Preston centre in particular seems to be evolving fast as spaces are changing. On Pitt Street the six terrace houses that looked out of place, surrounded by car parks, have now vanished and have been replaced with...er, a car park. This area is now one giant car park mainly serving the Lancashire County Council and Records offices. It's part of the criteria now, because everyone drives, to create space for cars. Over twenty years following this changing urban landscape, the new spaces created are likely to be - or already are:
a) a car park
b) student accommodation or luxurious/professional accommodations
c) generic new offices (to let)
d) umm...a car park
Change has also arrived at Vernon's Lodge; a fishing pit, central to the land that merges with Penwortham and Lostock Hall. To this day, there's the mystery of rusted green pipework that sits above a concrete platform with an opening facing the fishing pit. Something existed before, but what?
The other surrounding space has been a combination of 'edgeland', marginal-brown field and green belt for many years. It was this latest visit that things were different.
I heard the diggers first and could make out a high wall, obscuring a mound of red rubble. Everything behind had been flattened. The factory was no more. It had been an idea today to investigate again, to see into that place as I only had photographs from the outside. A dog walker told me they were preparing it for flats and the workers were redirecting the flow from the fishing pit as a 'feature'.
"About time, the factory's been closed fifteen year and they only knocked it down twelve month ago. I'm just waiting for the right pay out. We should get that and another house." He lived behind a row of houses which are to be part of the redevelopment. The houses on Sunny Bank, right next to where the factory was are still there. "Oh yeah, people are still living in them. They be waiting as well, till the time is right."