Light a Musical Beacon in Charlton

Rachael has been in touch with a message for you…

Exciting new community music project starting in Charlton next week! I am a Charlton based musician, passionate about uniting local people through music and the arts. As a result of this interest my music company (Soundcastle) and I will be running FREE community music sessions on Monday afternoons from February 27th to June 4th at 4.15 – 5.15 and 5.45-6.45pm. If you want to know more then check out www.soundcastle.co.uk or email me at rachael@soundcastle.co.uk. ALL WELCOME!

Greenwich Council eyes ‘Charlton Garden City’


Greenwich Council has launched its draft masterplan for the Charlton riverside area, and is asking for public comments.

It covers the area north of the Woolwich Road from the SE7/SE10 boundary right across to the Westminster Industrial Estate, just inside Woolwich.

The big idea…

“By 2027, Charlton Riverside will be transformed into a new urban quarter connecting Greenwich Peninsula to Woolwich town centre. It will comprise of a sustainable mix of uses including substantial residential use in a high quality environment focussed around an enhanced Thames Barrier Park.”

Ideas include a revived riverside transport scheme (a successor to the axed Greenwich Waterfront Transit), a creative quarter around the Westminster Industrial Estate (“along the lines of Fish Island [in Bow] and Hackney Wick”), keeping industry around the wharves at Lombard Wall, a new primary school and “rationalising” the retail parks. this curious plan…

“Charlton Garden City: The area will draw on the principles of a garden city with a strong landscape theme. The Thames Barrier Park will double in size and new development will take the form of a contemporary version of a traditional Georgian terraced development, for example as shown in the Olympic Legacy Masterplan with some mews style development. The area will be new build with a new secondary school.”

Want to know more? There’s an exhibition at The Valley on Monday 20 February (3pm-8pm) as well as at Woolwich Library on Saturday 3 March (10am-2pm). You can download the plans via the council’s website.

Two Olympic closures planned for Woolwich Common

Traffic will be banned from crossing Woolwich Common via Ha Ha Road for two periods this spring and summer as it gets ready to host the shooting events at the London Olympics.

The road will be closed at the Charlton Park Lane junction from 7 July to 19 September, to allow it to become part of the Olympic and Paralympic venue which is currently under construction.

But it will also be shut from 15 April to 7 May for the ISSF World Cup, a test event expected to attract more competitors than the shooting contests at the Games.

Unlike some of the other Olympic test events, no tickets are going on sale for the ISSF World Cup, which will give Olympics organisers the chance to finesse their plans for the temporary venue. LOCOG recently took control of the site from the Olympic Delivery Authority.

Repository Road, which runs through Woolwich barracks, will also be closed to traffic for several hours each day while the site is operational, and bus route 486 is to be diverted via Cemetery Lane and Charlton Park Lane.

Some 3,000 people are expected to attend the events at Woolwich Common each day, and they will be directed to an entrance at the eastern end of Ha Ha Road, at the junction of Grand Depot Road. The junction with Charlton Park Lane will be used as an access point for athletes and staff, in an arrangement agreed with Queen Elizabeth Hospital. Some parking spaces on Charlton Park Lane, which is part of the Olympic Route Network, will be relocated onto the pavement.

As well as the shooting event, Woolwich Common will also play host to the Paralympic archery competition. Changes to parking arrangements will be made across a wide area, with parking bays requiring free permits to deter Olympic visitors from driving to the venues.

Meanwhile, Charlton station will see shuttle buses leave for the O2 – rechristened the North Greenwich Arena for the Games – every four minutes during gymnastics and basketball events. The shuttles are not expected to interfere with the current 486 service, although it is not expected that ordinary commuters will be able to use them.

The busiest days for the North Greenwich Arena are expected to come at the beginning of the gymnastics contest, with 16,000 spectators due on 28 and 29 July for each of three sessions. The rest of the O2/NGA will function as normal during the Olympics, although visitors will have to use one of 43 search lanes to be installed in Peninsula Square before they can access the bars, restaurants and cinema.

Further details on the North Greenwich Arena plans, as well as parking across the wider area, can be found at an exhibition at Ravensbourne college, behind North Greenwich station, on Friday between noon-8pm and Saturday between 10am-4pm.

Skate park planned for Thames Barrier site

The Greenwich Skatepark Co-Op has been in touch about its plans to build a skate park on the green space at Eastmoor Street, close to the Thames Barrier. It would replace the current facility by the Thames at Woolwich, which is due to be taken over for Crossrail works. Secretary Ashleigh Marsh explains…

“We are applying for funding from sources including Sport England and the Mayor’s Fund, and your support can help us to achieve enough to make sure Greenwich at last has a quality skatepark. The Woolwich skatepark is underused due to its outdated design, with poor surfaces and resulting maintenance problems, and our young people who cannot easily travel across London need somewhere local to develop their skills. If we maximise our fundraising success, we can aim to build a skatepark as good as any in London, to gain a lasting legacy from the Olympics for the South East London community of skaters and riders, and beyond.

“The value of a skatepark can be measured by its appeal to people who may not enjoy team sports, but like to express themselves in other challenging physical activities. A professional quality skatepark will mean our young people will be able to progress from beginners to the highest levels in a positive atmosphere of skill sharing, bringing cultures and generations together. Seeing what visiting professionals and teams can do will be inspirational.

“Our members share many years of skateboarding experience and community work. We will make sure that the new park is designed and built to last by specialists, and will work with the Council to make sure it is well looked after. We are planning to run events such as competitions and summer schools to make sure this opportunity will give maximum benefit to the community. We are in touch with the Greenwich BMX Club, at the Hornfair racing track, and their riders would also welcome a concrete park, with more scope for different techniques.”

The co-op also hopes to build links with The Reach climbing wall and The Raceway go-kart centre, both of which are nearby. A planning application is due in the next fortnight, and construction could start this summer if funds are in place.

Maryon Wilson animal park a step closer to safety

Charlton Champion exclusive: Maryon Wilson Park’s animal centre is looking more secure after the foundation of a limited company, the first step in forming a trust to take over its management from Greenwich Council.

The threat to the centre’s future was first revealed by this website in December 2010, when the council revealed plans to cut its budget from this April.

Now a trust is on course to be set up from April, aiming to promote animal welfare and education alongside a visitor attraction. To help the trust get up and running, this website understands Greenwich Council is to keep the animal centre’s stockman working for at least another year.

The council is also actively seeking corporate sponsorship and looking at “adopt-an-animal” schemes.

“I am delighted that the positive work done by the steering group in recent months has got us to this position so quickly,” Greenwich Council’s cabinet member for culture, John Fahy, said.

“There are exciting plans for the centre and the board of trustees will be confirmed in the next couple of weeks. A fund raising strategy as been put in place and we are confident that the long term future of the centre.”

The trust will be able to access funds not available to the council, and may also establish membership schemes.

(Thanks to Rob at greenwich.co.uk for contributing to this story.)

Crime warning: Be alert after muggings in Charlton Park

Thanks to Paul for getting in touch with this warning:

I live on the far side of Charlton Park, and the reason I am writing is that recently there have been a few attacks or muggings in the park.

The police are aware of this and one recent case involved my next door neighbour’s son. He was beaten up by a couple of teenagers who got off the 53 bus and followed him into the park to steal his iPhone.

The police got footage of them at the entrance of the park but there was no CCTV in the park itself to capture images of a quite violent attack.

Surely this highlights a clear need to have CCTV in the park. I am pretty sure that if people knew there was no CCTV in there they would think twice about walking through it at night. On the other hand maybe if thugs, young or old, knew this they might be more audacious in their attacks.

Sounds nasty. It does seem strange that there’s CCTV at the busier end of the park, but none at the other where you’d expect wrongdoers to make their getaway through quieter streets. The park’s open 24 hours a day and forms a vital cut-through for people who live around Canberra Road and Charlton Park Lane, so it does sound like they need better protection. I wonder what our local representatives have to say?

You may not know – they had very little budget with which to promote themselves, even before the recent police cuts – that the local police safer neighbourhood teams hold occasional “street surgeries” and drop-in sessions to listen to concerns like this, although unfortunately they’re held while most people are at work.

Around Charlton Park, Kidbrooke with Hornfair ward, which now has to share a sergeant with the adjoining Blackheath Westcombe ward, has one tomorrow (Weds 7th) at 2.30pm outside the Big Plate Cafe on Shooters Hill Road. The Charlton ward team are holding a drop-in surgery at the Charlton Triangle Homes office at Cedar Court, Cherry Orchard Estate at 4pm on Wednesday 14th December.

Covering the north of Charlton, there are also teams for Peninsula and Woolwich Riverside wards.

Buy a piece of Charlton drinking – and football – history


Fancy owning a little bit of a vanished Charlton pub? The sign from the demolished Valley boozer on Elliscombe Road has gone up for sale on eBay to raise funds for work in the local community.

The pub was opened in the mid-1960s by Charlton Athletic and England winger Harold Hobbis, who was its first landlord, and for many years it was a matchday favourite for Addicks fans.

But it fell into decline in its later years, and closed in 2008 following a robbery. It was demolished this summer to make way for a development of flats. However, work has stalled on the site following news that the developer has gone bust.

More happily, the sign at the front has been kept, and is now being sold by the Charlton Central Residents Association to buy plants and bulbs to make the following corners more attractive…

  • Junction of Nadine Street and Charlton Church Lane
  • Junction of Wellington Mews at with Wellington Gardens
  • Junction of Fossdene Road and Inverine Road
  • Front of St. Richard’s hall on Swallowfield Road
  • Junction of Nadine Streer and Gologolly Terrace

So if you drank in The Valley as a local or an Addicks fan, or know someone who did and fancy buying them an unforgettable Christmas present, then get bidding. And in case you were wondering, the big photo of the football ground inside the pub was sold a couple of years back.

The Charlton Central Residents Association represents people who live in an area bounded by (but not including) Charlton Church Lane, Victoria Way, Springfield estate and the railway line. People who live in adjacent streets can now apply for associate membership – if you want to find out more about it, here’s the latest members’ bulletin and newsletter.