Brixton Square marketing day: the awful truth

I’ll be honest: I walked right past Brixton Square tonight when Barratt Homes were holding their marketing day event.

I couldn’t bring myself to walk in when I saw the clipboard-toting, super-smarmy, swivel action suits doing their thing, but an intrepid reporter for urban75 bravely ventured in and has posted up what he saw.

Barratt Homes, Brixton Square and the fight to retain affordable housing in Brixton

And yes, they really are naming one of the upmarket blocks after one of Brixton’s most loved old pubs/squats (“Bradys“).  Another will be called ‘Windrush’ because that’s really appropriate for a block where the cheapest one bedroom flat starts at £265,000.

Here’s his report…

I went in, posed as a buyer and drank their free bubbly. I felt a bit dirty tbh.

There was a wide range of people there: posh white people, posh black people, posh asian people.

Two Jamaican guys were stood on the pavement outside looking in and muttering something about “bloodclart rich workers.”

They are giving free ipads to people who make a reservation.

There are 5 blocks of flats in the development, which will be called “Windrush”, “Academy”, “Ritzy”, “Brady” and “Village”.

Flicking through their glossy brochures (full of pics of Brixton Village, pics of people raving it up in the Academy, and pics of parks which aren’t even in Brixton) I was soon cornered by an agent who started giving me the spiel.

I was probably the scruffiest person in there but she still asked me if I was a buy-to-let investor (!) and handed me a sheet showing potential rental income and annual gross yields etc.

I was interested in their reaction about the “affordable homes” thing and was about to ask when she handed me a plan of the building showing the make up of affordable, private, commercial etc (I’ll scan it and post it up if anyone’s interested?)

The ‘affordable’ bits of the building seem to be stuck in the back corner of the development (next to the railway lines) on each floor.

There are some flats on the ground floor (which face Coldharbour Lane) which were marked “planning to be agreed” which I assume are the flats in question re: the change in planning we’ve been discussing.

I made my excuses and left. I felt pretty miserable about the whole thing, which was compounded when I got back outside and saw one of the agents had parked their car right across the pavement. A guy in a wheelchair was coming along the pavement and had to go out into the road in rush hour traffic to get past the car.

And how much will these flats cost to rent? Take a deep breath and scroll down:

£310 per week for a one bed, £360 per week for a two bed (which they say is based on independent valuations made in April 2012.) Quick calculation makes that £1343 per month for a one bed, £1560 per month for a two bed.

That’s over £16,000 a year for a one bed flat. In Brixton, for fuck’s sake.

Read more and join in with the discussion on Brixton Square on the urban75 bulletin boards.

5 Comments on “Brixton Square marketing day: the awful truth”

  1. I can’t understand how they even got planning permission for this. I’ve lived in Brixton for 29 years now and would be embarrassed to live here. I would rather live across the road where normal people live.

  2. To the author,Understand your viewpoint, but, could I ask, how long have you been a resident of brixton, and where did you move from?

  3. As far as I know he’s Brixton born and bred, not that I think that has *anything* to do with the rent-accelerating scourge of Buy To Let speculators or the way that Barrett Homes wriggled out of their obligations for affordable housing in this development.

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