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WHAT MAKES A PLACE SPECIAL? Newtown exercise. Workshop output. Note. These outputs reflect the discussion at the seminar The responses are those of the participating groups as fed back in plenary rather than the product of a detailed analysis
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WHAT MAKES A PLACE SPECIAL? Newtown exercise Workshop output
Note • These outputs reflect the discussion at the seminar • The responses are those of the participating groups as fed back in plenary rather than the product of a detailed analysis • The report therefore illustrates what a workshop of this kind can produce; it is not a finished discussion of either character area
Investigation • Brainstorm features in the built environment that contribute to an understanding of character • Suggest the features that are key to analysing any area of a town • Apply these generic features to an analysis of Sycamore Drive
Character elements • Building materials • Palette • Street layout (grid, etc) • Building line • Roof line • Density • Use/status/class • Variety/uniformity • Boundaries (hedges/railings)
Character elements • Relationship to topography • Continuity with earlier landscape features • Landscape treatment • Greenery • Amenity • Height/massing • Building style/date/uniformity • Fenestration detail • Survival of original features • Public and private space
Character elements • Movement patterns • Permeability/legibility • Pavements, footpaths, lanes • Use of rear to properties • Change of use • Adaptability
Penyglodda • Grid layout • 2-3 storeys • Materials: brick, render, slate, cast iron • Building line directly to pavement • Surviving original detail (porches, doors, window detail) • Lower windows sash/upper casements • Back to back, high density, terraces • Use: residential/handloom weaving lofts • Use: some “factories” (conversions)
Penygloddfa • Some gaps in fabric • Topography (sloping site) • Layout reflects earlier field boundaries • Uniformity of period linked to development of handloom weaving and growth in E 19C/uniformity of style • On-street parking • Yards to rear (note openings to yards) • Lack of street trees; plot rears and vacant sites adapted to gardens/green space
Penygloddfa • Little modern infill • Sharp boundaries to character area and separation from Edwardian and later upslope and to W • Higher status residential in Crescent St? • Corner shop, pub, museum • Compact area • Wide streets • Attractive detailing (brick, timber detail) • Some Regency features to more pretentious units: arches, hoodmoulds, doorcases)
Sycamore Drive • Part of private housing estate: contrasts with public housing of 1970s (predominant in modern Newtown) but part of recent expansion as service and retail centre • Development in phases (Beechwood Drive/Brynglas Ave earliest, pre 1994); still building 2009 at NW end of Sycamore Drive (laid out parallel to Old Barn Lane post 1994) • Spine road/culs de sac • Follows contours of hillside • Mainly semi-detached, some link with front and rear gardens
Sycamore Drive • Wide, curving spine road • Mainly two storey but recent three-storey town houses • Brick (some variation of shade/palette), uPVC • Uniformly residential • Individual treatment of frontages/gardens • Some conversion of front gardens to hard standing • Later development is denser • Variety offered by variation of house type and individualisation of private space, but not locally distinctive
Sycamore Drive • Distant from amenities • Car dependent/wide streets • Parking in garages/hard standing • Recent town houses have no front garden space to reflect needs of multiple car ownership • Limited connection with earlier street pattern • Typically L20C/E21C suburban: “anytown” • Backed by farmland and hillside – attractive urban edge setting • Solar panelling reflects adaptation in energy supply by individual owner