I have been in Germany for the last few weeks for my mums 80th birthday party
So here are some tweets about good ideas we can take from Germany, except maybe this 1st one, Germany has elections in September, there are lots of posters everywhere, mainly of politicians faces! 1/
The 2nd thing we must definitely have more of in London are German cakes (pics from my mums birthday party)
1st pic Friday choice
2,3,4th pic Saturday choices 😀 2/
We already have some of these in Tower Hamlets
Places where people can leave their books for others to borrow & read - a local residents library
Germany just does it more professionally & at scale 3/
We have something similar in Canary Wharf but if you buy glass bottles of apple juice for example, you can return them (a year later in my case) and get refunds for each bottle
Supermarket has a machine that will scan bottles & issue a refund that you take to the till 4/
My mums litter bin with 5 compartments in her kitchen
-Paper
-Plastic
-Organic/food
-General
-Metals
In her apartment block different rubbish bins for most rubbish types or nearby other receptacles for glass & plastics
TH level of recycling is around 22% by comparison 5/
Taking my niece to playgrounds in Germany is depressing, she loves them but when I compare to what we have locally in TH I despair at the comparison
Memmingen @StadtMM the town has a population of around 45,000 people, smaller than the IoD, but far more playgrounds 6/
I cannot even show you the best playground as always full of kids but is huge and water-based, with all kinds of shallow water play activities + 3 beach volley ball pitches
They also build classrooms in the woods nearby 7/
The Germans even build new playgrounds in areas with new housing developments!
One large new playground next to a new 5 storey block
In London, we rely on private sector developers to build new playgrounds at the edges
In Germany, the local government builds them 8/
It is not just formal playgrounds
Throughout the town are places where kids can play or
climb or
jump on golden tiles that each make a different musical note or
walk in the stream (its cold!) 9/
Although we have underground car parking in TH it is much more common in Germany, makes for a more efficient use of space
That park with the town theatre in the background is also an underground car park with a park & playground above it
Reduces impact of cars at street level 10/
Dogs are well catered for as well
Need a bag to pick up dog poo?
In the parks, you will find free poo bags
Just take one
I think part paid for by advertising on the bags 11/
Did I mention cake? 12/
Some other good ideas
Really solid durable play surfaces
Maps & historical information about the town, paid for with advertising
Bins & clear rules at playgrounds
Audible timers for blind people at road crossings 13/
This year lots of areas with bee friendly wild flowers in verges & in parks 14/
Many beautiful houses & small apartment blocks
I despair at the quality of equivalent English new development
(although my mum says german standards slipping)
May comment later about Munich 15/
I will comment later about cars and liveable streets, this being southern Germany (BMW, Audi & Mercedes Benz all based nearby) but cycling & pedestrian better than in London
This is the town hall (with the modern office annex to the right)
Memmingen has its own Mayor 16/
This is the main administration building
German local government is much more local than its equivalent & has real powers, Memmingen town with 45,000 people has social infrastructure similar to that of the whole of Tower Hamlets with 330,000 people
More later on this 17/
I am not saying everything is perfect, you could easily write tweets in reverse about taking English ideas to Germany
& noticeable that more graffiti than a year ago
But at a local level the Germans do some things better
Plus it has its own brewery! memminger-brauerei.de/brewery/histor…
18/
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This @TheEconomist article is very strange, odd & not really based on much evidence
It also repeats various myths without evidence, misses the big issues, and therefore comes to the wrong conclusions
A 🧵on its inaccuracies
a. no mention of leasehold or commonhold at all ! 1/
b. it correctly says these buildings are expensive which is true but then talks about land value in England as one main reason why tall towers in big cities are expensive
Economist article in black, my comments in red
The main reason why tall towers are expensive is 2/
because construction is v expensive
As evidence this agreement that Westferry Printworks could only deliver 21% affordable housing on a big site agreed by the developer, Tower Hamlets Council & the GLA
Construction costs £630 m
v
Land value £28m
v
Taxes (CIL & s106) = £49 m 3/
The issues are more extensive than @PlanningMag article states
Councillors who made the decision to reject the resident's Yes vote in favour of the business No vote
Incorrectly, used the wrong business turnout % to suggest a higher proportion of businesses voted than residents 1/
Proportionally more residents voted than businesses
Councillors were also not officially told that:
Some of the business votes were illegal (three people voted more than twice)
49.5% of all the business vote came from a single office building
Cllrs also not told that there was
2/
an active Police investigation underway
"amid suspicions of a “possible conspiracy to subvert the referendum”, allegation of multiple voting, and claims that some business owners had exerted “undue influence” to sway the vote against the council’s plan" standard.co.uk/news/london/po…
3/
Problems with Homes of Multiple Occupation (HMO) & why a man died due to Council inaction
A man died earlier this month in a flat fire, had the Council been more proactive and responsive he might still be alive but an attempt to get them to do so in January 2021 was rejected 1/
18 people, primarily students and delivery couriers from Bangladesh, lived in a 2-bedroom former Council flat at the time of the fire, 22 beds were seen in the property including in the kitchen (mainly bunk beds)
2/
The owner had bought the leasehold flat in 2005 but the freeholder was Tower Hamlets Council and the managing agent Tower Hamlets Homes, their arm's length management agency
Neighbours made complaints about number of people & leaks from the bathroom in late 2021 and 2022
3/
New independent private primary school in Canary Wharf planning application
CW Group has applied to build a new 9-storey (thin but tall) nursery and primary school in the middle of Wood Wharf
402 pupils (150 nursery pupils and 252 primary school pupils) and 80 FTE staff 1/
Summary here constructing-london.com/wood-wharf-sch…
This would be a fee-paying school separate from the Mulberry Primary state school already built opposite this proposed new school so there would be 2 schools on site
2/
It will be run by inspiredlearninggroup.co.uk/about-us/about… and would be the 3rd private school in the area including River House & Faraday
I assume CW Group are behind the idea of building a new private school as will generate a long run income and be popular with some of their new residents
3/
Local Plan consultation response - why the Local Plan needs to change
1st round of consultations on the new Local Plan ended on Wednesday - 2nd round of consultation should be later this year after they publish the draft policies
I wrote a 13 page response to it raising some 1/
of some of my issues with it & planning here in general
Fundamentally the objective of recent London and Local Plans has been to push most development in Tower Hamlets to Aldgate, Aberfeldy, Isle of Dogs including Blackwall & other parts of Poplar 2/
Development in most of the rest of Tower Hamlets is discouraged even when they have better transport links and better infrastructure than the growth areas listed above 3/
I went to the @ConHome Defence & Security Conference today
Several questions from audience about what will happen in Ukraine
All those who answered said, they don't know the outcome
That assumes Britain has a passive role
Britain could determine the outcome by helping Ukraine 1/
More western weapons would put Ukraine in a stronger position to win
(in the same way western support helped USSR defeat Nazi Germany) @BWallaceMP mentioned 250 vehicles sent by Britain
But Ukrainians crowdfunded to buy 101 ex-British Army armoured
vehicles themselves
(Ukrainians in UK find this harder to do as UK donation websites won't allow similar campaigns in the UK to buy 'weapons')
That we had 101 retired armoured vehicles incl. ambulances ready to go but were on the open market for sale suggests Britain not as
3/