Elephant and Castle Shopping Centre To Stay?

Elephant and Castle shopping centre from Metro Central Height

The Elephant and Castle shopping centre - picture by zefrog

A piece of news that is unlikely to please many residents of Elephant and Castle came closer to being confirmed last night at a Southwark Council Assembly meeting.

When Cllr Tim McNally challenged (includes audio) the Council leader, Peter John, on rumours that the Elephant and Castle shopping centre (which is not owned by the Council) was now unlikely to be demolished, John’s response was that he is “absolutely committed to see the shopping centre improved at Elephant and Castle”.

He added “We have the potential for something which — to all intents and purposes — is a brand new shopping centre for Elephant and Castle at a much earlier stage than we were looking at just nine months ago.”

This seems to be signalling a departure from the original plans (supported until now by Cllr John) to demolish the existing building; something that local residents have long perceived as one of the key elements of the regeneration project.

As Europe’s first covered shopping mall, the shopping centre has undergone many facelifts over the years. Most famously it was painted bright pink in the 1980s, as yet another attempt to try and counter the lack of popularity it has wallowed in since its opening in 1965.

According to Cllr McNally, spruce-up rumours vary from the addition of glass fronts to just another lick of paint — blue, this time.

While the building itself is not as poor a space as some may think, it’s clearly in need of more than just redecorating. We suggest a solution might be to strip the building of the various ungainly appendages it has gathered over its lifespan of nearly 50 years and return it to its original glory. That’s the original intended glory, not the reality of its opening tarnished by budget cuts that ensured corners had to be cut and compromises made on quality.

Meanwhile, with the regeneration agreement — which doesn’t include the shopping centre — finally signed in July last year, preparatory work has started on the site of the Oakmayne Plaza building (at the top of the New Kent Road, to the east of the shopping centre), which was originally planned for completion in 2007. This will see the creation of homes and student accommodation, a multiplex cinema, a supermarket and a selection of shops and restaurants overlooking a new market square.

The first part of the demolition of the mostly abandoned Heygate Estate, has started in Rodney Place while Ministry of Sound is still fighting a potential tower block on its doorstep. Another tower project, 360 by Richard Rogers, which had been buried with the economic downturn, was resurrected last month.

The regeneration process is expected to take about 15 years. Find out more on the Elephant and Castle development website.

  • mary

    As and E&C resident I’m really pleased at this news. The Shopping Centre is a part of the history of the place and I would much rather see some care and money put into it than for it to be demolished totally. There are some great little gems in there. However agree it’s going to take more than a lick of paint. Good to see movement on Oakmeyne and Heygate too.

  • Anonymous

    As an E&C resident I’m horrified by this news. The shopping centre is part of the history of the place, like Bubonic plague, and I would rather see if erased from history with a giant multi-dimensional space rubber.
    ;)

    Great post.

  • mary

    Oh I miss the Bubonic plague, the fact it’s gone is just more evidence of gentrification gone mad.

    I honestly think alot can be done with the place to bring back to – as author puts it – its original intended glory. Mainly I’m glad to see the regeneration moving.

    This audio slideshow about the centre is, I think, really great

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/london/hi/people_and_places/newsid_8925000/8925801.stm

  • http://twitter.com/zefrog Nicolas Chinardet

    I think the problem is that building is simply in the wrong place. While something similar to the splendid job done on the Royal Festival Hall would indeed by possible, the location and environment of the building mean that it should simply be demolished. Nothing can be done to the area without removing the building and rearranging the space. and that is what is needed here.

    The 1960′s was about what was then considered progress: the buildings and the car, not the human. The area has paid for this dearly. remodelling the area with the human in mind could bring back some of the old vitality and make the area much more livable.

  • James

    This is just so disappointing. The value that could be brought to the area by demolishing the dreadful shopping centre must surely outweight the cost.

  • http://japangold.blogspot.com/ Mario88

    Good post, hope everything turns out well.

  • http://twitter.com/edwardclarke Edward Clarke

    Seems weird there isn’t a commercial appetite for demolishing it – what’s the problem?

    • Anonymous

      The new viewing corridor (from Serpentine Bridge, toward Westminster) introduced by Boris prevents further high rise on the site, so they can’t rebuild it and create any more rentable space that there already is (the rebuilding plans entailed returning currently enclosed land to public use).

      • http://twitter.com/zefrog Nicolas Chinardet

        what constitutes “high rise” though? they could still probably build up to about 10 floors if not the same height as Hannibal House, non?

        • Anonymous

          The limit is approx 65 meters, 16-20 floors depending on floor height (strata is 148m)

          Oakemane plaza will be taller than this, 24 floors I think…

          But the master-plan called for 40 on the shopping centre site. They need to make LOTS of money from it to pay for all the infrastructure changes around the roundabout and tube station (which is £200m on it’s own)…

  • http://twitter.com/zefrog Nicolas Chinardet

    This today: New homes to be built at extended Elephant & Castle Shopping Centre http://www.london-se1.co.uk/news/view/5219

    • Anonymous

      I’m still confused by where these go, on the roof? Surely it can’t be built to support that much weight, it wasn’t planned for more oversite development. Maybe they are going to turn Hannibal house residential?

      • http://twitter.com/zefrog Nicolas Chinardet

        I have no idea. They don’t have space to expand the mall area either, really….