it fall into
disrepair. Then the whole chunk of land could be turned over for a high density
housing development.
Sound familiar?
Very much the sort of thing Barnet RE are really
enthusiastic about. If you combine that with the similarly
dishevelled-looking Masons Arms pub nearby,
that’s another attractive ‘road corner prime position’ for a
developer. It all points to what we have
seen so much of in North West London, vast areas of land freely handed over to
unscrupulous developers, to build complexes of human rabbit hutches – all
waived on by a Government that says we desperately need more housing. Yes, we
do - we need affordable housing,
suitable for families to live in, not luxury flats that are unaffordable or
future slums that look terrible after 18 months.
So…the saga of
this building carried on, no pub chains were interested – believe me I tried to
get them interested. I contacted Fullers, Antic and Youngs, all known for
taking on heritage buildings. All declined. Sadly the area was the biggest
issue for them. Edgware clearly didn’t tick the boxes, and let’s face it do you
blame them? Edgware has fallen down in the last ten years, in no part due to
Barnet Council effectively deserting the town like an unwanted child. It’s only
desire to rubber stamp unsuitable developments like the revamped Premier House
on Station Road.
However on
Thursday evening I had a few emails from a person who had been in contact with
me about The Railway Hotel before. They had seen my tweets and got in contact.
Their enthusiasm for action was noble, and it was great to see at least another
human being in the area was keen to look out for the building. The thing about the recent email was it
showed activity. “At last!”, I thought, but as I read on I got worried……very worried.
Apparently the building was being
cleared, in preparation for flats on the upper floors , and a restaurant on the
ground floor, and of some note, an ‘extension’. Don’t get me wrong – it is great to see the
building will be put back into a working role , rather than neglected. However
the detail was showing that the clearing was fairly ruthless, and included the
breaking up of concrete , the process of which was apparently causing the
building to shake (remember we are talking about an eighty year old building
with a great deal of timber and glass,
built before building regulations, and put up by guys wearing flat caps and
smoking Woodbines).
I took a note of
the building company and nowhere on the signage did it mention that they were
specialists in heritage restoration. In fact it looked to me like it was just
whoever turned up first in a local web search.
I have no reason to doubt the abilities of the builders but I would expect
something more in keeping with the listed status of The Railway Hotel.
Now, here is
where things get interesting. I had the time
the following day (I had to wait in for a boiler repair guy), to do some
emailing and calling. Two of the people
I contacted were Roger and Mrs Angry. I also contacted Historic England at
their London Office, the Senior Planning Enforcement Officer at Barnet Council,
the Twentieth Century Society , the three Barnet Councillors for the ward the Railway Hotel
sits in, a contact at GetWest London media, BBC London , and probably a few
more. A bit excessive you think?
Well, you can
think that, but back in 1980, over the course of the August Bank Holiday
weekend the fabulous Art Deco Firestone Tyre factory on the Great West Road, in
Brentford was demolished. The listing that would have stopped this horror from
happening was due to be served on the following Monday. Too little, too late.
There is the example that a great many lovers of heritage buildings at risk
will use. It would appear
that my efforts may not have gone in vain. Despite the Barnet Planning Officer
being rather shy , Historic England did get back to me that morning to inform
me that “…. Historic
England have not been consulted on any recent applications for the site”.
I decided I would try, for the third time to call the shy
Planning Enforcement Officer at Barnet, and they actually answered. In a tone
and manner that I can only describe as emotionally detached, I was told that
her manager was on the way to The Railway Hotel as we spoke to check what was
happening. Does that not sound a little like negligence? Barnet Council have a duty of care by law
over the Railway Hotel, or indeed any listed building in its territory.
I don’t know if my hasty intervention, prompted by a well
meaning individual ,( who I will not name out of respect), will save the Railway
Hotel from a fate worse than death. All I can do is to keep it in the
spotlight, so that people like you, reading this rather long article will be
aware of what is going on with our shared built heritage. These buildings are
more than just bricks and mortar, they are places where couples met, and later
married, where events that shaped people’s lives took place – a pale youth’s
first pint in a pub, a game of darts or pool that meant a lot, a wedding
reception, a wake, or simply just a great night out, or lots of great nights
out. These buildings are part of an area’s identity, its history. If we let
them get desecrated, or demolished then we are letting a little bit of our
collective soul be wiped from the present
and left only as a faded memory.
If The Railway Hotel gets restored to just a quarter of
its former self, I will be delighted. If it provides a meaningful purpose for
the local community (as it once did), even more so. If it provides someone with
a much needed home, brilliant. But whatever happens it needs to be done with
sensitivity, and within the boundaries of the listing status that was placed upon
it.
Now get me a pint!!
Mark Amies, September 14th
2018
Thank you for the update on the fate of The Railway Hotel. I've lived in Edgware all my life, and it is one of the few buildings that defines Edgware. I would love to see it back up and running as a pub - or similar.
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