
Simon Heffer: Will the spread of ugliness across Britain never stop?
The illustrated essay in the Architectural Review – named, with an appropriate lack of understatement, Outrage – has long been out of print, absurdly for a piece deemed influential in how we think about our built environment, the damage done to it in modern times and the landscapes it occupies. However, it has just been handsomely republished by Notting Hill Editions and, seven decades after it was written, remains an essential volume for anyone who minds about why our country looks as it does. Nairn revelled in Britain's local and regional differences, but his outrage was directed at what he called Subtopia, which he defined as 'the annihilation of the difference by attempting to make one type of scenery standard for town, suburb, countryside and wild'.
Outrage maps a road trip from Southampton to Carlisle in the mid-1950s, and Nairn makes his point about the drab uniformity of 20th-century Britain by discussing how the suburban road leading out of Southampton looks much the same as the suburban road leading into Carlisle, lined with tedious rows of semi-detached houses, and littered with advertising hoardings, telephone wires, ugly street furniture (especially lampposts) and the odd pylon.
Nairn insists he is not opposed to development or progress, but rather thoughtlessness when it comes to design, the standardisation that makes Southampton look like Carlisle, and the insensitivity with which existing landscapes are treated by the imposition of new features. He also rages against phoneyness: if anything is as bad as turning parts of rural England into towns, it is trying to impose rural features, such as half-hearted plantings of trees and shrubs, on urban ones.
He was writing at a time, too, when little effort had been made to clean up the countryside after the Second World War. Many former Army bases and airfields had been allowed to rot once they were no longer needed, leaving ugly collections of tatty huts, decaying concrete roads and abundant wire fences all over the place.
He called for adherence to 'the basic principle of visual planning', which he saw as being 'to maintain and intensify the difference between places', thus eliminating the uniformity so beloved by local authorities and their planners. He urged readers who shared his views to write to their local councils to complain. He told them not to seek to put the clock back, because they couldn't, but to lobby for a thoughtful application of the features of the modern world.
'Three things have got to be accepted about Britain,' he wrote. 'It is industrial, overcrowded and small. These all suggest one conclusion, that all our development must be high-density and small-area.' By these means, towns could be divided from countryside to the benefit of both; the alternative was 'blurred edges' and the spread of ugliness into rural areas.
One cannot read Outrage today without seeing an England that, despite Nairn's efforts, has existed throughout our lives. We are no longer industrial, but we are more overcrowded now than then (the population of these islands, all of whom have to live somewhere, has grown by up to a third). The detritus of the war has gone; many new buildings are of higher specification, and planning has become more strategic and sometimes even adheres to the idea of an aesthetic.
But a lot of places still look horrible, distinctions have been lost, and a new range of pylons is about to march across East Anglia to the Thames. Nairn reminds us that we have a right not to put up with this and retain the power to complain. But will we?
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Daily Mail
7 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Neighbours are urged to SNITCH on one another if they catch them using hosepipes during ban... so will YOU grass if a homeowner waters their begonias?
Britons are being urged by some water companies to report their neighbours if they spot them using a hosepipe in areas where a ban has been imposed. Water firms have different policies on what people should do if they spot someone flouting the ban, as England struggles with the driest start to the year since 1976. South East Water has asked people in Kent and Sussex who see a person breaking the rules to get in touch so they can take 'appropriate action' if needed. Southern Water urged those in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight to 'gently remind' neighbours of the restrictions in place and 'direct them to our website'. And Yorkshire Water has confirmed that it would remind customers 'of their obligations' if they are repeatedly told about someone breaking the restrictions. But Thames Water is the only company to specifically advise against people getting in touch, saying: 'You don't need to contact us about neighbours using hosepipes.' Water companies can impose a ban under the Flood and Water Management Act 2010, which gives them powers to issue fines of up to £1,000 for non-compliance. However an investigation by The Times in 2022 found no company has ever issued a fine since the powers were first introduced in an earlier act dating back to 1991. TikTok users claim they are flouting a hosepipe ban as they continue to fill up pools - although one (bottom right) has insisted the video was a joke, and she is not in an area with restrictions Homeowners have also been warned by forces including West Yorkshire Police that they should not contact officers on 101 or 999 to report an apparent breach. The issue was a hot topic on Channel 5 programme Jeremy Vine On 5 yesterday, which received 168 responses to a Facebook post asking: 'Would you grass on someone for watering the garden?' One said: 'No I wouldn't. The whole thing's stupid... can't use your hose but you can fill endless buckets to use instead... can't use hose in a residential dwelling but I can pay a gardener to come and use it instead. I've better things to do than snitch on my neighbours for using what they are paying for.' A second wrote: 'Would not need to snitch on anybody if the water companies used our money for investment instead of higher top salaries and bonuses.' And a third posted: 'No but I'ev got a neighbour that would - she's reported me for putting food out for birds.' It comes as Southern Water today became the latest water firm to announce a hosepipe ban. Restrictions on hosepipes for watering gardens, filling paddling pools or washing cars will begin for one million households in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight from Monday. The move aims to protect the 'critically low' Test and Itchen chalk streams, which supply most of the area's water, but levels are down 24 per cent on normal flows for the time of year, Southern Water said. It is the latest announcement by water companies bringing in hosepipe bans after the driest start to the year since 1976 for England. Meanwhile TikTokers claim they are flouting the hosepipe ban as they continue to fill up pools. Homeowners are posting jovial videos showing them using the hose in their gardens - with one saying: 'I pay my water bill so I will be filling up the pool for the kids.' Another posted a clip of a happy girl enjoying the pool on a sunny day, writing: 'Hosepipe ban? Someone come tell her that she can't do this today.' A third uploaded a clip showing them with a hosepipe next to their pool in the garden, writing: 'Do you think I'm playing in doors when it's 30C out here?' And one showed a hosepipe running into a garden being used to fill up a pool under the caption 'breaking the law', adding: 'It's not me, it's the neighbours hahahaha.' Others said they were filling up pools before the ban in their area came in, so they could enjoy being in the water outside even once the restrictions had begun. Some came up with workarounds, such as filling up the pool with a kettle - or running the water from an outside tap through a water bottle with a hole in the bottom. And gardening experts also pointed out that those in hosepipe ban areas are still allowed to water their plants by filling up a watering can from an outdoor tap. Rainfall across England was 20 per cent less than the long-term average for June, which was also the hottest on record for the country, with two heatwaves driving unusually high demand for water, the Environment Agency has said. More heatwave conditions have followed in July, with the Met Office warning weather extremes such as heat have become the 'norm' for the UK as a result of climate change driven by human activities such as burning fossil fuels. East and West Midlands became the latest areas of England to fall into drought amid three summer heatwaves so far and a drier than average June. The Environment Agency said three more areas - Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, East Anglia, and Thames area - have now moved into prolonged dry weather status. The East and West Midlands regions have joined Yorkshire, Cumbria and Lancashire, and Greater Manchester, Merseyside and Cheshire, which are already in drought. Across England, rainfall was 20 per cent less than the long-term average for June, which was also the hottest on record for the country with two heatwaves driving unusually high demand for water, the Environment Agency said. Reservoir levels continue to fall, with storage across the country at 76 per cent. Millions of households are facing water restrictions, with a hosepipe ban implemented in Yorkshire last Friday in the face of reservoir storage at only 54 per cent. Yorkshire Water said restrictions on using hosepipes for activities such as watering the garden, cleaning cars and filling paddling pools were brought in to try to protect supplies in the face of more dry weather forecast in the coming weeks. Customers who ignore the hosepipe ban could face fines of up to £1,000, but the utility said 'we hope it won't come to that' as it urged households to help conserve water by sticking to the restrictions. The restrictions include using a hosepipe to water gardens and wash private vehicles, fill domestic pools or clean outdoor surfaces. People can still wash their car and water their gardens using tap water from a bucket or watering can, while the region's 139,000 businesses will be allowed to use a hosepipe if it is directly related to an essential commercial purpose - but not for other uses such as cleaning paths outside a business property. Other TikTok users have been filling up pools before the hosepipe ban in their area came in Youlgrave Waterworks, a private firm which supplies 500 homes in Derbyshire, became the first to introduce a hosepipe ban at the start of last month. But Yorkshire Water was the first major utility to bring in restrictions for its 5.7million customers. Embattled utility Thames Water has also announced a ban which will begin next Tuesday for customers in Oxfordshire, Gloucestershire, most of Wiltshire and some parts of Berkshire. London has avoided the ban, which will be applied to 1.1million customers in postcodes beginning with OX, GL, SN, RG4, RG8 and RG9. The water company has asked customers not to use hosepipes, including for cleaning cars, watering plants, filling pools or cleaning windows. Businesses which use water as a core part of their purpose, such as garden centres and car washes, will be exempt. South East Water has a ban in place from this Friday, which will affect homes and businesses in Ashford, Canterbury, Eastbourne, Maidstone, Haywards Heath and Royal Tunbridge Wells. Southern Water's water managing director Tim McMahon said: 'We're sorry we're taking this step, but as other water companies have already done, we have to respond to the widespread and prolonged dry weather affecting our region. 'In our case, this means a hosepipe ban for our customers in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight to protect the health of our amazing chalk streams, which as one of the rarest habitats on earth has been compared to the Amazon Rainforest. 'We must act now to support the wildlife that live there, including Atlantic salmon and southern damselfly.' Some people have come up with workarounds, such as filling up the pool with a kettle (right)- or running the water from an outside tap through a water bottle with a hole in the bottom (left) While some appeared to be confused as to what the ban means (left), gardening experts say those in hosepipe ban areas can still water their plants by filling up a watering can (right) He said the company has been working '24/7' to find and fix leaks, and ensuring the network is working as efficiently as possible, but it is 'not enough', and he urged customers to help to reduce use by adhering to the ban. Meanwhile Anglian Water, which supplies drinking water to 4.3 million customers across the East of England - the driest part of the country - said recent rain has prevented the need for a hosepipe ban, but one could still be required this summer. Recent rain has helped river and reservoir levels and more is predicted for the coming weeks, but with an 'exceptionally dry' few months and uncertainty over the forecast, a hosepipe ban may yet be needed, the utility said. The warning comes after East Anglia was among the regions moved into prolonged dry weather status, at the same time drought was declared in the East and West Midlands. Anglian Water's director of water services, Ian Rule, said: 'The East of England is the driest part of the country so we're used to seeing a lack of rainfall in our region and we plan accordingly. 'Our focus on leakage, and the investment we've put in place to give us resilience in the face of climate change, has helped to delay the need for restrictions, but the last few months have been exceptionally dry, even by our standards. 'River levels had been looking very low following the historically dry spring, but they have responded better than expected to recent rainfall. 'There is also some rain in the forecast over the coming weeks which, if it materialises, could provide some welcome respite for the region's rivers and reservoirs. 'However, the forecast is far from certain, so we're closely monitoring the situation and if the exceptionally dry weather does continue, then restrictions might still be needed this summer.' He also said the dry ground means water pipes are at greater risk of shifting and breaking, and the company is facing an increase in issues being reported, with teams working round the clock to fix burst and leaking pipes. The company does not want to put restrictions in place unnecessarily, he added, but protecting the environment and the region's 'vital' agricultural sector means leaving as much water in the environment as possible. The Environment Agency has warned that without substantial rain, more bans will follow. The drought declaration for the Midlands, where some river flows are at their lowest for June since 1976, came after the latest meeting of the National Drought Group - with the situation deteriorating since the group last met in early June. Water companies are being told to follow their drought management plans as well as step up work to fix leaks. The public are being urged to use water wisely across England and comply with any local restrictions as the dry weather continues to impact water resources nationwide. Anglers, wild swimmers and boaters are also being urged to report any environmental issues they see, such as fish in distress in low water conditions.


Evening Standard
a day ago
- Evening Standard
Government confirms next census will take place in 2031
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Wales Online
2 days ago
- Wales Online
National two-minute silence to be held on August 15
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