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Little Green Street
(photos and petition text kindly donated by littlegreenstreet.com)
Little Green
Street off Highgate Road in Kentish Town is one of the oldest streets in London.
It’s not very big, just eight houses on one side and two on the other. The
houses were built in the 1780s are Grade ll listed and remain one of the few
intact Georgian streets in London. They have stood unharmed through train
crashes, the London Blitz, and survived two hundred years of wear and tear.

Until now, when Little Green Street found itself, through no fault of its own,
turned into the only access road for developers hoping to build 20 houses, 10
flats, and an underground car park on derelict land behind Little Green Street.
Despite its size, the developers insist that Little Green Street is big enough
to carry all the cranes, diggers, and lorries they need to carry all the waste
away from the forty foot deep excavation they need to dig to build their
underground car park. Some of the lorries and cranes weigh up to 49 tonnes and
some are 2.9m wide. It’s a pity they didn’t measure Little Green Street, because
the carriageway of the road is just 2.5m wide.
The work would go on from 8am to 4pm five days a week and would last two years.
During all this time no-one would be able to walk, cycle or push a pram down
Little Green Street while the lorries were trundling up and down. The three
families on the right hand side of the street would have less than six inches of
pavement between them and the lorries and none of the dozens of children who use
it as a safe short cut to at least four schools would be able to walk down it
safely.
At the same time, Camden’s Highways Department put up a sign warning people that
the road would soon be closed for Highway reinforcement. Don’t worry, they said,
we aren’t going to widen it, just make it stronger. They want to dig 1.2m down
and pour concrete to reinforce it. We think the houses will fall down if they do
that, because the road is so narrow they haven’t got room to shore it up.
Meanwhile, other people began to get interested in Little Green Street.
Yesterday Bill Nighy, star of Love Actually and Pirates of the Caribbean,
wandered by – what’s going on, he asked. We told him. They can’t do that, he
said. It’s senseless, he said.
We agree.
If you want to support the people of London's Little Green Street, like
Bill Nighy and the official Bill Nighy Experience do, you can sign the
petition at their website.
For this and other chances to help click the banner below.
© Copyright 2006 The official Bill Nighy Experience or original sources