Sunday, 23 November 2008

Hall Road II



Battered by the sea it is tempting to think of these ruins as the remains of a lost Roman port, a Caesarea or a Tyre, a great town defeated by the sea and rebuilt in a safer harbour. They are more the ruins of Pompeii, overtaken by a disaster, a rain of fire falling from the sky, the ruins cleared from the streets in the rebuilding and hauled away to this desolate coastline, away from the people, away from sight. New uses for lost buildings pounded to rubble. The different stones weather differently. Half a century on the beach has worn the granite not one jot, crisp edges, smooth sides, the sharp edges of window frames. The sandstone carvings are returning to the sea, being broken down and smoothed, each year adding a millimetre to the sand. Marble is blasted by the sand and the wind, turns chalky. Half man-made half stone, concrete is more ambivalent and giant lumps age slowly, trailing old mesh-wires like the legs of octopuses, concrete and rusted iron sculptures of dead sea creatures, unwilling to decay as if still needed. The scale of these ruins is awe-inspiring. Happily now we can skip across rooflines, gigantic pieces of stone designed to be seen from below and from fifty feet below, carvings only visible from the top floor, from the highest offices. Local children are awed by these ruins, this city from before their parents were born, this lost city that their great-grandparents knew; they make small towers of stones and brick, assemble small offerings of marble tiles, glass, brick, and leave them on giant flat shards of city, tilted tables, smashed altars. Here the city is returning to the sea.



Yet this is more than a dumping ground for lost buildings. Four thousand people died in Liverpool in the Blitz, and these bones of the city are a secular shrine to them, a monument to the lost traveller, the ARP warden, the unknown civilian. The heat cooled by years of the tides, their memories soothed by the water, the wind; each year the carving is less crisp, is less visible. In a century it will be gone, this beach of stones, the memories washed away by the sea.

Twentieth-Century Ruins II: Hall Road, Crosby


The beach at Hall Road, Crosby, Merseyside, July 5th 2005


A stumble across the boulders near the car park, the wind cold and unexpectedly fierce. Giant white boulders, sharp this far from the sea, surrounded by a carpet of red bricks, smoothed by the sea into round lumps, corners chipped then sanded by the sea. Red eggs, the remains of whole streets of houses, gardens, out door toilets, sheds. A smashed beach of floor tiles, iron drainpipes, electrical fittings, bakelite, china, roof tile, a sea of smoothed red brick; a broken city brought here after the war and dumped on the beach to strengthen the coastline. The whole crumbling now, returning to the elements. A small stretch of hard clean sand, dotted with worn-smooth tiles and tiny pieces of sanded glass, hard beneath our boots on this raw day; a grey sky, the sea muddied, the horizon lined with ships. The crash and foam of the waves. The endless wind on our faces, more like cold October than July.

Further along the shore the remains are bigger. Fragments of wall appear, six or eight courses of brick still bonded together, pounded for fifty years by the sea, scoured with salt, untouched by lichen or weed. They are slumped in the rubble of brick and stones, giant fallen walls, rubbed and caressed into organic shapes, sleek and sinuous, boundaries shifting, shapes of brick seeming to swell and stretch, move and turn, twisted walls still eight or ten tons in weight. Here too are the edges of buildings, gigantic pieces of column and architrave, capital and frieze, hauled from the wreckage of bank or insurance office and dumped to protect the coast; today they might be rescued and sold to architectural salvage men, to find new homes as relics and garden ornament. Porticos and window frames, steps and the bases of columns.

Friday, 14 November 2008

Runcorn Wildwood

A recent journey through Runcorn, where I used to go walking with friends. The long roads were landscaped 30 or 40 years ago and many of the trees are now mature. The autumn colour on the chestnuts and especially the beech and maple were astonishing; it has been a good year for colour. Extending the urban wildwood idea, I was reminded of the alternative routes across this 'new town' landscape. Runcorn New Town seemed to be criss-crossed by a series of unofficial paths between the bus routes and walkways that residents had made to make their lives easier; short cuts. They were used by all ages and it was not surprising to see a pensioner slip out of the bushes with her shopping. Once past the boundary hedges, the undergrowth was often surprisingly thin and the spaces under the trees were open - and so safe. These paths extended across the whole new town landscape, or seemed to. They made the town seem imposed on older patterns of landscape and land use, and also indicated the futility of town planning that ignored residents' needs and usage. We often followed them at night and slipped past houses and bus lanes and through business parks and small industrial estates, a linked network of paths. More about this if I get to visit Runcorn again. My only other observation was the creep of new business parks and houses out towards Daresbury; when I walked there it was fields.

Friday, 7 November 2008

Urban Wildwood

Derelict school site, Liverpool, October 31st 2008

What does a landscape need to make it wild? These unvisited places fascinate me and link these urban landscapes to my recurrent autumnal interest in the Blair Witch Project and The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon; woods as places of ancient danger, almost prehistoric menace. I suppose the Founding Fathers took this European sense of wildwood with them to the New World.

I seem to have walked such derelict landscapes many times; the airfield at Burscough for the Southport book, for example, or long Railway Club walks in the late 1970s. These twentieth-century ruins seem a background to urban walking; and the idea of wildness and wildwood is absorbed/inherited by derelict built environments. There is a lot in this.

Twentieth-Century Ruins I


Redundant school sign, Liverpool, October 31st 2008

I am fascinated by the overlooked places in a city, the unvisited places. On a recent visit to Liverpool I found a demolished school slowly reverting to nature, the school buildings long demolished, the sweep of tarmac road way being slowly cracked and heaved by roots and grasses. There were still roadsigns warning drivers of crossing children and even a pale blue Liverpool Education board deterring intruders. (Reminding me of the old school exercise books with the city's coat of arms on them.) The kerbstones in the grounds were slowly disappearing under a year or two's leaf litter and there were still old lamp-posts with broken lamps on them. The hedge has gone shaggy and unkempt but is still recognisable as a hedge; the trees have been left to their own devices and at least one of the beech trees is enormous.


A snapshot into the light; old road patterns and new fences, October 31st 2008

From outside the fence (or what was left of it) the grounds looked like part of the neighbouring gardens, which themselves are a wild space, unmanaged woodland. Part of the school site has been sold off to a healthcare company, and these grounds are slightly better managed, but are still largely a wild space. Dog walkers use these places during the day but at night they revert to wildwood, full of perceived dangers; not bears or wolves but druggies and rapists. This sense of dangerous wilderness in the heart of the urban landscape, this 'otherness', seemed a redefinition of the urban landscape; how much of this overlooked and unvisited wildwood is there in a big city? How much unseen and neglected landscaping, abandoned garden space, even the unreachable and invisible space at the back of a border?

And beyond this exciting idea of wildwood there was the sense of a future gone awry. The school looked as though it was built after 1945 - greenfield site, modern roads and walls - but the future it was part of didn't happen. Instead the school was closed and half the site sold to a private healthcare company. An optimistic post-war landscape that didn't last.

A sign for a school that is no longer there...