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Desperate search for new town centre premises for High Barnet’s free book shop which distributes unwanted books

Yet another smiling recipient…but the days are numbered at High Barnet’s free book shop which is desperately looking for new premises as it is under notice to leave The Spires shopping centre.

Unless another vacant shop or a community space can be found by Saturday 12 April the Global Education Trust will have to close its doors much to the disappointment of the 20 or so volunteers who hand out anything up to 100 free books a day.

Dean Masters (above) was delighted to find a free copy of a book by golfing legend Jack Nicklaus – a reminder of his younger days when he regularly played golf himself.

Book shop manager Jackie O’Brien (right) – seen with volunteer Emma Newby – says that she and her team of assistants are keeping their fingers crossed in the hope that the trust can find alternative premises somewhere in High Barnet town centre.

“We exist on donations and are run entirely by volunteers, so we can’t afford to pay rent.

“We rely entirely on the generosity of landlords to let us use an empty shop or vacant premises where we can display our books.

“We have been so lucky to have had nearly a year at The Spires and the success of what we have achieved speaks for itself.”

At anyone time the trust is operating around 20 free books around the country and they all distribute unwanted books which would otherwise have been pulped or gone to landfill.

Urgent hunt for new empty premises in town centre for Chipping Barnet's popular free book shop

Ms O’Brien said that on most days the shop in The Spires has been giving away anything from 50 to 100 books, all of which have been donated to the trust.

Usually, the shop attracts at least 50 customers a day, but it can be double that at weekends and school holidays.

When it opened in May last year the trust stocked the shop with books from its central warehouse, but the organisers predicted the shop would soon become self-supporting because of fresh donations of books from within the community.

“What is so rewarding about volunteering at the shop is to see how much we are appreciated by local children who can hardly believe that they can take away free up to three books.

“Some of the children are really excited about coming to the shop. Perhaps they are on the hunt for a Roald Dahl or Jacqueline Wilson book

“It is then that we realise what it means to them, because some youngsters come back and donate to us all the books they have grown out of.

“Because all of the stock is donated lots of it is pretty dated or out of print and when older customers come in, they can’t believe their good fortune in finding a book they have always wanted.”

The free book shop is under notice to quit because the unit it is using – formerly a Costa coffee shop – is to be re-opened as a Greek cafe.

Fresh donations of books are no longer being accepted and unless another vacant shop or perhaps unused community space can be found, the shop will close on 12 April allowing a week to shift the stock to the Global Education Trust’s warehouse before vacating the premises on 19 April.

“Unfortunately, we have been told by The Spires that they have no space for us and our only hope is that a landlord might come forward and offer us another temporary home.

“We have asked the Chipping Barnet Town Team to help us relocate so perhaps we might be lucky,” said Ms O’Brien.  

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Transport for London grilled at public meeting on its proposals for High Barnet Station car park

Chipping Barnet constituents filled most of the pews in St John the Baptist’s Church on Thursday evening, 20 March 2025, to tell Transport for London (TfL) what they thought about their proposal to build 300 flats next to High Barnet Station. After a passionate and occasionally acrimonious meeting, the TfL team will have no illusions about local opposition to their development. But the audience were also left in no doubt that – barring unforeseen constructional challenges or political events – we have little chance of securing more than a few tweaks to the design of the buildings or their outdoor spaces.

The plans were exhibited for public consultation at the end of February and presented at a TfL webinar on 4 March. They can be viewed online here, as can the Barnet Society’s response to them.

Dan Tomlinson MP called this meeting on The future of High Barnet station car park to give residents another chance to ask questions and pass their comments on the scheme directly to the developers. These are TfL’s property company Places for London and their house-building partner Barratt London. Patrick Clark headed their panel, which included members of their design team.

Opening the meeting, Mr Tomlinson explained that he himself is neutral about the scheme. Barnet’s recently adopted Local Plan designates the site for 292 homes, and the Labour Government and Mayor of London are committed to delivering much-needed new housing. If the Council refuses the scheme it will go to the Planning Inspectorate, who are almost certain to approve it.

But Mr Tomlinson wanted to ensure that, if it is approved by Barnet’s planning committee, the developers will have listened directly to people who live in Chipping Barnet, and the designs made as good as they can be. As an example, he pointed to the public footpath ramp that he has insisted must be improved with better lighting and benches. He also said that TfL has agreed in principle to move the northbound bus stop closer to Station Approach.

During a brief overview of the scheme by Patrick Clark, the mood of the audience quickly became apparent. His remark, ‘This will be a car-free scheme’ was greeted by hollow laughter and his promise of ‘four drop-off points’ by ironic applause.

Mr Tomlinson then invited questions from the audience around three topics: transport and connectivity, the design (particularly its height) and other issues including car parking.

A question about the impact of building work on the neighbourhood was answered by reassurance that a Construction Management Plan would be agreed with the Council, and that ‘just-in-time’ management of construction vehicles would minimise disruption. The added difficulties if Barnet Football Club stadium is built nearby at the same time were not addressed, however.

Members of the audience commented that the six proposed Blue Badge bays are not enough for current, let alone future, needs.

The panel was asked where residents of new flats will park. The reply that they will not be allowed to apply for Resident Parking Permits did not go down well.

A questioner noted that the Northern Line links High Barnet to many hospitals, and many nurses and other staff members use the tube early or return late after night shifts. Women in particular need the security of using their own cars at those times of the day. 

Another questioner deplored TfL’s reluctance to embrace any of the wider opportunities offered by the project such as improving cycling experience and safety.

Gordon Massey asserted that the current proposals ‘will take us back to 1872’ when there was no car park. It was in 1934 that the Barnet Residents Association first called for the lack of a bus stop on the station forecourt to be remedied.

A member of the audience speculated that TfL’s ruling out of buses on the station forecourt was driven not so much by technical constraints but by their wish to protect the bus schedules. That prompted a burst of clapping.

An even bigger round of applause followed another speaker’s observation that ‘It’s clear to me that this is a done deal.’

Regarding design, Mr Tomlinson and others pointed out that the Local Plan states that seven storeys is the maximum height for this location in Barnet. The planning consultant on the panel replied that London Plan Policy D9 allows greater height if certain criteria are satisfied.

There was universal agreement that TfL’s team must supply visualisations to prove their contention that the buildings would not interrupt key views. Mr Tomlinson strongly supported this request.

Katy Staton, a landscape architect, said the drawings were not adequate for this stage; more detail is essential. She also asked if the designs take into account the new building safety requirements such as for two staircases. The panel’s architect assured everyone that the buildings would comply with the latest Building Regulations.

Under other matters, a questioner asked what would be done to relieve pressure on local services. Mr Tomlinson said that he had already asked the Council for, and had been given, data on pupil numbers and the ability of local schools to accommodate them. Due mainly to the decline in the local birth-rate, there would be spare capacity. He reminded the audience that the Government is already investing heavily in the NHS. He is in regular dialogue with local GPs and assured us that additional funding would be available. If health services don’t improve by the next election, he quipped, ‘I’m a goner’.

Another questioner was worried about the safety risks to the 200 or so children likely to be living in the flats, especially from vehicles, since the plans showed no provision for emergency access, deliveries or visitors.

Nick Saul, a retired civil engineer, drew the panel’s attention to the fact that most of Barnet hillside was an artificial construct, and that the best structural advice should be obtained before a final commitment was made to proceed with the project.

The biggest boo of the evening followed a comment from the floor that TfL had admitted that a proportion of the flats could be sold to overseas investors. But 90 minutes was up and no time was left for a satisfactory answer to this or many other questions, though Mr Tomlinson invited the audience to let him know about any other concerns.

Additional reporting by Frances Wilson

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Mayor of Barnet pays tribute to the “amazing achievement” of the founders of a welcoming home for overseas students  

A small village community of flats and bungalows established by two Holocaust survivors has provided a home over the decades for hundreds of students from all over the world – an achievement celebrated with a visit by the Mayor of Barnet, Councillor Tony Vourou.

Barnet Overseas Students Housing Association, which is based at Nansen Village in Woodside Park, will be celebrating its 55th anniversary next year, to the great delight and satisfaction of the surviving co-founder Charlotte Weinberg.

Charlotte, who is 94, and her late husband Kurt — who was rescued by the Kindertransport – began a life-time mission to welcome and help provide accommodation for foreign students staying in London, first by hosting students in their home and then by building the village in Woodside Avenue. 

Their dream was to create a community where overseas students arriving in London could live together while completing their university studies – a vision which Councillor Vourou said had become the couple’s lasting achievement.

Councillor Zahra Beg, chair of the Nansen Village trustees (above, left) joined the mayor and Charlotte, who is 94.

Councillor Beg is a ward councillor in Underhill and Barnet’s cabinet member for equalities and the voluntary and community sector.

She said that once Kurt and Charlotte began looking after students from around the world, they marvelled at the sense of togetherness generated by young people from different religions and cultures sharing their lives.

“We know there are generation after generation of students who tell us they won’t ever forget their time living here at Nansen village – a legacy from the dream of Kurt and Charlotte that is continually being taken forward.

“As trustees we have tried to ensure that the focus of the founders stays true and that a community from diverse backgrounds can come together and share that experience.”

Brian Trainor (above, far left), chief executive of the housing association, took the mayor on a guided tour of the village which was established on what was once the site of two Victorian houses and which is named after Fridtjof Nansen, the explorer, humanitarian and Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

With the help of a grant from the British Council, two blocks of flats and some bungalows in the gardens were constructed in the late 1960s and in 1971 the first tenants moved into the first 66 homes to be completed.

Currently there are 130 students in residence, 35 of whom have families with children. Since its opening, 380 children have been born to parents at the village.

The majority of students are currently from South America and the Middle and Far East.

The housing association is organised on a non-profit basis and rents are kept as low as possible to accommodate students on low incomes, with or without children (under the age of eight).

Laila Kasuri, who is in the second year of a PhD at Imperial College, expressed thanks on behalf of the students residing in the village and congratulated Charlotte and Kurt on what they had been achieved.

She and her husband — and their two children aged five and two – were originally from Pakistan and had moved to London from Canada so that she could complete her studies in water governance.

“I am so grateful as a young parent for all the support I get at Nansen Village. The community here is very special.

“Last year we had a visitor at our bungalow from California. He said he was two when he lived in the very same house.

“He was the child of a PhD student then living at Nansen and said his childhood in the village was the best five years of his life. 

“Apparently, he was always in the playground and the sandpit. My children are often out there too. All the children know one another socially and together we all have such a rich social life.”

Mayor of Barnet joins celebration of work of community village for overseas students at Woodside Park

After being congratulated by the mayor for all she had done to encourage students from different cultures and religions to live together, Charlotte said she did feel proud of what she and Kurt had achieved given all the troubles in the today’s world.

“I often wonder what so many of the students who have lived here are doing now.

“Our aim is to give them a sense of security, especially when facing life in a big city and we hope they have taken the name of Nansen Village around the world.

“People who survived the Holocaust don’t forget the support that we were given, and that ethos became our driving force.”

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Vandalised ULEZ camera pole left littering grass verge at Arkley – a reminder of the campaign of sabotage around High Barnet

Arkley’s much admired volunteer litter picker is having to admit defeat when confronted with an abandoned ULEZ camera pole which was left lying on the grass verge after being cut down during a wave of sabotage.

Because of High Barnet’s position as an entry point to the ULEZ zone, roads in and around the town were regularly targeted by vandals protesting at Transport for London’s £12.50 charge on vehicles failing to meet the new ultra-low emission standards.

After two poles were felled in Rowley Lane, Arkley, close to the junction with the A1 fly over, TfL finally gave up in August 2023 – but the last pole to be erected, minus its camera, was left on the verge, and was partly submerged in last summer’s undergrowth.

Lying there forlornly, the abandoned pole is an eyesore – and TfL’s failure to take it away does hamper the work of Peter Lassman who does all he can to keep Rowley Lane free of rubbish.

Peter, who lives in Rowley Lane, has been a volunteer litter picker for the last ten years and takes great pride in keeping one of the main approaches to Arkley as free of rubbish as possible.

“As one of the older residents I’m very happy to do my bit trying to keep Arkley clean and tidy. I do my best to collect litter all along Rowley Lane right up to Barnet Road.

“Most of the rubbish is discarded cans and bottles together with a lot of plastic waste. The verges look so much better after a clean-up, especially now that spring is coming, but there’s not much I can do about the camera pole.”

Mr Lassman’s dedication is a reflection of the community spirit within Arkley which prides itself on its village identity – a point which is reinforced with the Arkley village signs on the main approach roads.

Volunteer litter picker at Arkley finds unexpected item -- an abandoned ULEZ camera pole lying on a grass verge

After giving up on its attempt to install a ULEZ camera at the A1 fly over end of Rowley Lane, TfL erected a substitute at the junction of Rowley Lane and Rowley Green Road which has remained standing for the last nine months.

At the height of the anti-ULEZ protest, camera poles were cut down with angle grinders last year at the junction of St Albans Road and Stapylton Road and on Hadley Green at the junction of Drury Road and Sydney Chapman Way.

There were numerous cases of vandalism to the cameras in the summer and autumn of 2023.

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Main through route from High Barnet to Arkley closed to traffic as Thames Water repair collapsed sewer

Motorists and bus passengers are facing severe disruption for the rest of March because of the closure for sewer repairs of Barnet Road, Arkley – the main road from High Barnet towards Arkley and Borehamwood.

A collapsed sewer between the junctions with Rowley Lane and Barnet Gate Lane means that this section of Barnet Road will be closed until at least Friday 28 March.

The closure has prompted widespread complaints because of the absence of clear directions for alternative routes and the withdrawal of bus services along Barnet Road.

Through traffic is having to make a lengthy diversion either via Quinta Drive, Mays Lane and Barnet Gate Lane or via Rowley Lane and the A1 Barnet bypass.

Three bus routes are also on diversion – the 107 (New Barnet-Edgware), the 384 (Cockfosters-Edgware) and 614 Uno (Hatfield-Queensbury).

Diversions needed as main road from High Barnet to Arkley closed to through traffic for sewer repairs

Residents living in the vicinity say there was a lack of advance notice and consultation, and they are worried about the inability of large vehicles such as fire appliances to enter side roads such as Rockways.

Bus passengers have been facing confusion, due the lack of clear advice on diversionary routes and alternative bus stops.

The well-used 107 service has been diverted in both directions via the St Albans Road and the A1 Barnet bypass.

Motorists have deplored the absence of clearly signposted alternative routes. Lorries and large vehicles are having to make larger detours as some of the roads on nearby alternative routes – such as Rowley Lane and Mays Lane – have width restrictions and barriers.

Contractors working for Thames Water have put up a sign at the junction with Wood Street and Well Lane warning of the closure ahead along Barnet Road until March 28 but there are no clearly signposted alternative routes.

Residents say their calls to Barnet Council, Transport for London and Thames Water have largely resulted in buck passing with no-one taking responsibility, although Thames Water have now said their traffic management team has been alerted.

There has been considerable congestion at rush hour with traffic jams caused by reversing cars and lorries.

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Barnet Football Club’s supporters hoping their team’s top-of-the table position in the National League bodes well for a return to Underhill

Leaflets promoting Bring Barnet Back are being distributed across the town as the campaign hots up to persuade Barnet Council to approve plans for a new football stadium at Underhill.

If playing form is any guide, the club might be hoping for a warm welcome: Barnet is currently top of the National League and well placed for promotion to League Two of the English Football League.

Barnet haven’t been beaten in their last 21 National League fixtures. The Bees have now established an nine-point lead at the top of the table after their stunning mid-week 5-0 defeat of Yeovil Town at The Hive (4.3.2025).

However promising their performances on the pitch, the chances of Barnet playing again at Underhill are finely balanced.

The outcome depends on whether Barnet Council can be persuaded that there is a special case for a new stadium to be built within the Green Belt on playing fields at Underhill, close to the site of the original stadium which was demolished to make way for the Ark Pioneer Academy.

Opponents to the project, who are against the loss of Green Belt land and who fear traffic congestion generated by a new stadium, are rallying support around a petition which has attracted over 18,800 signatures.  

A strong case is being made for the new site on the grounds that careful landscaping would reduce the visual impact of the stadium, and that the environment and biodiversity would be greatly improved with extensive tree planting and the creation of a pond between the stadium and the Dollis Valley green walk.

Supporters hope Barnet Football Club's top of the table position boosts chances of return to Underhill

Seen above with an artist’s impression of the site are Sean McGrath (left) of consultants WSP and architect Manuel Nogueira of AndArchitects

Much of the emphasis in the club’s campaign to play again at Underhill is based on the economic impact.

Club chairman Tony Kleanthous has promised to finance the building of the new stadium, at a cost of around £14 million, and the estimate is that it should sustain the equivalent of 78 full-time jobs when taking into account all those working part time on match days.

On some estimates the return of the club could add £6 million a year to the Barnet economy, including £2.1 million from extra business for the town’s traders over a 23-week season.

If the application for a new stadium fails to get approval – and Barnet are denied a chance to rebuild the strong local support which they once enjoyed – there are stark warnings that the club’s long-term future is in grave doubt.

Representatives from community groups including the Barnet Society, Barnet Residents Association and Love Barnet have been advised that attendances at the club’s current base at The Hive Football Centre are not sufficient for long-term financial viability.

What was described as “a considerable financial shortfall” is having to be made up by Mr Kleanthous, the Barnet FC chairman and owner.

The Hive, midway between Edgware and Standmore, which is also owned by Mr Kleanthous, is a separate financial entity.

Its pitch, training facilities and diagnostic centre are used by a range of other clubs as well as Barnet and because of its proximity to Wembley it is often used as a training camp by visiting teams.

Since moving to The Hive in 2013, Barnet have failed to match the attendances at Underhill.

Currently the average gate is around 1,800. A move back to Underhill could increase that to around 3,500 given the strength of local support with the new stadium having a maximum capacity of 7,000 spectators.

Additional revenue from ticket sales could bring in an extra £500,000 a season and that could be matched by an equivalent amount in sponsorship which together would be make up the current shortfall which on some estimates is around £1 million a year.

If the club fails to get approval for a new stadium there are doubts as to whether Mr Kleanthous would be prepared to make a fresh attempt to return to Barnet.

His view is that if the community are against the club’s return and there is not the support which Bring Barnet Back believe there is, then there is little more that he can do.

But without the injection of additional revenue, the fear is that within four to five years’ time Barnet might no longer be sustainable financially.

With help from the distribution of funds from the Premier League, the club says it would establish a new charitable foundation at Barnet which would offer a range of activities with an outreach to local schools and support for local clubs.

Once back in Barnet, the club’s aim would be to establish community initiatives and there any number of possibilities, including, for example, the possibility of providing space for a local foodbank or other projects.

The club would open a new diagnostics and imaging centre at the new stadium in line with the facilities provided at The Hive which a said to be recognised as one of the best screening facilities at a football club.    

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Adventurous programme of lakeside concerts is planned for this summer in support of Monken Hadley Common 

Preparations are well underway for the most ambitious programme so far for the popular summer season of concerts beside Jack’s Lake at Monken Hadley Common.

Since the festival was launched in 2021, there has been ever growing support for the open-air musical evenings which are held in a woodland glade beside the lake.

Ilona Domnich (above right), the New Barnet opera singer whose idea it was to give people an opportunity to enjoy music and nature in a magical setting, has arranged dates for four concerts over weekends in June, July and August.

Her aim this summer is to feature more singers from musical theatre, to explore the versatility of the voice, and to include a greater variety of instruments for the chamber music.

Andrew Walker (above, left), chair of the Monken Hadley Common Trust which hosts the concerts, believes the expanded programme will appeal to a wider section of the community and increase attendance.

“We hope the concerts will bring along people who perhaps have never been to the common before.

“That will help us spread the word that the Hadley Common Trust which cares for the woods and lake is run entirely by volunteers.”

The concerts are free, but cash and card donations (£15 suggested minimum per adult) will be collected.

Proceeds will be shared between the trust for the upkeep of the common and for a bursary for a young musician at the World Heart Beat Music Academy in Nine Elms.

The four concerts will be on Saturday 14 June at 7pm; Sunday 6 July at 7pm; Sunday 20 July at 6.30pm; and Sunday 3 August at 6.30pm.

This summer’s theme is to explore different genres with concerts which explore the versatility of the voice in opera and musicals and bring in more musical instruments.

Ilona will be accompanied by Charles Mutter, leader of the BBC Concert Orchestra as well as other talented musicians. All being well they will include a harpist and an accordionist.

“We want the concerts to appeal to a wider audience and attract people who have never been before.”

Each summer Ilona finds the concerts are introducing people to classical music for the first time, including the anglers from the Hadley Angling and Preservation Society who share use of the lake.

“Often, after the concerts, anglers fishing around the lake come along and thank us. One told me that he usually listens to hard metal or rock but had loved the classical music and opera.”

For more details about the Jack’s Lake contacts: https://ilonadomnich.com/projects/hadley-woods-festival-music-on-jacks-lake/

Andrew said the importance of the concerts was that they introduce more people to the common and that gives the trust a chance to spread the word about how the upkeep of the common depends on volunteers.

“There is always a new challenge for us, trimming trees, maintaining footpaths, and looking after the dam to the lake and the weir – all sorts of different tasks.”

“The trust is a charitable institution, and it is the members who elect the trustees who are responsible for the common, so we are always looking for new members to come and join us.

“Holding concerts beside the lake is just one of the ways we can raise our profile and attract the attention of people who can give us financial support or join a working party.

“What better way to get to know Hadley Common than bring along a picnic and a bottle of wine or whatever and sit beside the lake and listen to amazing classical musicians.

“It is a chance to make a donation towards caring for the commons and supporting a bursary for a young musician.”

For details on how to join the Hadley Common Trust or to become a benefactor or concert sponsor go to the trust’s website www.mhctrust.org.uk or email treasurer@mhctrust.org.uk

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Compost bins and another bug hotel are all on the itinerary when visiting New Barnet’s innovative community garden

A guided tour of New Barnet’s much-cherished community garden by Wendy Alcock, founder of the Incredible Edible campaign, was a highlight of the group’s annual seed swap at St John’s United Reformed Church.

Wendy (above) gave gardening demonstrations as she went along – all part of her aim to encourage residents to make 2025 the year to grow more of their own food.

The seed swap is a chance to come along with seeds, small plants, tools, pots etc. and to swap them for free with someone else.

An extension to the community garden and green space – along three sides of the church at the junction of Somerset Road and Mowbray Road — was officially opened last year.

Incredible Edible was started by Wendy to encourage home cultivation in gardens and unused land.

The community garden around St John’s demonstrates what can be achieved by clearing and preparing what was previously an unusable rubble-strewn area.

A second bug hotel has been created in the corner of the newly cleared land with the aim of encouraging more insect life.

Another recent innovation – now in its second year – are the compost bins which were installed to produce leaf mould.

When Barnet Council ground staff collect leaves from the borough’s parks, the community garden is an eager recipient.

New Barnet community garden leading the way in campaign to encourage more home cultivation

Rotting leaves from last year were displayed by Dave McCormick, an Incredible Edible volunteer, and long-standing member Barnet Friends of the Earth and Barnet Clean Air.

An extra compost bin was added last autumn when the council delivered a total of 50 bags of green leaves swept up from parks around the borough.

“After rotting down for a year those 50 bags will produce ten bags of leaf mould which is so important in adding structure to the soil.

“We could take many more leaves from the council and what our community garden demonstrates is the great potential there is.

“We hope more groups can establish composting arrangements in the hope the council can be encouraged to give us even more of the leaves that have to be swept up each autumn.”   

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Warm applause for another imaginative drama retelling events from the rich tapestry of High Barnet’s historic past  

Claire Fisher’s first play – Mary Livingstone, I Presume? – tickles the audience with a joyous array of gossip and small talk between the Hadley Green gentry of yesteryear, their servants and the townspeople of Barnet.

The Bull Theatre was packed with highly appreciative audiences for the latest production by the Blue Door Theatre Company.

An ingenious script imagines the ghost like presence of Mary Livingstone inside Livingstone Cottage, the house on Hadley Green which in 1857 was the home of the Victorian explorer and missionary Dr David Livingstone, his wife and children.

A plaque dedicated to the centenary of Dr Livingstone’s birth was erected on the front wall of the cottage.

Claire’s story line imagines a sequence of events that led up to the official unveiling ceremony in 1913.

The re-appearance of Mary (played by Sarah Munford, see above) in a magnificent and voluminous crinoline style dress triggers challenging conversations which become the all-absorbing pre-occupation of Isabelle Harrington (Brigid Hekster) who moved into Livingstone Cottage after she returned to the country following the death in South Africa of her mine investor husband.

What actually happened in the everyday reality of today was that Claire Fisher and her family moved into the cottage 11 years ago.

Finding herself living in a house inhabited by such an illustrious famous predecessor developed Claire’s interest in researching how the famous explorer and his family came to live at Hadley Green in the 1850s.

The inspiration for the play – the first she has written and directed – grew out of Claire’s realisation that the role of Dr Livingstone’s wife Mary had been largely ignored.

In fact, it was Mary’s knowledge of local African languages and her standing among local people that was crucial to the success of Dr Livingstone’s travels, yet little was known about her contribution in propelling her husband into the pantheon of historical figures.

Claire started to wonder whether there were any women residing in Barnet in 1913 who had dared to suggest that Dr Livingstone’s wife deserved at least a mention – as there is no reference to her on the commemorative plaque – and her play tries through the drama that unfolds to put the record straight.

Isabelle Harrington, the central character, is the grieving widow who has returned to Hadley Green and who moves into Livingstone Cottage.

While navigating her grief she is determined to find out more about the Livingstone family.

She is also determined to continue working on work on her “causes” – votes for women, and campaigns like the attempt to ban the wearing of ostrich feathers on women’s hats.

Isabelle finds comfort in conjuring up Mary and the repercussions of their imagined conversations interact with the lives of the other women in the play, ranging from Caroline Penman (Val Golding) the formidable mother of her brother-in-law, to their long-standing servant Kitty (Jan Parker) who as a 20-year-old was a servant in the Livingstone household.

Kitty recalls working in the house while Dr Livingstone wrote about his missionary travels. She remembered how the couple’s children used to play on Hadley Common.  

Claire says her aim in the play was to portray the lives of women who had to manage their lives and hopes through the whims of men who treated them as second-class citizens.

Warm applause at Bull Theatre for another imaginative drama retelling events from rich tapestry of High Barnet's historic past

In thanking the cast at the curtain call, Claire (above right) paid tribute to the dedication to the members of Barnet’s successful community theatre group and especially for the encouragement and support she had been given by Siobhan Dunne (left), the artistic director of the Blue Door Theatre Company.

Mary Livingstone, I Presume? is the latest in a series of locally inspired productions including The Boy I Love set in the 1880s in High Barnet around the arrival of the annual Barnet Fair and Fog of War by local playwright James Godwin set in 1471 in the heart of the Battle of Barnet.  

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Coming Soon: Barnet Society is updating its website

This is the new front page of the Barnet Society’s website — a long-planned upgrade of our online presence.

We have made it easier to use with improved access and simpler procedures for new members joining the society.

Our aim is to present a cleaner and more elegant design with an improved home page setting out how the society organises itself and which explains who we are and what we aim to achieve as a community-based organisation.

Our news page is now searchable so looking for a news story or for information should be easier. Various filters will help locate the item concerned.

There is also easier access to the society’s quarterly newsletter and past newsletters are now listed in a more attractive format.

Our archive of well over 1,000 news reports and stories has been transferred to the new site along with the comments which were made at the time – a fascinating chronicle of news and events about Barnet over the last decade.

We hope the changes made to the membership area will make it easier for news members to sign up and get involved in the society’s work.

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New television production facility offers Barnet College students chance to gain skills for jobs on offer at expanding film studios

Barnet and Southgate College students on creative and media production courses can now gain hands-on experience in tv, sound and animation at the Studio, a new multi-media production facility at the college’s Barnet campus.

Opened at a cost of £2.2 million – including specialist equipment valued at £1.4 million – the Studio allows students to create their own tv shows, soundtracks and visual effects.

Investing in a multimedia centre offering students real-world experience in developing their own content coincides with the rapid expansion of film and television studios within the UK and the opening of many employment opportunities.

Close to High Barnet are the well-established Elstree Studios and BBC Elstree Centre which have now been joined at Borehamwood by the recently completed Sky Studios Elstree complex – see above — which has 12 sound stages.

Thousands of new jobs are due to be created or are in the pipeline.

Sky is developing a Future Talent programme offering 12-month on-site placements and an academy to take young people behind the scenes.  

A planning inquiry is to be held in March into an application by Sky Studios for a second phase of its Elstree complex with an additional five sound stages.

Since the completion of its south studios in 2022, Sky has been hosting production teams from several major film companies but an application for a 71,000 square metre extension to the north, with another eight buildings, was rejected by Hertsmere Borough Council in March last year.

The extension, on land between Rowley Lane and the A1 Barnet bypass, was considered an inappropriate development within the Green Belt.

Sky lodged an appeal last November – objections must be submitted by March 4 and an eight-day inquiry is due to start on March 25.  

After officially opening the Studio at the Barnet campus, the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, met some of the college students

Over 40 guests attended the ceremony including producer and songwriter Pete Waterman, Rebecca Hawkes, from Elstree Studios and Barnet College governor Adam Morley.

College chief executive officer and principal Neil Coker said the college was excited to see the Studio become a reality – “a true hub, where the industry can connect with the provision of skills, enabling the college to offer new talent and increased diversity in the workforce of the tv, sound production, animation and VFX sector.”

“Students can learn in a real-world environment, using industry-standard equipment and develop hands-on experience, from producing their own tv shows to creating bespoke soundtracks.”

He expressed his gratitude to London Assembly member, Councillor Anne Clarke, Barnet Council leader, Councillor Barry Rawlings, and the President of the college, Lord Levy.    

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New developments could reshape High Barnet: a chance for residents to have a say before planners take critical decisions

High Barnet is at a crossroads over future developments. Members of the Barnet Society are about to get an opportunity to debate key issues and hear the views of the Chipping Barnet MP Dan Tomlinson.

There are three main areas of uncertainty: the construction of eight-storey blocks of flats on the car park and container yard at the High Barnet tube station; an application by Barnet Football Club to build a new stadium at Underhill; and the continuing uncertainty about the future of The Spires shopping centre and its possible redevelopment.

Mr Tomlinson will take questions after members have had an opportunity to air their views and had a chance to vote on how they would like these schemes to proceed and whether they should be approved.

This discussion, followed by the Q&A, is a members’ only event on Thursday evening 27 February, so if you’d like to come along, join the Society at https://www.barnetsociety.org.uk/membership You will be given details of the meeting.

Each of the main three items will be introduced and debated separately to identify key questions to put to Mr Tomlinson (above).

Nick Saul will open the first short debate by outlining the proposal by Transport for London — through its property subsidiary Places for London and Barratt Homes — to build blocks of flats to provide 300 homes at High Barnet tube station.

This would result in the loss of all 160 car park spaces.

Building flats of up to eight storeys on the narrow strip of land between the tube line and Barnet Hill has raised numerous issues about the safety of the site and future access to the station.

In his session, Simon Kaufman will explore the options that face the town in view of continuing uncertainty over the future of The Spires shopping centre.

Almost two years have elapsed without any further word on proposals to redevelop the centre by creating a new central walkway with six blocks of flats to provide 250 new homes.

BYM Capital, owners of The Spires, became insolvent in late 2023 and administrators are now in charge of the company.

Mr Kaufman is keen to see whether there is support for fresh initiatives towards tackling the need to regenerate both the shopping centre and surrounding area and to explore the future role of Barnet Council.

Frances Wilson will lead the debate over the controversial application by Barnet Football Club to seek permission to construct a new stadium on playing fields at Underhill.

Last December the club chairman Tony Kleanthous announced that he has dropped a plan to site the stadium on the school playing field of the Ark Pioneer Academy and has opted instead for a site further along Barnet Lane.

Although the proposal has been greeted with enthusiasm by Barnet FC supporters, opinion is deeply divided with many in the town opposing the construction of a new stadium on open playing fields, unconvinced about the economic and social benefits to the community.

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Eight-storey blocks of flats will look out on to Barnet Hill if Barnet Council approves tube station plan for 300 homes

If Transport for London gets the go ahead to build four high-rise blocks of flats alongside Barnet Hill, they will transform the approach to the town from Underhill.

Plans for redeveloping the land around High Barnet tube station to provide 300 homes have now been updated.

A fresh round of public consultation is planned for late February and early March with drop-in sessions at the Tudor Hall, Wood Street, and an online webinar – for details see below.

TfL’s property subsidiary Places for London and Barratt Homes will outline their latest proposals.

When a public exhibition was held last November, Places for London said they were undecided about the height of the blocks of flats, but the latest image indicates they will be of eight storeys.

They will be built over the station car park and the site of the self-storage container yard between the tube track and Barnet Hill.

All 160 car park spaces at the station will be lost in the redevelopment and the only spaces left remaining will be for disabled drivers and blue badge holders.

When residents had their say in November the loss of the car park was high on their lists of objections, but Places for London said the current policy of the Mayor of London is that car parking spaces will not be replaced in housing developments at tube stations or nearby brownfield sites.

Another issue of concern was the stability of Barnet Hill and whether there was sufficient space for four eight-storey blocks of flats on the narrow strip of land between the tube line and Barnet Hill.

Equally troubling for many of those at the last round of consultations was the developers’ reliance on the existing station approach road to provide the main access route to the flats.

Over the years TfL has been asked repeatedly to work with Barnet Council to improve the approach to the tube station which gets crowded – and often blocked – with cars dropping off passengers and other vehicles waiting for people to arrive.

Disabled access in and around the station has been approved: at great cost space was created for a level footpath around the tracks to provide wheelchair access to all three platforms.

But the lack of a designated dropping-off point and TfL’s refusal to offer a shuttle bus service to Barnet town centre highlight what residents say is a catalogue of broken promises.

2025 is the 85th anniversary year of the electrified service reaching High Barnet.  The first tube train arrived on 6 April 1940.

Because of cost-savings imposed by the Second World War there was insufficient money to provide an escalator to the top of Meadway or an entry tunnel under Barnet Hill.

London Transport’s failure to live up to its earlier promises perhaps pales into insignificance compared with the outcry in 1868 when the Great Northern Railway failed to honour its undertaking to extend the line from Finchley all the way to High Barnet town centre – a tunnel was supposed to take the line to the final station to be sited near Ravenscroft Park.

Have your say: Drop-in public exhibitions at Tudor Hall, Wood Street, on Monday 24 February 15.00 to 19.00 and Saturday 1 March 11.00 to 15.00.

An online webinar will be held on Tuesday 4 March from 18.30 to 19.30. To join email HighBarnet@fieldconsulting.co.uk

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Renovation of historic organ at Barnet parish church will preserve the “beating heart of our town”

Restoring the 140-year-old organ at Barnet parish church is proving a massive task — well over 2,000 organ pipes are having to be individually cleaned and if necessary repaired before they can all be re-assembled.

Organ builder Jonathan Wallace (above, right) with his son Daniel, a trainee organ builder, hopes to have the organ rebuilt ready for playing again by the autumn.

Mr Wallace is no stranger to the task of restoring church organs in and around High Barnet – in 1991 he helped with the organ restoration at Monken Hadley church in 1991 and then at St Peter’s Arkley in 1993.

Restoration of the organ at the parish is likely to cost £165,000, half of which has been met by an £83,000 grant from Barnet Council from its community infra structure levy on new development.

An appeal has been launched for the other half and donations can be made via the parish church website, www.barnetparishchurch.org.uk

Parish administrator Tony Long — seen above at the doorway to the organ loft – said that such is the shortage of specialist church organ restorers that it had been some months before repairers Henry Groves & Son Ltd had been able to take on the work.

Installed in 1884 by the famous 19th century organ builders William Hill and Son, the organ has not been refurbished for nearly 40 years and numerous pieces need replacing including pipes, resonators, buttons and pistons.

Refurbishment will include replacing the perishable sheepskin used for large bellows and valves. Rebuilding the console with the latest playing aids will make it ideal organ students and organ recitalists.

Once the restoration has been completed St John the Baptist Church hopes to extend its programme of musical education with pupils at local schools and host a wider range of concerts and musical events.

When she launched the organ restoration appeal in May last year, the then Mayor of Barnet, Councillor Nagus Narenthira, said the borough council recognised the importance of preserving the organ for its use by future generations.

Team vicar Father Sam Rossiter-Peters also stressed the importance of renovating the organ, which he said was an important piece of High Barnet’s history — “the beating heart of the parish church and the beating heart of our town.”

Mr Wallace and his son have established a workshop area where they are cleaning the organ pipes and carrying out any necessary repairs.

“It was 30 years when I first saw the organ here at the parish church.

“Then, two years ago, we were called in to undertake a full rebuild. The first task is to strip out all the pipes – and all told there are 2,100 of them.”

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Lengthy discussions ahead as Barnet Football Club presses on with plan to return the club to “where it belongs” at Underhill

Barnet Football Club has completed another stage in its attempt to gain approval from Barnet Council for the construction of a 7,000-seat stadium on playing fields at Underhill.

A planning application submitted at the end of last year has now been validated – a step which enables the club’s consultants and architects to start pre-application discussions with officers in the council’s planning department.

Club chairman Tony Kleanthous said he was delighted progress was being made.

He hoped Barnet FC would now receive the full support of the council and help bring “our incredible club back home”.

While the Bring Barnet Back Campaign, which has 5,000 supporters, is equally delighted with the publication of the application – www.newunderhill.com – there are signs of mounting opposition to the loss of open playing fields along Barnet Lane.

A petition to the council with the title “Save Barnet Playing Fields” – see www.change.org – has already attracted well over 18,000 signatures.

It opposes the loss of “a green space vital to the health and wellbeing of local residents”. 

The playing fields are described as “an irreplaceable community asset” which provide space for recreation and exercise and could not accommodate “an oversized project that local infrastructure simply cannot support”.

After first suggesting the possibility of using the school playing field of the Ark Pioneer Academy – which was built on the site of the original Underhill football ground — Mr Kleanthous has decided instead to see whether Barnet Council will give permission for a site further south along Barnet Lane.

The outline application proposes the construction of a £14 million stadium on council-owned playing fields which back on to Grasvenor Avenue and which extend south to the Dollis Valley London Loop footpath.

The club says both the academy and the school’s playing field would not be affected by the proposed stadium and the new location would move the stadium away from the densest residential area.

All the stands, except the west stand, would be a lightweight structure of modular construction and prefabrication.

Refreshment kiosks would be mobile and only function during match-days.

Barnet moved to The Hive Football Centre – midway between Edgware and Stanmore – in 2013 after a protracted dispute between Mr Kleanthous and the council over the refusal to grant planning permission for a larger stadium.

The Underhill ground was put up for sale in 2014 and was purchased by the Department of Education as a site for a new free school — Ark Pioneer Academy — which opened in 2019.

But after a well over a decade at The Hive, Mr Kleanthous says he recognises that the town of Barnet has suffered from the loss of its football club.

“This is an attempt to see if we can return to Barnet. A new stadium at Underhill would benefit the town and help ensure a sustainable future for Barnet FC.” 

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Safeguarding great crested newts and bats now an issue at planning inquiry over possible travellers’ caravan site in Mays Lane

Concern about possible harm to great crested newts and bats is on the agenda at a public inquiry which is hearing an attempt to overturn the refusal to grant planning permission for two travellers’ caravans in a field off Mays Lane, Barnet.

Barnet Council has rejected the application on the grounds that it is inappropriate development in the Green Belt.

The lack of a survey into the potential impact on great crested newts is one of the reasons for the council’s continued refusal to give approval.

Any survey to detect the presence of newts needs to be carried out between mid-March and mid-June.

Annabel Graham Paul, the council’s representative, told the inquiry that it would be unlawful to grant permission for the caravans before a risk like that had been assessed.

But Michael Rudd, who is representing Patrick Casey, who proposes to develop the site, dismissed the views of local residents that concern about newts justified rejection of the application.

He said that Barnet Council had now accepted there would be no adverse effect on bats if the caravans were placed in the field. If newts were present in the paddock conditions could be imposed to protect them.

The inquiry is being conducted online as a virtual event with the planning inspector, Graham Chamberlain, intending to take evidence at further sessions in March and April.

The application for permission for two travellers’ caravans and associated dayroom buildings was made by Mr Casey in September 2023.

The site is a two-acre paddock currently used for grazing horses and is next door to the Centre for Islamic Enlightening (formerly a Brethren Gospel Hall).

Barnet Council refused permission on the grounds that creating a site for travellers’ caravans was an inappropriate development in the Green Belt and would have an adverse effect on biodiversity and the openness of the site.

In her opening statement, Mrs Graham Paul said the council believed a caravan site would be harmful.

As there had been no previous development in the field, its only lawful use was for grazing horses.

Barnet’s new local plan had identified zero need for travellers’ and gipsy sites within the borough. Therefore, there was no justification for granting planning permission even on a temporary basis.

Her statement was supported by Councillor Tim Roberts, who represents Underhill ward.

He said Barnet had an outstanding record in providing affordable homes and there was no need for a caravan site.

If this proposal was approved, it would be followed by further applications and the field would be turned into a housing estate.

Objections to the plan were marshalled by the Quinta Village Green Residents Association which represents 150 families living nearby.

Their representative at the inquiry, Michael Fry, said the two-acre field made an important contribution to the Green Belt.

Siting caravans on the land would be an unwarranted incursion into the countryside. The residents believed – unlike the council – that development of the land would increase the risk of flooding.

People living locally had observed great crested newts on the site and they had also seen bats and feared wildlife would be at risk if the field became a caravan site. 

When outlining the case of behalf of Mr Casey, who purchased the field at an auction, Mr Rudd said the council’s original refusal to grant permission had been overtaken the government’s new definition of Grey Belt – former Green Belt land on which development could now be permitted.

He said there was already residential development close to the Mays Lane field and it was clear that it fell into the definition of Grey Belt. The paddock did not strongly contribute to the Green Belt and there was no longer justification to refuse the application.

He argued there was a demonstrable need for gipsy and travellers’ sites within the Borough of Barnet and even if the site did not meet the Grey Belt test, its impact on the Green Belt would be limited due to the small scale of the proposal.

Among the interested parties to give evidence on the opening day was the former Chipping Barnet MP Theresa Villiers who said she lived a mile away from the site at Arkley in Barnet Gate Lane (a continuation of Mays Lane).

She supported the objections being made by nearby residents and agreed that the field was a part of a vital buffer between Barnet and the Green Belt.

She disagreed with the suggestion that the paddock could now be considered Grey Belt land.

As someone who had often cycled and driven along Mays Lane she was concerned about the safety of pedestrians.

There was no footpath on this section of May Lane – just a muddy grass verge – as the pavement only extended along Mays Lane as far as the junction with Partridge Close.

“I have regularly cycled along this section of Mays Lane, and I do worry about the speed of vehicles. Even 30 miles is fast when there is no footpath.”   

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Tudor Hall to be kept for community use after successful bid to purchase High Barnet’s “unique heritage asset”

After months of uncertainty a deal has finally been agreed: High Barnet’s historic Tudor Hall in the middle of the Barnet College campus has been saved for community use.

A bid by the trustees of Barnet Museum has been accepted by the board of governors of Barnet and Southgate College.

The sale is subject to contract and the museum, which now has an exclusive right to buy the building, hopes to be able to exchange by mid-April.

There will be widespread relief among organisations in the town which feared the worst when the college put the hall up for sale on the open market in December 2023 with a guide price of £1 million.

Working out how to secure community ownership of what was originally the schoolhouse for a free grammar school granted a charter by Queen Elizabeth in 1573 became a top priority.

Barnet Museum and the Local History Society led the way and at their request the hall was declared an asset of community value by Barnet Council.

This gave the museum six months to try to put together its own bid to save the historic building from going to a commercial purchaser.

Sales agents Colliers had revealed that the college had received an offer close to the asking price from an unnamed “private education provider”.

Prospective funding was promised by the Hadley Trust which enabled an offer to be submitted before the deadline under the rules for assets of community value.

John Hall, chairman of the museum’s trustees, told the Barnet Society that he was confident that subject to satisfactory diligence contracts would be exchanged.

“Both the museum and the college are delighted that the sale has been agreed for the future preservation of this unique heritage asset.

“Steps can now be taken to start drawing up plans for the future use of the hall.

“We can begin to think now as to how best to improve and preserve the structure and re-open it for public use to meet the wishes of the Hadley Trust and the wider High Barnet community.”

Mr Hall said the aim was to make hall available for displays and exhibitions organised by the museum as well as opening up possibilities for a wider community use for events and functions.

One of the driving forces behind the museum’s bid for the hall was that ownership of the building would allow the staging of exhibitions about the Battle of Barnet and the possibility of it becoming a centre for displays about the Wars of the Roses.

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Shake-up in Barnet’s arts scene as borough council prepares to launch a long-awaited arts and culture strategy

Barnet Council is to take on the task of helping to promote and support arts and cultural events across the borough — a role previously performed by a network of volunteers.

An online guide is to be published by the council listing a wide range of arts, leisure and sports events.

Council staff will help to co-ordinate attempts to gain sponsorship and advertising.

Details of the new council-led approach were outlined to arts enthusiasts and supporters at The Bull Theatre, High Barnet, during a commemoration of the achievements of the late Pam Edwards who devoted 60 years of her life to encouraging the local arts scene.

Councillor Anne Clarke (above, left), Barnet Council’s cabinet member for culture, leisure, arts and sports, told the get together that a new strategy on arts and culture in the borough is due to be published in the spring and will set out the new framework.

A new online guide to arts, culture and sports events will be compiled by the council.

It will replace the listings published in Barnet First, the quarterly magazine published since the 1970s by a volunteer team at the Barnet Borough Arts Council.

Ros Staines (centre, above), who took over from Pam Edwards as the secretary of the arts council, welcomed the borough’s decision to take on the task of publicising the listings of local arts events.

With them above is Susi Earnshaw (far right), of The Bull Theatre, which will assist in co-ordinating the volunteer committees which organise the annual Barnet Christmas Fayre and Theatre in the Park at Oak Hill.

These two events were previously organised under the auspices of the arts council which is now to be wound up following the announcement of the introduction of a new borough-wide arts and culture strategy.

Councillor Clarke said the borough council’s aim was to link up Barnet’s cultural and sporting institutions and provide full access to a comprehensive events listing on the council’s website.

“We hope by April or May to be able to launch an arts and culture strategy for Barnet.

“Our aim is to widen access to events in the borough and bring people together, so we are reaching out to cultural and sporting groups to compile the fullest possible listing of future events.

“We have also been getting to grips with the task of seeing how we might be able to encourage sponsorship for events and perhaps support such initiatives with the help of advertising.”      

Susi Earnshaw told the gathering that she hoped that in the future The Bull Theatre – which is the home of the Susi Earnshaw Theatre School – might be able to offer a wider programme of events.

If funding could be obtained, she said she would like to appoint a full-time theatre manager who could build up a wider programme of evening and weekend events.

A look back at the life of Pam Edwards, who was a founder member of what is now the Bull Theatre, was presented by Jenny Remfry, who worked closely with Pam from the 1970s to 1990s and who was a former chair of the Barnet Centre Association.

Pam, who died in July last year at the age of 98, was a tireless supporter of the local arts scene and helped to initiate a range of well-established and much-loved artistic and community events which are now an established part of Barnet’s social calendar.

Of all the challenges she faced, by far the most ambitious was her role as a founder and organiser of the original Old Bull Arts Centre which expanded to become the Bull Theatre.

Among the many successful ventures which she helped to develop were the annual Barnet Christmas Fayre, East Barnet Community Festival and Theatre in the Park.

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Chipping Barnet MP keen to work with Barnet Friends of the Earth and other environmental groups on new community projects

Answering questions from Barnet Friends of the Earth was a chance for the Chipping Barnet MP Dan Tomlinson to say more about his plans to encourage initiatives such as helping to finance the installation of solar panels on community buildings.

A newly appointed member of the MP’s constituency staff is to be responsible for working with local groups to help develop a range of community projects including schemes to improve the environment.

Many public buildings including schools and community centres cannot afford to install solar panels and Mr Tomlinson’s aim is to encourage the development various initiatives including community energy projects.

“What we would like to do is get behind local initiatives and work with energy providers to support residents and community organisations to cut their fuel bills.

“I am sure there are probably dozens of initiatives already out there intended to help people insulate their homes and as Chipping Barnet MP I want to see what more can be done to help them.

“The same goes for community organisations faced with increasing costs of heating and lighting.

“I now have a member of my constituency staff who can work with the local community, and we want people to tell us how we can best assist.”

Wendy Alcock (above, left) founder of the Barnet community gardening initiative Incredible Edible – one of the many groups which supported the Friends of the Earth question-and-answer event – welcomed Mr Tomlinson’s appointment of a constituency staff member to help co-ordinate support for local schemes.

There was already one community energy project being developed in Friern Barnet and she was sure local activists would be keen to work with the MP and his staff on ways to improve the environment.

Dave McCormick (right) who helped organise the session with Mr Tomlinson, said they had brought together members from a wide range of groups including Chipping Barnet Foodbank, Barnet Green Spaces group, Barnet Beekeepers and Clean Air Barnet.

Mr Tomlinson said that since becoming MP constituency last year he had been surprised and encouraged by the strength of local environmental groups which made him even more determined to do what he could to support their work.

He faced some challenging questions from his Friends of the Earth audience especially on emerging government policies on climate change, house building and protecting the environment.

Labour’s proposals to limit the ability of activists to continue mounting legal challenges was a necessary step if the government was to succeed in speeding up investment in new energy and infra-structure projects.

At present there could be as many as three legal challenges to plans for wind farms, solar farms or new nuclear power stations.

The government’s aim was to limit this to one judicial review in future to stop projects being blocked for years.

“We will keep the ability to mount a challenge in the courts, but if a judge says there is no merit in a further challenge, we will not let that case go to appeal.”

Mr Tomlinson said the construction of a £100 million tunnel on the HS2 rail line to shield bats flying overhead in ancient woodland in Buckinghamshire illustrated the difficulties encountered with the current rules which said there could be no harm to wildlife in such locations.

“Rather than developers being required to spend money on projects like a bat tunnel, the government favours the creation of nature restoration fund.

“What we will probably say is that a developer must contribute money into a nature restoration fund, and it would be experts in the natural environment to say where that money should be spent. “

Mr Tomlinson said the government hoped to start consultations on such a scheme before Christmas and it would enable the country to do so much more to protect the environment because the money could be targeted on where it would achieve the most benefit.

He insisted that Labour’s push towards increasing housebuilding would be driven by a policy of releasing land in a sensible and rational way.

The government was trying to encourage a sense of optimism about what could be achieved.

“Young people in London are spending half their income on rents; some are spending more than that.

“So, we have to have a bold target on housing.”

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Bus lanes to be introduced on High Street approach to Barnet town centre — only six objections

A plan to introduce bus lanes along both sides of the busiest section of Barnet High Street — between the Wood Street junction at the Barnet parish church and Meadway — has been approved by Barnet Council and Transport for London.

Only six objections were registered after 456 letters were sent to nearby residents and businesses.

But an earlier council questionnaire and a petition organised by the former Chipping Barnet MP Theresa Villiers indicated there was much wider opposition among local car drivers and other road users.

An official consultation process was launched in July last year after TfL surveys indicated delays to both southbound and northbound bus services using the High Street.

TfL says timings will be improved by the introduction of rush-hour bus lanes – operating Monday to Saturday from 7-10am and 4-7pm.

According to data published by Barnet Council around 6,700 bus passengers either board or alight each weekday at stops in this section of the High Street which is served by 11 bus routes.

The northbound bus lane would be from the junction with Meadway to the junction with Fitzjohn Avenue and the southbound bus lane would from the High Street junction with Wood Street as far as the junction with Normandy Avenue.

No loading will be permitted when the bus lanes are operational (7-10am and 4-7pm) but the inset parking bays on the southbound side between Wood Street and Meadway will not be affected and there will be no parking loss as a result.

To improve access for buses the kerb will be re-aligned outside the Red Lion public house and a bus stop on the other side of the road, near the junction with Park Road, will be relocated by seven metres.

In setting out the case for the introduction of three-metre-wide bus lanes, the council says that passenger numbers on bus routes passing through Barnet have increased to 208,000 trips per day.

However, passengers wait approximately 20 per cent longer than intended on high-frequency routes and travelling within the borough by car is typically two to four times faster than taking the bus.

A public questionnaire was distributed last summer which produced 439 responses – and 52 per cent of those replying thought a northbound bus lane was important and 62 per cent considered a southbound lane was important.

But 54 per cent of those who responded said they feared the introduction of bus lanes would lead to increased congestion.

The questionnaire was followed by a three-week statutory consultation which closed on December 19, and which resulted in only six objections, five of which warned of increased congestion.

While the consultation was taking place Ms Villiers says she received well over 4,000 signatures to a petition against the plans for bus lanes in Barnet High Street, Whetstone High Road and Cat Hill.

Later, when TfL dropped the plan for bus lanes at Whetstone and Cat Hill, she maintained her opposition to bus lanes in High Barnet on the grounds that they offered no significant benefit and would only worsen traffic conditions at the already complicated junction of the High Street with Wood Street.

Although she was no longer the Chipping Barnet MP, she was still strongly opposed to the scheme and was anxious that residents’ views should be heard.

“I am a resident of Arkley and regularly use this route as a tube and bus passenger, car driver, pedestrian and cyclist,” said Ms Villiers.

“In my nearly two decades of representing Chipping Barnet no one has ever asked me for a bus lane in Barnet High Street.

“Barring cars and vans from using road space in this location would cause significant and unnecessary congestion.

“This would harm community life in our neighbourhood by leading to more empty shops.”     

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High Barnet drama group’s new play highlights life of Mary, wife of explorer and Hadley Green resident Dr David Livingstone

Daily life in High Barnet well over a century ago has been re-imagined for a new play which looks back even further in time to the years when the Victorian explorer Dr David Livingstone and his wife Mary lived on Hadley Green.

A plaque on the front wall of what is now known as Livingstone Cottage records that he lived there in the year 1857.

Mary Livingstone, I Presume? has been written by local dramatist Claire Fisher who has lived in the cottage for the last 11 years and who believes Mary Livingstone has not had all the recognition she deserves.

Very little has been published about Mary’s life. She was the daughter of missionaries, became a missionary herself and was accomplished African linguist.

Her knowledge of African people and languages was considered crucial to the success of Dr Livingstone’s travels.

Rehearsals by members of the High Barnet drama group the Blue Door Theatre Company are well underway for a production which is to be staged at the Bull Theatre with four performances at the end of February. (see full details below)

The play recreates events in 1913 when some of High Barnet’s well-connected residents decided the town should install a commemorative plaque at Dr Livingstone’s home on Hadley Green.

A grieving widow living in the house, Mrs Isabelle Harrington, played by Brigid Hekster (left), takes an interest in the life of Mary Livingstone, played by Sarah Munford (right).

Isabelle finds herself in conversation with Mary – a storyline which explores the lives of women in different times and places, and which presents a “feminist look at women’s hidden voices”.

Cast members take on the role of residents of the town including a butcher’s daughter, schoolboy and other local characters living on Hadley Green and at Monken Hadley.

A vital prop in the drama is a magnificent Victorian phonograph, a model of which was made by sculptor and artist Cos Gerolemou, seen here with writer and director, Claire Fisher (left).

Cos said he had studied illustrations of phonographs of the era and was impressed by the way they were decorated with acanthus leaves, an effect which he was anxious to recreate.

Claire acknowledged the challenge she has in getting Mary Livingstone, I Presume? ready for its premiere at the end of February.

“This is the first play I have written and directed, and I am so in awe of the cast in giving it their all.

“Many of our drama group have full time jobs and here they are at rehearsals, giving their time to help bring the play to life.”

Livingstone Cottage is a regular stopping point for guided walks and people visiting Hadley Green and Monken Hadley.

Since moving in Claire has been busying researching the history of both the house and the Livingstone family.

She was fascinated by what happened in 1913 when the high and mighty of Barnet decided to put up the plaque to mark the centenary of Dr Livingstone’s birth and record that he lived in the house in 1857.

Claire says she is indebted to the advice and support of Susi Earnshaw at the Bull Theatre and artistic director Siobhan Dunne. 

There will be four performances at the end of February at the Bull Theatre, High Barnet – on Thursday and Friday, 27 and 28 February, at 7.30pm and two performances on Saturday 1 March at 2pm and 7.30pm. For tickets and more information: www.thebulltheatre.com

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Trust established by tv stars Sarah Parish and James Murray to fund drama therapy sessions at Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospice

Sarah Parish, well known for her role in tv series such as Peak Practice and Pillars of the Earth, and her husband, actor James Murray, are supporting drama therapy sessions at the Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospice in Byng Road, Barnet.

Through the Murray Parish Trust, established after the death of their daughter, they help to fund children’s mental health care projects.

On a visit to Noah’s Ark the couple met Christina and her two sons, Arthur aged one, and nine-year-old Joseph, (see above), who both attend drama and music sessions at the hospice.

The trust is to fund a total of 300 drama therapy sessions — the latest initiative to get their backing since they started raising money in memory of their daughter Ella-Jayne who died in 2019 at the age of eight from a congenital heart defect.

Sarah said their trust – which has directed over £4 million to healthcare projects since it was established in 2014 – was there to help families at their darkest hours.

“When our daughter was in intensive care for four months, we witnessed at first hand the unmet need for emotional and psychological support.

“If the mounting trauma of having or being a seriously ill child isn’t properly processed with professional help, it can have devastating consequences.”

Sarah met Pasha Wild (above left), drama and movement therapist at Noah’s Ark, who stressed the value of therapy in helping children explore different parts of themselves and untangle and unpick things in a way which is helpful for them.

Christina Lucas-Dodsworth, whose son Arthur was referred to Noah’s Ark, was full of praise for Pasha’s support.

Arthur, who has severe hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy had to be transferred to a neonatal intensive care unit, and it was thought unlikely he would survive coming off a ventilator.

He was referred to Noah’s Ark, became less critical, and now attends a drama and music group, Tunes and Tales.

His brother Joseph also has drama therapy with Pasha to help him deal with the issues which can affect siblings of seriously unwell children.

Christina said Joseph was now much happier at school.

“When we told Joseph his little brother might not be here that long, it was a very difficult conversation to have. 

“Now, he is able to start opening up to his teachers and tell them what is on his mind, saying things like Arthur is in hospital today and that he’s feeling a bit worried.

“After the session with Pasha he’s much more comfortable talking about these things.

“I think the drama therapy is good at tackling the prospect of loss and it is definitely helpful for a child who doesn’t want to do the talking at that age and for whom it’s probably just far too much.”   

During their visit, Sarah and James were briefed on the challenges facing the children’s palliative care sector.

Only 17 per cent of Noah’s Ark’s income is funded centrally through the Children’s Hospice Grant and the rest is raised through voluntary donations.

Currently the hospice’s running costs stand at approximately £18,000 a day.    

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McMullen brewery says two Barnet pub closures are only a “temporary measure” and that the premises should re-open by the spring

Regular customers at The Queens Arms, Barnet, have been fearing the worst with the doors remaining locked and no sign of life inside. However, they have been assured that the closure — and also the closure of the Kings Head in Barnet High Street — are both only temporary.

Hertford brewers McMullen and Sons say they have recruited a  new tenants for the Kings Head but are still in the process of lining up a new tenant for the Queens Arms.

The Kings Head has been closed since September. McMullens told the Barnet Society the company hopes to re-open the pub by late spring or early summer.

Several potential tenants have expressed an interest in taking on the Queens Arms and the aim is to have it re-opened at the latest by the spring.

The Queens Arms, with the Everyman cinema on one side and a BP petrol station on the other, is mid-way between the Northern Line and the Great North Road.

There has been speculation on social media that this large site, which includes a car park, might be sold off for redevelopment as flats.

But McMullens stressed that the closure was only temporary.

Local concern about the future of the Queens Arms has been heightened by the grim statistics about the difficulties facing the licensed trade with reports from across the country of an average of 34 pubs closing every month.

Another McMullen pub just a few hundred yards away, The Old Red Lion at the bottom of Barnet Hill, was closed in 2015 and replaced with a group of town houses.

East Barnet village has been without a pub for almost a year since the Stonegate group closed the Prince of Wales – but locals have been encouraged to see that work has started on refurbishing the premises.

The prospect of losing the last pub in the village was such a blow, that campaigners succeeded in registering The Prince of Wales as an asset of community value – only to find that there was a last-minute reprieve. 

Stonegate Group finally confirmed that the pub had been to the sold to another pub company, Heartwood Collection, a hospitality group which runs upmarket inns and restaurants across southern England.

Heartwood have promised a “multi-million-pound refurbishment” with the bar and dining room enhanced to provide a combined capacity of 150 covers. In the rear garden there would be a terrace for up to 55 covers.  

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Likely demolition of industrial and repair workshops has prompted a lookback to days when laundry was all hand washed

Plans to demolish a group of workshops and other industrial premises mid-way between Barnet and Whetstone has revived family memories of how it was once the site of a well-regarded laundry serving customers in and around North London.

Meadow Works, just off the Great North Road, was established as a hand laundry by Sidney Morris early in the 1900s and his descendants have compiled a history of what became a flourishing local business.

An application to build a new self-storage depot on the site – see aerial view above — is to be submitted to Barnet Council in mid-February by Compound, a development company, which is opening self-storage facilities around London and the south-east.

Currently the site is occupied by a range of workshops, small garages, and vehicle repair firms many of which would be displaced.

Co-working spaces will be provided as part of the redevelopment and the application proposes new premises, fronting on to the A1000, for the well-known Hole in the Wall Cafe.

A sales brochure for the Meadow Hand Laundry shows how it looked soon after the business was opened by Sidney Morris who bought the site in 1901.

Laundry was hung out to dry in the surrounding meadows. Hampers of washed and ironed laundry were delivered by horse-drawn carts to customers in London and nearby towns and villages in Hertfordshire.

A photograph of the laundry staff indicates the scale of the business.

Much of what has since become the Meadow Works industrial estate is hidden behind large hoardings alongside the Great North Road.

These were erected by the Finchley Bill Posting Company to serve as advertising space, and they had the added advantage of preventing dust blowing from the road onto the laundry drying in the meadows.

Sidney Morris – seen above, standing far right – was born in Finchley. He was one of five brothers and a blacksmith and mechanical engineer by trade.

The photograph, which was taken outside the laundry, shows the rural nature of the land around Meadow Works as it was in 1910.

After first purchasing land for a laundry business at New Southgate, Sidney opted instead for the Great North Road and bought a meadow and house then known as Whelm Villa.

After the property was destroyed in a fire in 1910, he built the Meadow Works main building which was completed in 1914 together with a family home.

He created extra space by rebuilding and converting a former green tin church moved from its site in Athenaeum Road, Whetstone.

Buildings on the site were requisitioned by the Army during first and second World Wars and as the laundry business declined, Sidney encouraged his sons to build up an alternative enterprise as bakery engineers.

For a time, the factory was let out to a tailoring firm called Taylors but by the early 1970s Morris Brothers (Bakery Engineers) was well established by brothers Jack and Dan Morris (Jack is second from the right, above).

When Sidney Morris purchased Whelm Villa it was the only building on the Great North Road between Barnet and Whetstone and it was thought originally to have been a coaching inn or hotel.

Traffic along the main road has continued down the years to offer plenty of business opportunities.

In the 1920s there was a coffee stall at the corner with Lyonsdown Road which was owned by a Mr and Mrs Francis.

After criticism from local councillors about the appearance of their stall, which was a caravan on wheels, they rented space from the laundry and opened what became the Hole in the Wall Cafe – named because it was hidden behind the advertising hoardings.

Recollections about the history of Meadow Works, and those who lived and worked there, have been collected from members of the wider Morris family by Jane Polledri (left) and Barbara Vallé, great granddaughter, and granddaughter of Sidney Morris. 

Jane said the demolition of buildings on the site, including The Whelm, which was the original home of the Morris family, had prompted her to start compiling a record of what they could all remember.

“It is sad to think that a place which holds so many happy family memories is about to be demolished.

 “I have learned so much about the history of the place. The original building, Whelm Villa, was thought to have been a coaching inn or hotel on the Great North Road.

“Family legend has it that Dick Turpin or even Charles Dickens stopped off there.

“We know there was stabling for horses and one of my uncles remembers seeing bricks on the porch floor which outlined the name ‘Whelm Hotel’.

“We are not sure where the name Whelm came from. It could be a corruption of the word elm, after the elm trees alongside the Great North Road, and well – after the well behind the house.

“Between the wars a man stored a small aeroplane in the field at the back of the house and used take off flying in the direction of the Odeon cinema.”

Jane’s mother Barbara, who is 85, says she spent her school days visiting with her mother Doris and grandmother Kate Morris at Meadow Works.

“My mother worked in the laundry with her two sisters. There was always so much to do and see.

“There was a large greenhouse, stables for horses and carts, styes for four pigs, chickens and fields with a large pond where grandfather’s children used to swim.”

After buildings were requisitioned by the Army requisitioned during the Second World War – and used to store furniture for people whose homes had been bombed – Barbara remembers seeing soldiers there and sometimes sitting on their knees.

After the war German prisoners of war were assigned to work at Meadow Works before returning home. They helped feeding the horses, pigs and chickens.

“Now the fields and meadows that I remember – and a house where I spent such a happy time – is about to become a distant memory,” said Barbara.