This is the most surreal journey you'll ever take on the tram. One moment you're in East Croydon, then suddenly it pivots right, and you're in the countryside....it has to be experienced
Turns right at Sandilands onto the trackbed of the Woodside to Sanderstead railway line, in a cutting that has always been leafy. Suburban South Croydon (very respectable) goes on above your head.
Reminds me of the Euskotren from San Sebastian/Donostia Amara station to Bilbao - the train looks like a underground carriage but its winding through forests and sheep pasture. There's one section where its literally surrounded by trees only 2 meters or so from the trackbed.
Having grown up in New Addington I am torn, as a kid the open green space was brilliant. Heading off to the woods with your mates, bike rides, a free air show once a year. Having moved away as an adult I now see the lack of investment and social deprivation but as you noted, I would still vociferously defend it from its detractors. Great video 👍
This only shows how our needs change with time... Also, you must be aware that today we are yearning for open green spaces, we are dreaming about the bike trip with friends into woods, and are ready to travel for miles in order to pay entrance fee for air show, so...
As a child/teenager growing up in New Addington in the 1960s/70s, we really were out in the sticks. The nearest cinemas were in Croydon and the only way to get home was by bus. Unfortunately the buses stopped quite early so you had a choice of walking home or missing the end of the film. No cab would go to New Addington in those days and night buses only went into London. West Wickham might technically be the nearest rail station but there were no direct buses there. I remember Fieldway being built and the Council did what they often do and moved all the problem families there into small properties with tiny gardens which is what led to the issues in the early years. The older parts of the estate sort of got tarred with the same brush. There were three pubs and there's always been a community centre, which I believe has been recently rebuilt. We also had a library and swimming pool so not completely bereft. The other issue was weather; being in an exposed spot we'd often get snowed in or engulfed in peasouper fogs.
Wow, the amount of comments saying New Addington is a rough dangerous place, I lived in Northdowns cresent from 77 to 84 and didnt see any trouble at all! I enjoyed school, made lots of friends and frequently ventured around the parks and woods as there were open greens everywhere. I was part of the swimming team, went to scouts and loved the toy shop at the parade. Many happy memories! Infact I moved to Gloucestershire in 85 to a tiny village that had a crime record through the roof and the highest heroine use in the UK. ill always love New Addington, great place :)
Ah we were posh at Burnt Ash (David Bowie's junior school) as we went to Southlands Lido no less for our swimming when all the other schools had to go to the grim Downham baths we went to an outdoor lido for our thrashing about in the water hehe
I grew up in New Addington. Fieldway was dodgy at night then. You did get a shot of where I used to live. No buses to West Wickham then, we did have express buses to Croydon, the C1-C5. You paid into a Johnson Box and no ticket. Many mornings with packed Daimler DMS buses the kids would get chucked out when the bus ground to a halt ascending Gravel Hil. We had to walk up to the top of the hill and the bus would crawl up and we got back on. We had Routemasters on the 130/130B and I know most of the conductors on first name terms. Fun times!
The Croydon Tram system has gone full circle. Croydon to Wimbledon uses the old SR railway trackbed, which was used by the Surrey Iron Railway ,a Very old "Tramway" in the early years of the Nineteenth century. What goes around........ etc !
@@JagoHazzard The Surrey Iron Railway wemt all the way down to Merstham in Surrey. There is still evidence of it to be seen, but the construction of the M23/M25 motorways and the realignment of the A23 destroyed much. Weighbridge Cottage, Merstham, now a private residential house, is thought to be the second oldest surviving railway building in the world.
I discovered New Addington some years ago when taking the tram all the way to end to see what was there. On the same branch the woods at Coombe Lane stop are an absolute delight to walk in on a quiet summer afternoon. New Addington itself frankly doesn't deserve its reputation. It's a charming place at the end of the line with lovely green spaces - the Addington Vale is wonderful to see and within easy walking distance of the tram stop.
I love the way you sneak social history discussion and critical analysis of post-war town planning into a video supposedly about trams! Nicely done - more of the same please.
I used to work down the road from there at the Selsdon park hotel.... now im back in Christchurch, New Zealand and work in the suburb of Addington here😲, I rode the trams many times and have wonderful memories! Great videos👍
Takes almost an hour. I take the 64 all the way from Croydon hospital all the way to New Addington when I come out from the Moorfields eye clinic every few months. Due to the drops they put in my eyes to photograph them I can not see much for a couple of hours. I can find my way to the bus stop but often have to ask somebody to tell me when the 64 arrives. By the time the bus arrives at New Addington my vision is improving and I get lunch from the fish and chip shop and eat it on one of the seats nearby. Strange that they would have considered a tramway in 1950, just two years before the last London trams were withdrawn but I believe a short section was actually built in 1951 to serve the Festival of Britain.
I ended up in New Addington when I took a bus that I thought was headed into Croydon town centre - passed the nearest stop without even recognising where I was - so stayed on for the ride thinking all the time that I wouldn't want to live out here without a car. When New Addington tram stop hoved into view, I was never so relieved.
Those pre-war semi-detached houses are very common in North East London going into Essex. We used to play a game whilst walking up the road in which I grew up. "Spot the bombed house". All the houses have the same roof and window designs, except the ones which were hit by bombs. After the war, they tried more or less, to rebuild the bombed out houses is a similar style but used cheaper materials and the overall design features and window patterns don't match. Going back there today, it's surprising just how few of the owners have changed the original Window pattern designs. Many, despite having added double glazing, have nevertheless mimicked or recreated the original pattern.
As someone who has literally never heard of New Addington, when you showed the street views I was amazed by the place, such a calm and beautiful place to live in. Hadn't you mentioned the social problems and stigma associated with the town, I'd get the most positive view of it.
It's an area that ought to be a lot better than it is. The idea of having a garden village on the outskirts of Croydon with lots of green space running through it was a good one. The problem was that inadequate transport links, inadequate community facilities and employment opportunities, and it being a socioeconomic monolith of social housing for low-income families meant that it never fulfilled those possibilities. If you look at the Indices of Deprivation (dclgapps.communities.gov.uk/imd/iod_index.html), it scores very well for living environment, and surprisingly well for crime - surprising for me because growing up nearby, the line was always that if your car got stolen you would just go round and round New Addington until you found it, and mostly that turned out true - but for income, employment, health and education it does really poorly. Perhaps no worse than other council estates, but where New Addington stands out is the sheer size and scale of it - a population of over 20,000.
We moved to this area in 2017, having known and been wary of its reputation for some years. We would never have considered it were it not for the tram, whose impact on social mobility cannot be overstated. Our neighbourhood is great, all privately owned, fantastic neighbours, families everywhere. We overlook a wide green and it is like being in the countryside. We can drive out into the country in 10 minutes, and we both commute to Central London which can be done in under an hour if you time it right. We've rarely seen any trouble, certainly no more than any other part of London we've lived in. The only thing that might force us to move is a lack of secondary schools in the immediate area - you'd need to apply further afield, but there are good schools only a tram or bus ride away. In all it's really not bad. As others here have said it's the ineptitude of the now bankrupt Croydon Council that will harm the whole borough more than any other factor.
I remember being taken to New Addington swimming baths 50 odd years ago (we lived in nearby West Wickham). Back then the place had a bit of a reputation and seeing it for the first time was quite daunting, as it was so different to our own very tame version of suburbia. The baths were great, though - clean, new and airy - very different from the Victorian baths at Beckenham that we were used to. I'm glad New Addington is getting some investment again.
During the construction of Tramlink I was lucky enough to be invited to tour the works in progress. When at New Addington, those on the tour were told that the town's original name was the New Croydon Sanitary Housing Estate.
Jago Hazzard, I lived in London the past three years and when I had to leave I did it with tears on my eyes, thanks to your videos I feel a little bit connected to the city I really loved! Thank you!
Remember how shocked my Mum was when she discovered my first girlfriend lived in New Addington. We lived in a "respectable" part of Croydon. It was a pig getting to her place on public transport though. Only one bus route (130) or a cab if you were flush.
If anyone is thinking of taking a tram to New Addington to see the countryside, then don't fail to change at the New Addington tram terminus onto the half hourly 464 bus. This was introduced at the same time as the tram, mainly to link it with Biggin Hill (via the narrow and scenic Salt Box Hill), but then continues out into the countryside again to Terminate in the Surrey Village of Tatsfield, where there is a quite pleasant pub. Quite a remarkable route for a TfL service.
At 0:33 is St. Mary the Blessed Virgin church. It’s so old (there’s records of a church on this site since 1080 AD) it’s listed in the Domesday Book. We held a funeral service in Aug. 2019 there for my best friend’s gran who lived up the hill from the church. She had lived in nearby Shirley since the mid 1950s. She was a legend. If you’re ever in the area please visit. It’s beautiful inside and full of history. You don’t have to be a churchgoer to appreciate its value.
Always a delight when another Jago video drops. This is no exception, must say your commentary style of whit with a hint of sarcasm works wonderfully well and is refreshingly different to media clones. Please keep these coming, they are one of few positive things to come out of this current situation. Thank you.
I love these things: garden villages reveal so much about the planners and the adaptations by residents say much for who they are and what the character of a place is. Thank you for taking the time to explain that and for, once again, bringing that gentle scouring of issues that allow us viewers to get a proper look at places we've never seen before.
40s, 50s and 60s low cost public building tend to look the same, no matter where you go but the East Germans did have a touch of 'style' you don't see elsewhere.
@@simonf8902 I presume it's Queen Elizabeth the 2nd , She is the only queen that can shoot you to death , as she is still born in the middle ages ,so it's no surprise .Old habits dies hard
I'm neither British nor do I live in London but I love the city and your videos are like a breath of fresh air now that we can't travel and discover more of London. Keep up the good work! Greetings from Greece!
I went to John Ruskin College in 2004 - 2006 so used to get off the tram at Gravel Hill. I remember going to New Addington to a friend's house and remember the place feeling like it was the end of the earth! Definitely felt that isolation. So surprised to learn that the tram only opened up in 2000.
I love your channel. It lets me see aspacts of current and past London and surrounding area that I wouldn't see otherwise. You unintentionally have become a news source to the world about London life and transportation in areas surrounding train stations. Thank you for the work.
Loved the mix of tram history and history of the neighbourhood. The architectural style of the homes, and high rise apartment(?) buildings remind me of similar structures found in various cities in Northern Utah.
I first went through New Addington in 1980 when there was a Green Line route from Crawley to Gravesend that did a "double run" from the site where Addington Village is now, up to Salcot Crescent, near the parade of shops and the New Addington tram terminus is now situated, then all the way back again!! It only lasted a couple of years. The trams hadn't even been thought of, let alone considered at that time!! It seemed strange at first to visit the place again affer all the tram infrastructure had been completed, quite a transformation, but it's been like that for 24 years now!
i love your dry wit. i also enjoy the peripheral historical, social and architectural stuff. im not actually a transport nerd, but im getting there by following you for the other reasons!
Great video and good info. I always saw the name "New Addington" on trams and buses when I was in Croydon (many years ago) but I never visited that area neither knew what the area was about.
My flat features in this video, right by the offending "Wednesday" signage. Funny enough, the bin men now come at random times of day and week. New Addington, suffers from the perceptions of bigots from more affluent parts of Croydon. Sometimes described as a white ghetto, populated by displaced East Ender's after the second world war, the people of the area held a survivor persona which added to the community feel. These people were and still are tough, not afraid to man up to the job if needed. No snowflakes here, other than those that fall from the sky. The winters used to be much harsher than recently, but when it does, this place comes alive. On the hills around the place I have seen Snowboarding and Husky sleds, as well as quad bikes, making best use of the wide open spaces which are plentiful. New Addington is flanked by woodland on either side but one side contains more ancient trees and the other more chalk down land, so the diversity of flora and fauna is immense. The views of London from the hill on top of where we reside are spectacular. From my top floor flat, I can see three golf courses, the woodland nature reserve at Selsdon and the entire London skyline, the Tram stop is a stones throw and 20mins to East Croydon stn. All this for a rent of well under £150 pw ! Ssshh! sometimes the reputation may serve us well. We border the counties of Kent and Surrey and are well positioned for trips to London and the South Coast. My only grumble is the Island feel, I prefer the diversity and vibrancy of East London, especially from the rivers and canals, from which we are far from any here. But if you like fresh air and space, you could do much worse than live here. Croydon Council it would now appear has not just let this area down, but Croydon as a whole. With the bankruptcy will come cuts to services and the hard work to uplift will now be undone. Never underestimate the power of a few people to mess it up for the many, but one thing is for sure the people of New Addington will survive whatever comes there way.
Well said, I'm in Biggin Hill and I've heard it all about New Addington but I've never had any trouble there and it's great having Lidl just up the road
First time I went to new addington I nearly got robbed. My father used to work on the gas mains. When he was working in new addington they chavs tried to break in to his van. He had to threaten to remove their heads with a clay graft. Addington is a generally unpleasant place in my experience.
I only no of new Addington through talk of tramways , a good example of how rail links improve social living , yes a balance of green spaces , housing , trees hedges ,shops , road rail links all the planning department should have stuck to , I really do enjoy these short urban studies jago can't wait for more !!
i think its good that you expanded on the train content to give some context,london is a very interesting place and its nice to get to see and hear about its everyday reality,especially for those of us out here in the antipodes..thumbs up and keep up the excellent content.thanks.
Thank you. I grew up not too far away (Bromley) and went to school closer still (Hayes). In the 70s it was notorious for being, er, rough, but when I went there for the first time (early 2000s) it didn't look any worse than other suburban 'new towns' that I'd visited. It's certainly in stark contrast from nearby West Wickham / Coney Hall, which are the kind of places where my schoolfriends lived, who told me it was a rough place.
I learned at school that the town of New Addington started with the first structure being the pub and the houses followed on from there. We used to go to New Addington swimming baths on our bikes because the future West Wickham baths was just a vacant plot of land with a sweet shop on the corner.
Given the place’s reputation I’ve never fancied venturing to that end of the tram line. This has inspired me to give it a look, at some unspecified point in the future!
Interesting video. I was a police officer based in a “police house” in 1970 in New Addington. What a difference then and to your video today. Yes a very rough area but as I had transferred from the East End of London it was almost home from home, and made for interesting policing. Thank you for creating the nostalgia.
@@TransportBaz Yes indeed. The name rings a bell but I can’t put a face to him, but some of my relief were Roger Lashmar (whom I still keep in tough with at Xmas etc) and John V (his surname escapes me). I had transferred from G division in order to get married and consequently transferred back to uniform and posted to ZA, and lived in the valley in Biggin Hill and after a year I was re-accepted into the C.I.D and then transferred to Croydon (ZD), my buddy there was Clive (Peter) Farr under a DI called Bill Hucklesby (who I see died fairly recently) and a DCI called Mike Hyams, who led the robbery squad nicknamed the Spend a Penny Robbery when a Securicor van was done in Purley Way when all three crew stopped to have a pee. Where were you?
@@peterburgess980 I knew John as he was my local Beat Bobby, and mum was Neighbourhood Watch. I was still in single digits, and growing up on Fieldway. Now I'm just a push of a button away from officers, trying to not transmit what I think of some calls.....
@@peterburgess980 Well, push of a PTT switch anyway. I'm that vital step between the call coming in, and the call you receive. One of my most-used phrases is "That's not an I-Grade!"
Have fond memories of the Royal School of Church music who had their headquarters at Addington Palace. And yes when we went to the local swimming pool one boy was threatened by an older teenager.
Great vids very witty. I sometimes use the tram between Croydon and Harrington Road and have always thought what if I took the tram to New Addington, now I know what awaits. Cheers
Good heavens! New Addington, I lived there in the late 60's early 70's (Redstart Close and went to Rowdown and Fairchilds schools)! Looks a bit drab now, but brought back memories though. Thanks.
Now there's a nice idea for a video - 'A Day Out in the Country from London'. Back in the day, LT was quite good at producing posters to encourage leisure travel by bus and tube to enjoy some of the verdant bosky idylls around London. Epping Forest, Ongar, Ruislip, Perivale, Kew Gardens, Richmond, Chesham, Denham, Waltham Cross, Box Hill come to mind. How about a look at the posters on Google, and maybe even try one or two of the suggestions to cheer us all up when Spring arrives?
Nice big houses, a good proportion of which have large gardens / driveways , ideal for the Banger Racing Boys to do the weeknight do ups prior to off to Arlington Raceway in Sussex
On a side-note, there are about 4 million council properties in the UK. £800 to paint a single two-storey building, so that comes to around £3.5 billion. Is that not a job that the UK government could manage to brighten up cities considerably and reduce the mud-brown environment? Government spending last year was £850 billion. Do people want to keep living in somewhere like 5:06 forever?
I live in New Addington. The nickname is Little Siberia. When it snows, it snows; and hangs around. Honestly I grew up in Kentish Town and there's more bother there than here. The place is still a PITA to get to and from central London. Bus services all go around the Fieldway estate and take an age. The tram is good, but you are stuck with having to funnel through to East Croydon first to get anywhere. There is no direct bus to West Wickham. One would be handy.
New Addington always had facilities including a swimming pool and a library. It also has an industrial area off the King Henry's Drive to the south-east. You're right that it doesn't have much other work except for retail and then only small shops. It was always largely a commuter village and had plenty of buses coming in and out and has always been very car-dependent but nearly everyone goes in and out by one road (the only other being the country lane leading to Biggin Hill airport). Weird place. The school has a bad reputation and kids who want better apply to schools outside, including in West Wickham.
lived there in the early 2000 for couple of years. Very quiet eerie feeling in the evening. Lots of single moms, young people in hoodies and generally cold energy there
mate...New Addington...A sprawl of samey buildings and common folk and immigrants and chavs, and gypsy kids...Art, theatre, literature, innovation, refinement, culture doesn't tend to make it's way to New Addington and the locals aren't interested anyway in anything of refinement (which does not mean posh)...I grew up in East London, lived in West London and North London and Croydon...New Addington....that lot will only get it if they move away for a good while then see if they'd like to move back to such a featureless hole
Thank you for a balanced account. It takes me back to my Croydon childhood. The isolation of New Addington may not have been entirely deliberate, but Addington village was, even in the '30s, both prosperous and influential, and the villagers would have wanted absolutely no transport links with the new estate. So what New Addington got was the 130 bus route; the only way in and the only way out. In the 1960s lots of Croydon residents would let 130s go by if there was another bus in the offing. Easy to ignore, you say. Spot on for the fellows (yes, and they were all men), who ran Croydon in those days. May I suggest a video on the life and times of Sir James Marshall (following some revealing research)?
not just the people running Croydon, I'm afraid. It's easy to ignore what's out of sight. Not just in England, either, France is notorious for building their HLMs (habitations à loyer modéré, or social housing, mostly synonymous with the same brutalist architecture as you can find in many social housing flats) somewhere over a hill, only connected with a slow and infrequent bus line, from the town centre. They are in effect dumps for all the undesirables for the city.
@@SBCBears because you need money for that. You can polish a turd, it stays a turd. You can clean your shack, it will stay a shack. And the best way to get money, is to go to work. But if you can't afford to go to work, you're quite literally stuck. You can't afford an apartment closer to schools, work or even a station? You'll have to to with social housing somewhere out of sight. You can't afford a car? You'll have to rely on a bus that runs once an hour. You're late because the bus didn't show up? You're fired and can start all over. Why yes, you should take initiative yourself, too, but it's not as if you can choose the cards you're dealt with, and some have really bad cards.
@@barvdw I could not agree more! Putting marginalised people up in high-rises is a way of putting them out of sight. Here in Toronto, the suburban high-rises are not nice places. Crime, drugs and prostitution plagues them and the lack of transit is one of the major reasons why that is. The corner of Jane st and Finch avenue in the northwestern suburbs of Toronto is not a good area, but a light rail line is being built to serve it.
@@barvdw The video mentioned a lack of food stores within the large development. It seems a ripe commercial opportunity for a small Aldi, for example. Also mentioned were "social problems" and "gangs". I wonder if those issues impeded investment in the community. No money would be required from the community for a chain store or independent grocer to set up shop there. Rich or poor, people eat.
I remember visiting NA many years ago with my wife to visit an aunt of hers. I think we got a bus from Croydon, having travelled there from N London by tube & rail. But it was a long time ago ....! 😎
I am guessing here, but I would bet that for that tram driver, seeing you filming and then him assuming you are some sort of "tram spotter" was probably the most interesting thing that has happened to him while driving that tram. Also, you were actually on a train (or tram!)!!!
I love your videos in general, but this one here was especialy cool. A locals insights into his town is something you can never find in any travel guide and is a absurdly underrepresented kind of content. Keep it up!
Lived there in the 1960s as a schoolboy and in my first year at work. For me its biggest problem wasn't its people but its remoteness. It took me over an hour to get to my (private, scholarship boy) school in West Norwood and about the same to get to my first job in the Cabinet Office in Downing Street (the back entrance!). Mum had similar problems getting to her work as a laundry shop manageress. Eventually we managed a swap for a flat in Forest Hill and later to another right next to Forest Hill station. I still remember the monotony of that bus trip out through Addiscombe, up and over Gravel Hill, through the village down in the valley and then up the long, endless climb to the sprawling estate. We were in the green part, overlooking a large area of parkland and playing fields, but even so the outlook from our second floor flat was bleak and uninspiring even in Summer...with regard to its location, might the planned but never built Surrey Heights Light Railway have had something to do with its chosen location?
Us Bromley scooterboys often went to New Addington on our Vespa's to talk trash with the Croydon and West Wickham lot and give some verbals to the RD125 lot who buzzed us on occasion hehe happy days :D
Lewisham Scout District has a fairly large campsite not too far from New Addington, however they sit on two separate hills. If you were a Leader or, like me, an Explorer Scout helping run a weekend camp and arriving via the tram, it was often best to get someone to pick you up from the town. The path down to the campsite entrance could most politely referred to as "risky" when going uphill in broad daylight, as for the journey downhill at dusk... The thought of descending that steep and stony incline with a heavy backpack was worrying to say the least.
Great video Jago. Journalists are of another breed, with which their genetic code doesn’t allow to live in neighborhoods they so easily can portray as ghettos. Certainly when there’s community ground work being done, when inhabitants participate and care for their direct surroundings and environment, it won’t be journalists who see such, those eyes are only interested in the negative side of stories, and mostly where neighborhoods are involved.
There seems to have been a Stranglers tribute band called (appropriately) the Manglers whose rhythm section featured the Addington brothers: ua-cam.com/video/260kDEcqSdg/v-deo.html
Oh Jago,your wit and wisdom strikes again! For a bit of commentary,many places in the US,had streetcar,and interurban lines built into them,long before the people got there! The original New York and Harlem,was a horse car line,from City Hall to( where else),Harlem{named after Haarlem, in the Netherlands},and that was in the 1830's,so you can see the amount of growth since then! Any number of other places,could treated the same way,as transportation is vital to growth,and morale,but that does not enter into political equations,but the reality bites anyway! They never learn,do they!! Thanks again for your attention!! 🚋🚋🚋🚋🚋🚊🚊🚊🚊🚊🚞🚞🚞🚞🚞🚲🚲🚲🚲🚲🛴🛴🛴🛴🛴🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚈🚈🚈🚈
I am always curious to learn about everything around the public transport net of cities! Makes your videos interesting and stand out from many others ❤👍🏻
The "ghetto" as you put it was where the 314 bus used to terminate or there abouts. A nasty little row of shops and some high rises. In the good ol days as ny father used to say, he used to use the high-rise buildings for his pirate radio station "skyline". This was a few years before i was born however. But those flats had a perfect line of sight into the city. From the south
I want to live in Addington... My brains must be Addled...heheh Thank you, thank you. I'm here all week! Try the veal and don't forget to tip (not trip) the waitress!
The old 130 bus service was pretty good before the tram came along. I remember getting the bus with my grandparents and if the bus coming looked full we would just wait 10 minutes for the next one. You also had the express bus with the yellow sign which only stopped at a few designated stops.
This is the most surreal journey you'll ever take on the tram. One moment you're in East Croydon, then suddenly it pivots right, and you're in the countryside....it has to be experienced
thanks. I will take this route 1 day. If I remember !
You can get buses from Croydon to Banstead which I always loved to get.
Turns right at Sandilands onto the trackbed of the Woodside to Sanderstead railway line, in a cutting that has always been leafy. Suburban South Croydon (very respectable) goes on above your head.
Reminds me of how a friend described Addo. ‘It’s Narnia for chavs’.
Reminds me of the Euskotren from San Sebastian/Donostia Amara station to Bilbao - the train looks like a underground carriage but its winding through forests and sheep pasture. There's one section where its literally surrounded by trees only 2 meters or so from the trackbed.
Having grown up in New Addington I am torn, as a kid the open green space was brilliant. Heading off to the woods with your mates, bike rides, a free air show once a year. Having moved away as an adult I now see the lack of investment and social deprivation but as you noted, I would still vociferously defend it from its detractors.
Great video 👍
This only shows how our needs change with time... Also, you must be aware that today we are yearning for open green spaces, we are dreaming about the bike trip with friends into woods, and are ready to travel for miles in order to pay entrance fee for air show, so...
Bro I’m moving soon but I have lived here 13 years
I’m going to miss it
I always meet my girlfriend here at the moment
Going to be harder when I move
As a child/teenager growing up in New Addington in the 1960s/70s, we really were out in the sticks. The nearest cinemas were in Croydon and the only way to get home was by bus. Unfortunately the buses stopped quite early so you had a choice of walking home or missing the end of the film. No cab would go to New Addington in those days and night buses only went into London. West Wickham might technically be the nearest rail station but there were no direct buses there. I remember Fieldway being built and the Council did what they often do and moved all the problem families there into small properties with tiny gardens which is what led to the issues in the early years. The older parts of the estate sort of got tarred with the same brush. There were three pubs and there's always been a community centre, which I believe has been recently rebuilt. We also had a library and swimming pool so not completely bereft. The other issue was weather; being in an exposed spot we'd often get snowed in or engulfed in peasouper fogs.
I remember everything youve said, well put :)
Wow, the amount of comments saying New Addington is a rough dangerous place, I lived in Northdowns cresent from 77 to 84 and didnt see any trouble at all! I enjoyed school, made lots of friends and frequently ventured around the parks and woods as there were open greens everywhere. I was part of the swimming team, went to scouts and loved the toy shop at the parade. Many happy memories! Infact I moved to Gloucestershire in 85 to a tiny village that had a crime record through the roof and the highest heroine use in the UK. ill always love New Addington, great place :)
Can remember going to New Addington for swimming lesson when I was younger - there I have managed to say something positive about the place.
It's not Croyden.
That's another positive!
A swimming lesson or swimming lessons?
@@patrice58 Indeed. 😉
Did you come away with your swim suit then ?
Ah we were posh at Burnt Ash (David Bowie's junior school) as we went to Southlands Lido no less for our swimming when all the other schools had to go to the grim Downham baths we went to an outdoor lido for our thrashing about in the water hehe
I grew up in New Addington. Fieldway was dodgy at night then. You did get a shot of where I used to live. No buses to West Wickham then, we did have express buses to Croydon, the C1-C5. You paid into a Johnson Box and no ticket. Many mornings with packed Daimler DMS buses the kids would get chucked out when the bus ground to a halt ascending Gravel Hil. We had to walk up to the top of the hill and the bus would crawl up and we got back on. We had Routemasters on the 130/130B and I know most of the conductors on first name terms. Fun times!
The Croydon Tram system has gone full circle. Croydon to Wimbledon uses the old SR railway trackbed, which was used by the Surrey Iron Railway ,a Very old "Tramway" in the early years of the Nineteenth century. What goes around........ etc !
I do plan to make a video on that old tramway...
@@JagoHazzard The Surrey Iron Railway wemt all the way down to Merstham in Surrey. There is still evidence of it to be seen, but the construction of the M23/M25 motorways and the realignment of the A23 destroyed much. Weighbridge Cottage, Merstham, now a private residential house, is thought to be the second oldest surviving railway building in the world.
@@JagoHazzard Then there's the Croydon Canal.
@@JagoHazzard I would love to see a video of Mitcham (Not anymore a) Junction.
@@JagoHazzard Thanks.
I discovered New Addington some years ago when taking the tram all the way to end to see what was there. On the same branch the woods at Coombe Lane stop are an absolute delight to walk in on a quiet summer afternoon.
New Addington itself frankly doesn't deserve its reputation. It's a charming place at the end of the line with lovely green spaces - the Addington Vale is wonderful to see and within easy walking distance of the tram stop.
New Addington described as 'charming' well i never did. 🤣
I love the way you sneak social history discussion and critical analysis of post-war town planning into a video supposedly about trams! Nicely done - more of the same please.
I live in New Addington. You were right about how we're quick to leap to defending the area lol
As I was, living in Dagenham for years. The two places are similar in several ways, other people's snobbery against them being just one
Yeah I've been to Dagenham a few times and it felt just fine. Maybe we're just numb to whatever others dislike about the two areas...
I suddenly have an image of people in Addington standing outside their town with spear and shield
literally defending the town
@@-Joethefish- Big Louis Hawks the one of the leaders wasnt he?!? Lol
No idea mate, I was in Asia during the riots.
I used to work down the road from there at the Selsdon park hotel.... now im back in Christchurch, New Zealand and work in the suburb of Addington here😲, I rode the trams many times and have wonderful memories!
Great videos👍
There's a bus service from Thornton heath Pond to New Addington which is thoroughly enjoyable. One cannot knock the North Downs.
Takes almost an hour. I take the 64 all the way from Croydon hospital all the way to New Addington when I come out from the Moorfields eye clinic every few months. Due to the drops they put in my eyes to photograph them I can not see much for a couple of hours. I can find my way to the bus stop but often have to ask somebody to tell me when the 64 arrives. By the time the bus arrives at New Addington my vision is improving and I get lunch from the fish and chip shop and eat it on one of the seats nearby.
Strange that they would have considered a tramway in 1950, just two years before the last London trams were withdrawn but I believe a short section was actually built in 1951 to serve the Festival of Britain.
I ended up in New Addington when I took a bus that I thought was headed into Croydon town centre - passed the nearest stop without even recognising where I was - so stayed on for the ride thinking all the time that I wouldn't want to live out here without a car. When New Addington tram stop hoved into view, I was never so relieved.
Those pre-war semi-detached houses are very common in North East London going into Essex. We used to play a game whilst walking up the road in which I grew up. "Spot the bombed house". All the houses have the same roof and window designs, except the ones which were hit by bombs. After the war, they tried more or less, to rebuild the bombed out houses is a similar style but used cheaper materials and the overall design features and window patterns don't match. Going back there today, it's surprising just how few of the owners have changed the original Window pattern designs. Many, despite having added double glazing, have nevertheless mimicked or recreated the original pattern.
As someone who has literally never heard of New Addington, when you showed the street views I was amazed by the place, such a calm and beautiful place to live in. Hadn't you mentioned the social problems and stigma associated with the town, I'd get the most positive view of it.
It's an area that ought to be a lot better than it is. The idea of having a garden village on the outskirts of Croydon with lots of green space running through it was a good one. The problem was that inadequate transport links, inadequate community facilities and employment opportunities, and it being a socioeconomic monolith of social housing for low-income families meant that it never fulfilled those possibilities. If you look at the Indices of Deprivation (dclgapps.communities.gov.uk/imd/iod_index.html), it scores very well for living environment, and surprisingly well for crime - surprising for me because growing up nearby, the line was always that if your car got stolen you would just go round and round New Addington until you found it, and mostly that turned out true - but for income, employment, health and education it does really poorly. Perhaps no worse than other council estates, but where New Addington stands out is the sheer size and scale of it - a population of over 20,000.
On first looks at the start of the clip, to me it spoke of a State Housing area, with typical period urban social housing design principles in use.
Yea, drive through on a grey winter day. It’s bleak
We moved to this area in 2017, having known and been wary of its reputation for some years. We would never have considered it were it not for the tram, whose impact on social mobility cannot be overstated. Our neighbourhood is great, all privately owned, fantastic neighbours, families everywhere. We overlook a wide green and it is like being in the countryside. We can drive out into the country in 10 minutes, and we both commute to Central London which can be done in under an hour if you time it right. We've rarely seen any trouble, certainly no more than any other part of London we've lived in. The only thing that might force us to move is a lack of secondary schools in the immediate area - you'd need to apply further afield, but there are good schools only a tram or bus ride away.
In all it's really not bad. As others here have said it's the ineptitude of the now bankrupt Croydon Council that will harm the whole borough more than any other factor.
You've brought us so much sunshine through this shitty time! Thank you Jago.
I remember being taken to New Addington swimming baths 50 odd years ago (we lived in nearby West Wickham). Back then the place had a bit of a reputation and seeing it for the first time was quite daunting, as it was so different to our own very tame version of suburbia. The baths were great, though - clean, new and airy - very different from the Victorian baths at Beckenham that we were used to. I'm glad New Addington is getting some investment again.
During the construction of Tramlink I was lucky enough to be invited to tour the works in progress. When at New Addington, those on the tour were told that the town's original name was the New Croydon Sanitary Housing Estate.
A delightful mix of humour and pedantry! Rather good fun. Keep it up. Thank you.
".... And a leisure centre that I forgot to film" That cracked me up for some unknown reason.
Jago Hazzard, I lived in London the past three years and when I had to leave I did it with tears on my eyes, thanks to your videos I feel a little bit connected to the city I really loved!
Thank you!
You’re very welcome!
Looks like a nice quiet place to live in. Thanks for creating a video!
Remember how shocked my Mum was when she discovered my first girlfriend lived in New Addington. We lived in a "respectable" part of Croydon. It was a pig getting to her place on public transport though. Only one bus route (130) or a cab if you were flush.
If anyone is thinking of taking a tram to New Addington to see the countryside, then don't fail to change at the New Addington tram terminus onto the half hourly 464 bus. This was introduced at the same time as the tram, mainly to link it with Biggin Hill (via the narrow and scenic Salt Box Hill), but then continues out into the countryside again to Terminate in the Surrey Village of Tatsfield, where there is a quite pleasant pub. Quite a remarkable route for a TfL service.
At 0:33 is St. Mary the Blessed Virgin church. It’s so old (there’s records of a church on this site since 1080 AD) it’s listed in the Domesday Book.
We held a funeral service in Aug. 2019 there for my best friend’s gran who lived up the hill from the church. She had lived in nearby Shirley since the mid 1950s. She was a legend.
If you’re ever in the area please visit. It’s beautiful inside and full of history. You don’t have to be a churchgoer to appreciate its value.
I like the journey to new addington, the roller coaster ride down the addington hills en route is quite exhilarating
Always a delight when another Jago video drops. This is no exception, must say your commentary style of whit with a hint of sarcasm works wonderfully well and is refreshingly different to media clones. Please keep these coming, they are one of few positive things to come out of this current situation. Thank you.
You’re very welcome! I’d like to explore some of the other garden villages when thing get back to normal.
@@JagoHazzard Just make sure they're railway-themed, Mr. Hazzard.
I love these things: garden villages reveal so much about the planners and the adaptations by residents say much for who they are and what the character of a place is. Thank you for taking the time to explain that and for, once again, bringing that gentle scouring of issues that allow us viewers to get a proper look at places we've never seen before.
New Addington, what happens when you plan a little bit to much and a little bit not enough.
It looks like East Germany. Awful.
@Kenneth Aitchison ok. Sorry.
40s, 50s and 60s low cost public building tend to look the same, no matter where you go but the East Germans did have a touch of 'style' you don't see elsewhere.
@Kenneth Aitchison which Queen is that ?
@@simonf8902 I presume it's Queen Elizabeth the 2nd , She is the only queen that can shoot you to death , as she is still born in the middle ages ,so it's no surprise .Old habits dies hard
Love the statue at 4:30 - Addington Bear, by any chance?
We should make Jago sit in the naughty chair for missing this gem! Thanks.
I'm neither British nor do I live in London but I love the city and your videos are like a breath of fresh air now that we can't travel and discover more of London. Keep up the good work! Greetings from Greece!
Thanks!
I went to John Ruskin College in 2004 - 2006 so used to get off the tram at Gravel Hill. I remember going to New Addington to a friend's house and remember the place feeling like it was the end of the earth! Definitely felt that isolation. So surprised to learn that the tram only opened up in 2000.
I love your channel. It lets me see aspacts of current and past London and surrounding area that I wouldn't see otherwise. You unintentionally have become a news source to the world about London life and transportation in areas surrounding train stations. Thank you for the work.
You’re most welcome!
Loved the mix of tram history and history of the neighbourhood. The architectural style of the homes, and high rise apartment(?) buildings remind me of similar structures found in various cities in Northern Utah.
"Come to New Addington - we've got a new Lidl". Did that double the house prices?!
I was draged up just around the corner from New Addington.
It was cool to see it in your video!
I first went through New Addington in 1980 when there was a Green Line route from Crawley to Gravesend that did a "double run" from the site where Addington Village is now, up to Salcot Crescent, near the parade of shops and the New Addington tram terminus is now situated, then all the way back again!! It only lasted a couple of years. The trams hadn't even been thought of, let alone considered at that time!! It seemed strange at first to visit the place again affer all the tram infrastructure had been completed, quite a transformation, but it's been like that for 24 years now!
I know lots of people there. It's quite nice and actually snows there compared to central Croydon
Good on that polite looking bear for helping the residents out.
Thanks for trekking to Addington. Unlike any part of London I ever saw!
Another electrifying video...kept me in high-strung suspense...many points made along the way...you're on track for 100K subscribers now!
And at the other Addington (not Fieldway) we have that rare concept of an integrated transport interchange.
My home town 😍 what I do find interesting is that Fieldway tram stop is actually nearer to Headley driver than Fieldway 😂
Cheers mate,another fun tale... Wow closing in on 100,000 subs quicker than I thought!!
i love your dry wit. i also enjoy the peripheral historical, social and architectural stuff. im not actually a transport nerd, but im getting there by following you for the other reasons!
i spent half my childhood in New Addington and have many family still there.
Thanks so much for this. Remember when people down my way in Croydon said trams were bad but now a lot people use it.
Great video and good info. I always saw the name "New Addington" on trams and buses when I was in Croydon (many years ago) but I never visited that area neither knew what the area was about.
My flat features in this video, right by the offending "Wednesday" signage. Funny enough, the bin men now come at random times of day and week. New Addington, suffers from the perceptions of bigots from more affluent parts of Croydon. Sometimes described as a white ghetto, populated by displaced East Ender's after the second world war, the people of the area held a survivor persona which added to the community feel. These people were and still are tough, not afraid to man up to the job if needed. No snowflakes here, other than those that fall from the sky. The winters used to be much harsher than recently, but when it does, this place comes alive. On the hills around the place I have seen Snowboarding and Husky sleds, as well as quad bikes, making best use of the wide open spaces which are plentiful. New Addington is flanked by woodland on either side but one side contains more ancient trees and the other more chalk down land, so the diversity of flora and fauna is immense. The views of London from the hill on top of where we reside are spectacular. From my top floor flat, I can see three golf courses, the woodland nature reserve at Selsdon and the entire London skyline, the Tram stop is a stones throw and 20mins to East Croydon stn. All this for a rent of well under £150 pw ! Ssshh! sometimes the reputation may serve us well. We border the counties of Kent and Surrey and are well positioned for trips to London and the South Coast. My only grumble is the Island feel, I prefer the diversity and vibrancy of East London, especially from the rivers and canals, from which we are far from any here. But if you like fresh air and space, you could do much worse than live here. Croydon Council it would now appear has not just let this area down, but Croydon as a whole. With the bankruptcy will come cuts to services and the hard work to uplift will now be undone. Never underestimate the power of a few people to mess it up for the many, but one thing is for sure the people of New Addington will survive whatever comes there way.
Well said, I'm in Biggin Hill and I've heard it all about New Addington but I've never had any trouble there and it's great having Lidl just up the road
Yes there's always detractors, no matter what the area.
First time I went to new addington I nearly got robbed. My father used to work on the gas mains. When he was working in new addington they chavs tried to break in to his van. He had to threaten to remove their heads with a clay graft. Addington is a generally unpleasant place in my experience.
@@theghostofsabertache9049 A visit to Croydon will soon give you a perspective on that, believe me.
Thanks Vicky, well said.
I only no of new Addington through talk of tramways , a good example of how rail links improve social living , yes a balance of green spaces , housing , trees hedges ,shops , road rail links all the planning department should have stuck to , I really do enjoy these short urban studies jago can't wait for more !!
i think its good that you expanded on the train content to give some context,london is a very interesting place and its nice to get to see and hear about its everyday reality,especially for those of us out here in the antipodes..thumbs up and keep up the excellent content.thanks.
Thank you.
I grew up not too far away (Bromley) and went to school closer still (Hayes). In the 70s it was notorious for being, er, rough, but when I went there for the first time (early 2000s) it didn't look any worse than other suburban 'new towns' that I'd visited. It's certainly in stark contrast from nearby West Wickham / Coney Hall, which are the kind of places where my schoolfriends lived, who told me it was a rough place.
The “Mad mile” now has a 40mph speed limit too
I learned at school that the town of New Addington started with the first structure being the pub and the houses followed on from there. We used to go to New Addington swimming baths on our bikes because the future West Wickham baths was just a vacant plot of land with a sweet shop on the corner.
Given the place’s reputation I’ve never fancied venturing to that end of the tram line.
This has inspired me to give it a look, at some unspecified point in the future!
Do go. I've discovered it to be a nice place to visit that's very different from central Croydon. The woods on the way are fantastic as well.
Living in Australia, I'm learning a lot of U K geography by watching these videos. Carry on.
Interesting video. I was a police officer based in a “police house” in 1970 in New Addington. What a difference then and to your video today. Yes a very rough area but as I had transferred from the East End of London it was almost home from home, and made for interesting policing. Thank you for creating the nostalgia.
You were at ZA, were you? Were you familiar with John Quiller?
@@TransportBaz Yes indeed. The name rings a bell but I can’t put a face to him, but some of my relief were Roger Lashmar (whom I still keep in tough with at Xmas etc) and John V (his surname escapes me). I had transferred from G division in order to get married and consequently transferred back to uniform and posted to ZA, and lived in the valley in Biggin Hill and after a year I was re-accepted into the C.I.D and then transferred to Croydon (ZD), my buddy there was Clive (Peter) Farr under a DI called Bill Hucklesby (who I see died fairly recently) and a DCI called Mike Hyams, who led the robbery squad nicknamed the Spend a Penny Robbery when a Securicor van was done in Purley Way when all three crew stopped to have a pee. Where were you?
@@peterburgess980 I knew John as he was my local Beat Bobby, and mum was Neighbourhood Watch. I was still in single digits, and growing up on Fieldway.
Now I'm just a push of a button away from officers, trying to not transmit what I think of some calls.....
@@TransportBaz Hi, since replying to you I have remembered his surname, John Verrall. What are you up to now? The “push of a button” intrigues me.
@@peterburgess980 Well, push of a PTT switch anyway. I'm that vital step between the call coming in, and the call you receive.
One of my most-used phrases is "That's not an I-Grade!"
Have fond memories of the Royal School of Church music who had their headquarters at Addington Palace.
And yes when we went to the local swimming pool one boy was threatened by an older teenager.
Great vids very witty. I sometimes use the tram between Croydon and Harrington Road and have always thought what if I took the tram to New Addington, now I know what awaits. Cheers
Good heavens! New Addington, I lived there in the late 60's early 70's (Redstart Close and went to Rowdown and Fairchilds schools)! Looks a bit drab now, but brought back memories though. Thanks.
Now there's a nice idea for a video - 'A Day Out in the Country from London'. Back in the day, LT was quite good at producing posters to encourage leisure travel by bus and tube to enjoy some of the verdant bosky idylls around London. Epping Forest, Ongar, Ruislip, Perivale, Kew Gardens, Richmond, Chesham, Denham, Waltham Cross, Box Hill come to mind. How about a look at the posters on Google, and maybe even try one or two of the suggestions to cheer us all up when Spring arrives?
Bus 464 takes you further into the countryside and it's a bit of a rollercoaster ride too \m/
My only flight in a helecopter was a 10min ride from (old) Addington. Flew over New Addington - it looked better from up there!
Looking forward to the 100,000 subscribers video. I know that will be an even more spectacular video for us to enjoy.
Thanks! I hope it will be, if lockdown allows it...
Nice big houses, a good proportion of which have large gardens / driveways , ideal for the Banger Racing Boys to do the weeknight do ups prior to off to Arlington Raceway in Sussex
Another superb insight into a corner of the world I knew nothing about.
In a sense, this new addington to the video about London transport is about the new addington to the tramway, located in New Addington,
On a side-note, there are about 4 million council properties in the UK. £800 to paint a single two-storey building, so that comes to around £3.5 billion.
Is that not a job that the UK government could manage to brighten up cities considerably and reduce the mud-brown environment? Government spending last year was £850 billion.
Do people want to keep living in somewhere like 5:06 forever?
I live in New Addington. The nickname is Little Siberia. When it snows, it snows; and hangs around. Honestly I grew up in Kentish Town and there's more bother there than here. The place is still a PITA to get to and from central London. Bus services all go around the Fieldway estate and take an age. The tram is good, but you are stuck with having to funnel through to East Croydon first to get anywhere. There is no direct bus to West Wickham. One would be handy.
New Addington always had facilities including a swimming pool and a library. It also has an industrial area off the King Henry's Drive to the south-east. You're right that it doesn't have much other work except for retail and then only small shops. It was always largely a commuter village and had plenty of buses coming in and out and has always been very car-dependent but nearly everyone goes in and out by one road (the only other being the country lane leading to Biggin Hill airport). Weird place. The school has a bad reputation and kids who want better apply to schools outside, including in West Wickham.
The countryside near there is very nice, the London LOOP walk passes quite close to New Adlington as it goes between Hayes and Whyteleafe
lived there in the early 2000 for couple of years. Very quiet eerie feeling in the evening. Lots of single moms, young people in hoodies and generally cold energy there
mate...New Addington...A sprawl of samey buildings and common folk and immigrants and chavs, and gypsy kids...Art, theatre, literature, innovation, refinement, culture doesn't tend to make it's way to New Addington and the locals aren't interested anyway in anything of refinement (which does not mean posh)...I grew up in East London, lived in West London and North London and Croydon...New Addington....that lot will only get it if they move away for a good while then see if they'd like to move back to such a featureless hole
Thank you for a balanced account. It takes me back to my Croydon childhood. The isolation of New Addington may not have been entirely deliberate, but Addington village was, even in the '30s, both prosperous and influential, and the villagers would have wanted absolutely no transport links with the new estate. So what New Addington got was the 130 bus route; the only way in and the only way out. In the 1960s lots of Croydon residents would let 130s go by if there was another bus in the offing. Easy to ignore, you say. Spot on for the fellows (yes, and they were all men), who ran Croydon in those days. May I suggest a video on the life and times of Sir James Marshall (following some revealing research)?
not just the people running Croydon, I'm afraid. It's easy to ignore what's out of sight. Not just in England, either, France is notorious for building their HLMs (habitations à loyer modéré, or social housing, mostly synonymous with the same brutalist architecture as you can find in many social housing flats) somewhere over a hill, only connected with a slow and infrequent bus line, from the town centre. They are in effect dumps for all the undesirables for the city.
@@barvdw Why always depend on the gov to solve your problems? Why not start by making your own environment pleasing so others want to come to you?
@@SBCBears because you need money for that. You can polish a turd, it stays a turd. You can clean your shack, it will stay a shack. And the best way to get money, is to go to work. But if you can't afford to go to work, you're quite literally stuck. You can't afford an apartment closer to schools, work or even a station? You'll have to to with social housing somewhere out of sight. You can't afford a car? You'll have to rely on a bus that runs once an hour. You're late because the bus didn't show up? You're fired and can start all over.
Why yes, you should take initiative yourself, too, but it's not as if you can choose the cards you're dealt with, and some have really bad cards.
@@barvdw I could not agree more! Putting marginalised people up in high-rises is a way of putting them out of sight. Here in Toronto, the suburban high-rises are not nice places. Crime, drugs and prostitution plagues them and the lack of transit is one of the major reasons why that is. The corner of Jane st and Finch avenue in the northwestern suburbs of Toronto is not a good area, but a light rail line is being built to serve it.
@@barvdw The video mentioned a lack of food stores within the large development. It seems a ripe commercial opportunity for a small Aldi, for example. Also mentioned were "social problems" and "gangs". I wonder if those issues impeded investment in the community. No money would be required from the community for a chain store or independent grocer to set up shop there. Rich or poor, people eat.
I remember visiting NA many years ago with my wife to visit an aunt of hers. I think we got a bus from Croydon, having travelled there from N London by tube & rail. But it was a long time ago ....! 😎
I am guessing here, but I would bet that for that tram driver, seeing you filming and then him assuming you are some sort of "tram spotter" was probably the most interesting thing that has happened to him while driving that tram.
Also, you were actually on a train (or tram!)!!!
This kind of deserved a *Tales from the Tram* or *Jago's Trams* intro.
Thanks for your unique commentary. More please.
You’re welcome! Plenty more on the way!
Thanks jago love the vids about the weird suburbs like this. I didn’t realise south east London has so much area that is like the countryside
Liked this. Please keep us informed, Jago. xx
Seems a pleasant enough place.
What? Jago editorialising? Heaven forfend. As ever, many thanks.
I like that there's a huge grassy field surrounding the stop. It's like a huge oval roundabout
I love your videos in general, but this one here was especialy cool. A locals insights into his town is something you can never find in any travel guide and is a absurdly underrepresented kind of content. Keep it up!
Thanks!
4:07 That’s tramendous!
Lived there in the 1960s as a schoolboy and in my first year at work. For me its biggest problem wasn't its people but its remoteness. It took me over an hour to get to my (private, scholarship boy) school in West Norwood and about the same to get to my first job in the Cabinet Office in Downing Street (the back entrance!). Mum had similar problems getting to her work as a laundry shop manageress. Eventually we managed a swap for a flat in Forest Hill and later to another right next to Forest Hill station. I still remember the monotony of that bus trip out through Addiscombe, up and over Gravel Hill, through the village down in the valley and then up the long, endless climb to the sprawling estate. We were in the green part, overlooking a large area of parkland and playing fields, but even so the outlook from our second floor flat was bleak and uninspiring even in Summer...with regard to its location, might the planned but never built Surrey Heights Light Railway have had something to do with its chosen location?
I remember back in the day you could have your trainers nicked if you went addo!
Us Bromley scooterboys often went to New Addington on our Vespa's to talk trash with the Croydon and West Wickham lot and give some verbals to the RD125 lot who buzzed us on occasion hehe happy days :D
Luxury. We used to walk barefoot on nails.
Anyone who steals my boots deserves everything they get. Now I’m off to Google the symptoms of trench foot.
Only times I've ever BEEN to New Addington is the times there was the street market and when Dad used to work at the dump there
The tram line I live near in my city is is being refurbished and I do miss their rumble.
We would be lost without the tram 👍🏻🏆
Lewisham Scout District has a fairly large campsite not too far from New Addington, however they sit on two separate hills. If you were a Leader or, like me, an Explorer Scout helping run a weekend camp and arriving via the tram, it was often best to get someone to pick you up from the town. The path down to the campsite entrance could most politely referred to as "risky" when going uphill in broad daylight, as for the journey downhill at dusk... The thought of descending that steep and stony incline with a heavy backpack was worrying to say the least.
Great video Jago. Journalists are of another breed, with which their genetic code doesn’t allow to live in neighborhoods they so easily can portray as ghettos. Certainly when there’s community ground work being done, when inhabitants participate and care for their direct surroundings and environment, it won’t be journalists who see such, those eyes are only interested in the negative side of stories, and mostly where neighborhoods are involved.
having growing up in new addington still now haha its an amazing place sometimes here and there but it can get boring
"I can think of a lot worse places to be. Like down in the streets, or down in the sewer, or even on the end of a skewer"
"Stranglers" Rattus Norvegicus!
@@sunsetlights100 Indeed, there's a first pressing on my shelf. Also featured in the brilliant introduction to the rather brilliant film Sexy Beast.
What a bummer!
There seems to have been a Stranglers tribute band called (appropriately) the Manglers whose rhythm section featured the Addington brothers: ua-cam.com/video/260kDEcqSdg/v-deo.html
I watched them build it as I did my nurse training it is an isolated community by it's own psychology. I must say I loved working there.
Oh Jago,your wit and wisdom strikes again! For a bit of commentary,many places in the US,had streetcar,and interurban lines built into them,long before the people got there! The original New York and Harlem,was a horse car line,from City Hall to( where else),Harlem{named after Haarlem, in the Netherlands},and that was in the 1830's,so you can see the amount of growth since then! Any number of other places,could treated the same way,as transportation is vital to growth,and morale,but that does not enter into political equations,but the reality bites anyway! They never learn,do they!! Thanks again for your attention!! 🚋🚋🚋🚋🚋🚊🚊🚊🚊🚊🚞🚞🚞🚞🚞🚲🚲🚲🚲🚲🛴🛴🛴🛴🛴🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚉🚈🚈🚈🚈
I am always curious to learn about everything around the public transport net of cities! Makes your videos interesting and stand out from many others ❤👍🏻
Delivered with wit and charm as usual very entertaining keep them coming👍
The "ghetto" as you put it was where the 314 bus used to terminate or there abouts. A nasty little row of shops and some high rises. In the good ol days as ny father used to say, he used to use the high-rise buildings for his pirate radio station "skyline". This was a few years before i was born however. But those flats had a perfect line of sight into the city. From the south
I want to live in Addington... My brains must be Addled...heheh
Thank you, thank you. I'm here all week! Try the veal and don't forget to tip (not trip) the waitress!
The old 130 bus service was pretty good before the tram came along. I remember getting the bus with my grandparents and if the bus coming looked full we would just wait 10 minutes for the next one.
You also had the express bus with the yellow sign which only stopped at a few designated stops.