I moved into a prefab with my mum and dad in 1952. They were paradise after the two rooms we rented in postwar Britain. It had an electric cooker, a bathroom and separate toilet, loads of cleverly designed storage, and -almost unheard of in those days- a fridge. It was so well designed with a fold away table in the kitchen which could also be used as an ironing board. My parents were heartbroken when the council decided to tear them down in the 60s and move them to a much less appealing council semi.
I purchased my 1950 prefab in 2020. They are brilliant. I love living here. I rented it before I bought it (from the council) and the council contacted me and asked if I wanted to take up right to buy. I said yes. I still get people knocking on my door asking if I want to sell it. I can't if course, and won't! Ha ha. But yes this is the best place I've lived. I was worried about insuring it but no problem!
Brilliant film. A good lesson for today's urban planners. Who wants to live in a flat when you can have a great detached house with a garden. I hope they start a petition - if they do, I'll sign it!
I loved the prefabs in Aberdeen and I miss them! I think they took the Aberdeen ones down in the 80's...shame they were really pretty and really well kept! These ones are bloody beautiful too... people took pride in them and I think it was terrible giving people houses because they had been bombed then taking them away because Royal Dutch Shell wanted the land to build offices! It's outrageous...they went through enough and the land was donated and I think they should have been given the freeholds!
why do they have to pull these down. I lived at no.3 Baudwin rd, for nearly 20yrs from 1952 and loved every minute of it! I would love to have the opportunity to go or live there again, it would be a great way to remember the 'Prefab Estate'. we kids then, all grew up and played, schooled and even got married to another Prefab Person. oh! happy days!
I think it's a shame, not only are they nice little places, the people have taken immense pride and looked after these places, they are their palaces, their castles, their little piece of the country, and they've built up a wonderful community, the ladies at the start of the video talking about where they lived and moved to, who was there before, it's nice to see, that type of community is dying out in the UK with the new generations, that's your old style British community spirit
Memories. I was born at 1 Meiiot Road in 1947, we were the first occupants. I tell people that my first home was built by Italian craftsmen. They were prisoners of war!
@@moviladaniel6010 All you need to do is look at the housing "projects" of highrises in New York and Chicago built the same time as these. Many have been ripped down for a reason; it concentrates hoards of poor people in poorly maintained buildings and they begin to become crime ridden dumps.
I think combined with modern materials, these could be an answer to solving the Housing Crisis.....or at least the ever increasing demand for Social Housing (currently well over 1.5 million people). I'd love to be in one of these rather than Private Renting, where one can't put down roots
Of course by today's building standards these prefabs are completely primative, but just imagine if estates of homes similar to these, built to modern ecological and construction standards could be created now. It would mean ordinary working people who currently are forced to live in often substandard and expensive private rented accomodation, perhap scould live with some dignity and peace of mind.
A true lesson from history. Instead of politicians competing with meaningless “promises” to build “more” affordable housing (whatever that means), why don’t they recognise that we have a worse housing crisis than at the end of the Second World War and get off their backsides and actually do something! A determined drive to build thousands of prefabricated houses is truly affordable and can be achieved within months. They need to just get on with it !!
I have been here. Like a Smurf village. 5:00 I did a job with the bin lorries starting January 1st 2000 and I was absolutely charmed by finding this place in the cold dark of the early morning. It is a village of ethnic sameness, they are one tribe, salt of the earth whites, immune to change.
I have your book PREFAB HOMES. The pages have been well thumbed.If somebody out there would make some replicas I would be first on the list to rent one. The closet I think we have here in somerset are the to new container village in Bridgwater which people who work in Hinkley point live in at present and when they leave the college will take them over for the students. though they are staked on top of one another.
Make this project happen in Ukraine to get people there through the winter and give them somewhere to live in their own country so they can start to rebuild after the Russian Aggressor has gone.
Hi, when its said they were only meant to be there 10 years, what is the reason for this? due to quality of materials & technology? Thanks I am covering prefabrication and its prospect to assist in the current UK Housing shortage.
These old Birds with their nipples poking through their clothes always get me laughing because in their youth they would not be seen dead like that. Anyway Lewisham is my Manor.
My Nan lived in one in the mid 60's & it was the best home she ever had. Such a shame they had to demolish it & built flats on it in the 70's. 😢
I moved into a prefab with my mum and dad in 1952. They were paradise after the two rooms we rented in postwar Britain. It had an electric cooker, a bathroom and separate toilet, loads of cleverly designed storage, and -almost unheard of in those days- a fridge. It was so well designed with a fold away table in the kitchen which could also be used as an ironing board. My parents were heartbroken when the council decided to tear them down in the 60s and move them to a much less appealing council semi.
I purchased my 1950 prefab in 2020. They are brilliant. I love living here. I rented it before I bought it (from the council) and the council contacted me and asked if I wanted to take up right to buy. I said yes. I still get people knocking on my door asking if I want to sell it. I can't if course, and won't! Ha ha. But yes this is the best place I've lived. I was worried about insuring it but no problem!
I don't understand.. you bought it but can't sell it?
@@VinylToVideoprobably a condition of the Right-to-buy scheme....can't sell it on for x years, or something.
Sounds great. Where abouts are U, just what part of country that's all as in in London. ,none here now.
Brilliant film. A good lesson for today's urban planners. Who wants to live in a flat when you can have a great detached house with a garden. I hope they start a petition - if they do, I'll sign it!
So many interesting people, especially the interesting chap speaking at 0.37
I loved the prefabs in Aberdeen and I miss them! I think they took the Aberdeen ones down in the 80's...shame they were really pretty and really well kept! These ones are bloody beautiful too... people took pride in them and I think it was terrible giving people houses because they had been bombed then taking them away because Royal Dutch Shell wanted the land to build offices! It's outrageous...they went through enough and the land was donated and I think they should have been given the freeholds!
We have them in north east England ,and they look wonderful, and as this man says" land is valuable, just like council houses,
great video!!!
I was born in the bedroom of a prefab in 1958.
why do they have to pull these down. I lived at no.3 Baudwin rd, for nearly 20yrs from 1952 and loved every minute of it! I would love to have the opportunity to go or live there again, it would be a great way to remember the 'Prefab Estate'. we kids then, all grew up and played, schooled and even got married to another Prefab Person. oh! happy days!
I think it's a shame, not only are they nice little places, the people have taken immense pride and looked after these places, they are their palaces, their castles, their little piece of the country, and they've built up a wonderful community, the ladies at the start of the video talking about where they lived and moved to, who was there before, it's nice to see, that type of community is dying out in the UK with the new generations, that's your old style British community spirit
Memories. I was born at 1 Meiiot Road in 1947, we were the first occupants. I tell people that my first home was built by Italian craftsmen. They were prisoners of war!
Decades ago a solution for affordable housing was created. It was abandoned. The solution is here, we just need to bring back to life again.
what about the land usage which is way higher for detached homes than highrise?
@@moviladaniel6010 All you need to do is look at the housing "projects" of highrises in New York and Chicago built the same time as these. Many have been ripped down for a reason; it concentrates hoards of poor people in poorly maintained buildings and they begin to become crime ridden dumps.
I think combined with modern materials, these could be an answer to solving the Housing Crisis.....or at least the ever increasing demand for Social Housing (currently well over 1.5 million people). I'd love to be in one of these rather than Private Renting, where one can't put down roots
Yes, yes, yes!
Beautiful ❤️
Of course by today's building standards these prefabs are completely primative, but just imagine if estates of homes similar to these, built to modern ecological and construction standards could be created now. It would mean ordinary working people who currently are forced to live in often substandard and expensive private rented accomodation, perhap scould live with some dignity and peace of mind.
A true lesson from history. Instead of politicians competing with meaningless “promises” to build “more” affordable housing (whatever that means), why don’t they recognise that we have a worse housing crisis than at the end of the Second World War and get off their backsides and actually do something! A determined drive to build thousands of prefabricated houses is truly affordable and can be achieved within months. They need to just get on with it !!
I have been here. Like a Smurf village. 5:00 I did a job with the bin lorries starting January 1st 2000 and I was absolutely charmed by finding this place in the cold dark of the early morning. It is a village of ethnic sameness, they are one tribe, salt of the earth whites, immune to change.
They look so very peaceful 🙂
I have your book PREFAB HOMES. The pages have been well thumbed.If somebody out there would make some replicas I would be first on the list to rent one. The closet I think we have here in somerset are the to new container village in Bridgwater which people who work in Hinkley point live in at present and when they leave the college will take them over for the students. though they are staked on top of one another.
What a Wonderfull life it would be
2:02 oh golliwog brings me to my childhood
You are a character Eddie
Make this project happen in Ukraine to get people there through the winter and give them somewhere to live in their own country so they can start to rebuild after the Russian Aggressor has gone.
Brilliant - I love prefabs!
Hi, when its said they were only meant to be there 10 years, what is the reason for this? due to quality of materials & technology? Thanks I am covering prefabrication and its prospect to assist in the current UK Housing shortage.
What a pity....
This is one of the things West got right .
These old Birds with their nipples poking through their clothes always get me laughing because in their youth they would not be seen dead like that. Anyway Lewisham is my Manor.
So true 🤣
Dwellings ?, follow the money trails!