Image courtesy of Jon Spencer: http://www.jonspencer.co.uk/

A Building Exploratory Project for High Street 2012

The People’s Archive project aims to create a resource for the people who live, work and play around Bow Road. We are gathering the reminiscences, stories and opinions of local people in order to create an archive of this remarkable part of east London. Bow Road forms part of ‘High Street 2012’, the 6km route from the City of London to the Olympic Park.

You can follow our progress here on the blog, and get involved by voting for your favourite building on High Street 2012 on the Peoples' Favourite Buildings website.

Wednesday, 9 May 2012

The project continues...


Over the next few months, we plan to bring together the groups that we have worked with, in additional discussion and photography sessions. We hope to facilitate sessions where the older people and the young people we have worked with meet and share their experiences of Bow Road and the project so far. We’re sure that this type of intergenerational meeting will provide a rich experience.

We will update this blog with information and pictures about these sessions once they take place. In the meantime, you may want to follow our other activities along High Street 2012, by visiting the Peoples Panorama blog.

Friday, 17 February 2012

Working with older people

Karen Elmes, the Building Exploratory’s lifelong learning officer, writes about the creation and delivery of a series of workshops with three older peoples groups in Bromley by Bow: the ‘Young @ Art’ group, the ‘Bangladeshi Grandparents Group’ and users of the Poplar Day Centre.

“In developing and delivering the workshops we strived to tailor sessions to the needs, interests and capacities of each individual group. We ran virtual walking tours along Bow Road at the Poplar Day Centre and Young @ Art, where people’s reduced mobility and frailty ruled out the possibility of walking tours. The virtual walking tour involved projecting films taken from a bus along Bow Road, stopping at various points to discuss buildings and places. This, along with a collection of historic maps and photographs of Bow Road served as an excellent introduction to the process of recovering people’s memories.

A creative session for Young @ Art encouraged participants to use their artistic talents to represent their memories and experiences of Bow Road. Two building visits for the Bangladeshi Grandparents group gave this group the opportunity to visit two fascinating buildings to which they had never been to before - the newly refurbished St Mary’s Church and the Police Stables behind Bow Road Police Station. For most of the group it was their first visit to a church and they were captivated by the experience. The visit delivered an unanticipated outcome of promoting interfaith community cohesion. We’d love to develop the links that we have established with both the church and the Bangladeshi Grandparents, to explore this potential further in the future.

We used two means for recording older people’s stories; some have been recorded in writing by volunteers who participated in the sessions and some have been recorded in audio during one-to-one conversations with people who had specific stories relating to Bow Road. This has generated some fascinating insights into people’s lives and their connections to the street and its buildings.”