1. The Sacred Heart Church in Mill Hill Broadway.
This building was a centrepiece of my youth. I was baptised in the church, I had my first communion in it, I had my confirmation in it. My fathers funeral was held in it, as were numerous other family members. There were also many weddings etc in it. As a kid, I attended the youth club and the film club. But it was deemed not fit for purpose and replaced with a nice modern church that isn't drafty and completely lacks any great feeling of timeless spirituality. It breaks my heart. The picture is of my parents outside the church in 1974. When you remove the building, it makes such images painful. In the planning process there is no value at all placed on the hurt the demolition of such places of important heritage may cause. To me it is cultural vandalism. Can you imagine how it feels looking through the family albums in the knowledge that the backdrop to my life has been systematically erased.
2. The National Institute for Medical Research.
I went to school on The Ridgeway and the NIMR loomed over us. I had no love of the building, having worked there and seen the animal experimentation but it was a heinous act of cultural vandalism to destroy it. We used it as a backdrop to this video that my band made. It's demolition being a metaphor for what is happening to our country. Capita manage planning in Barnet. We made the video for the Kick Out Capita Campaign, but if you watch it you can see the destruction of the building taking place.
3. The National Newspaper Archive in Colindale.
When I learned that this was being demolished, I was flabbergasted. This was such an iconic building. I couldn't believe that Barnet Council didn't fight tooth and nail to save it. I was shocked that they didn't even bother to try and keep and iconic institution in the Borough. I despair, I really do.
Developers have free reign in borough of Barnet ,in Colindale the British Newspaper Library is demolished for homes. pic.twitter.com/idkVkcG0SS— Mark Amies (@Superfast72) March 14, 2015
So farewell, then British Library newspaper archive Colindale. Demolished to make way for 'Edition' apartment block pic.twitter.com/Xp9u5yt0Xc— Clare Newsome (@ClareNewsome) March 27, 2015
The British Library Newspaper Archive, Colindale #flats pic.twitter.com/6PMok967EI— diamond geezer (@diamondgeezer) October 31, 2015
4. The Copthall Diving Pool.
My daughter was a national youth swimming champion. Copthall swimming pool was a centrepiece of our family life for a decade. She was a member of the diving club for a while and this was as fantastic and inspirational element to the club. Barnet spent a lot of money redeveloping the pool, but in a scandalous act of destruction of a well respected club, they decided that diving wasn't value for money. Short sighted and stupid. If you ever win the lottery, please give a couple of million to the diving club, so we can reinstate this.
4. Hendon FC.And so demolition of a perfectly good deep water facility begins....— NorthLondonAquatics (@Save_Diving_Ldn) October 15, 2019
Despite 47 million being spent on two new centres with just swim pools - the deep water pool will now be demolished forever.
Goodbye #BarnetCopthall we fought to save you alongside 11,000 #Barnet residents 💔 pic.twitter.com/7ZpT5pjeZG
The field of dreams. The FA Cup tie against Newcastle. The local football community. Count's for nothing in Barnet. Hendon FC's ground was an outstanding example of a non league ground. It should have been listed, not demolished.
5. Barnet FC Underhill.End of an era Hendon FC Stadium being demolished today. Been there since 1926 very sad. pic.twitter.com/ANKkPzkP— Nessie B (@mrsgoldenballs) November 1, 2012
If Hendon was a crime, Barnet FC was a tragedy. The club fell foul of a war between the local Labour and Conservative parties. The local Conservatives hate football and did everything they could to force Barnet out of the Borough. This was maainly driven by spite, as the former Labour/Lib Dem adminstration had been proud of the club and given them a great deal on the stadium to stay. This is one of the things that has constantly inspired me to write blogs.
Some 1975 views of Barnet's recently demolished Underhill ground, at which a crowd of 5,181 watched the FA Cup tie v Peterborough Utd in 1977/78. Pics Bob Lilliman. pic.twitter.com/AMe2Ojr03w— Vince Taylor (@Groundtastic) February 20, 2018
Death of a football stadium. My photos today of Barnet FC's Underhill Stadium being demolished. Very sad to see. @fcbusiness @BarnetFC @Groundtastic @dannykellywords @talkSPORT @henrywinter @footballtrav pic.twitter.com/Re41UxeO3J— TonyIncenzoTalkSPORT (@TonyIncenzo) February 16, 2018
6. The Methodist Church, Goodwyn Avenue NW7
Sadly I have no photo's of this small church. I'm not a Methodist, but I was exceptionally fond of the place, as it had a youth club. As a boy I'd play table tennis there. Iconic British Rockabilly band The Polecats used to rehearse on the site. The congregation fell. The Council wouldn't allow a redevelopment, so the new owners left it open with a can of petrol and a box of matches in the porch, metaphorically speaking. It burned down and is now housing. Another communty asset for young people lost.
7. The Finchley Gaumont Cinema.
I could make a list of the demolished cinemas in Barnet, but the Gaumont was the finest example and for me the saddest loss. When I was at FCHS I would wait for the 221 bus to Mill Hill at the bus stop next door. We'd be taken to the cinema to watch educational films, and bunk in to watch Confessions of a Window Cleaner (that was what passed as pornographic for teenage boys in 1976). It was an amazing business. The Arts Depot is a great resource, but it is ugly and soulless and lacks the style that the Gaumont had. They should have built the Arts Depot in Burnt Oak, an area that needed a boost, not on the site of the Borough's best cinema
The Gaumont Finchley opened in 1937 and was demolished fifty years later in 1987. pic.twitter.com/kdeQzmnaua
— Rob Baker (@robnitm) May 1, 20168. The Bald Faced Stag, Burnt Oak.
The list of lost pubs is long, sad and depressing. I could have chosen any one of a dozen, but I chose the Stag as it was a pub my band had a residency at in 1984. It was a hard, working class pub that had a reputation, but was a vital part of the community. When such establishments are demolished, no one ever thinks about the people who need a place to meet friends. Ordinary people
The Bald Faced Stag, Burnt Oak in the 1960s & today. I don't quite know what is happening with it, but it's been left like this for nearly a year.— NW London TimeMachine (@time_nw) May 12, 2019
(Archive image via @memorieshendon ) pic.twitter.com/Z4HfxW1CoW
9. The Barnet Tardis!@planning4pubs The Bald Faced Stag, Burnt Oak, London. pic.twitter.com/v3XQ93U7Tv— Mark Amies (@Superfast72) May 30, 2016
This was a real landmark. When I was a kid, my Dad would take us out for a drive looking for Dr Who. It was demolished in 1980, things were different then, but I really don't know why we have to erase every little oddity when it becomes redundant. I was rather chuffed finding this picture of it.
Most were destroyed in the early 1970s. A few lucky individuals survived the massacre however. The last one in England stood on the Barnet Bypass and was demolished in 1980. And here it is - photographed in 1980 just before destruction! pic.twitter.com/xJDsq80CUx— BabelColour 🎞 (@StuartHumphryes) August 27, 2018
10. The Victoria Park Lodge.
Our local heritage counts for nothing. Aesthetics count for nothing. There are thousands of ugly, sub standard buildings in the Borough, yet they chose to demolish the lodge. There is a reason. The luxury flats which replace it will overlook the park and therefore command a premium. This is not about housing provision, it's about profits. It is sickening.
The Lodge is being demolished now! @BarnetCouncil as trustees of Victoria Park have failed in their duty as trustees. Why is this happening to the historic lodge in Victoria Park, Finchley N3? pic.twitter.com/vXhDCM8rsi— Victoriaparkfinchley (@victoriaparkfi1) June 11, 2019
Sorry to post such a miserable blog at the weekend, but sometimes it has to be said. I do wish I didn't give a F...
It may amuse you to note that whilst I was writing this I was interrupted by an urgent call from the Save The Midland campaign. Lets hope that there won't be an eleventh building on this list.
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