Welwyn Garden City

Welwyn Garden City

View to the northwest from the Parkway Fountain
Welwyn Garden City
Welwyn Garden City shown within Hertfordshire
Population 46,619 [1]
48,380 (2011 Census)[2]
OS grid reference TL245135
 London 20 mi (32 km)
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WELWYN GARDEN CITY
Postcode district AL7, AL8
Dialling code 01707
Police Hertfordshire
Fire Hertfordshire
Ambulance East of England
EU Parliament East of England
UK Parliament

Welwyn Garden City (/ˈwɛlɪn/ WEL-in) is a town in Hertfordshire, England. It is located approximately 20 miles (32 km) from Kings Cross, London. Welwyn Garden City was the second garden city in England (founded 1920) and one of the first new towns (designated 1948).

It is unique in being both a garden city and a new town and exemplifies the physical, social and cultural planning ideals of the periods in which it was built.

History

Welwyn Garden City was founded by Sir Ebenezer Howard in 1920 following his previous experiment in Letchworth Garden City. Howard had called for the creation of planned towns that were to combine the benefits of the city and the countryside and to avoid the disadvantages of both. The Garden Cities and Town Planning Association had defined a garden city as

"a town designed for healthy living and industry of a size that makes possible a full measure of social life but not larger, surrounded by a rural belt; the whole of the land being in public ownership, or held in trust for the community"[3]

In 1919, Howard arranged for the purchase of land in Hertfordshire that had already been identified as a suitable site. On 29 April 1920 a company, Welwyn Garden City Limited, was formed to plan and build the garden city, chaired by Sir Theodore Chambers. Louis de Soissons was appointed as architect and town planner, C.B Purdom as finance director and Frederic Osborn as secretary.[3] The first house was occupied just before Christmas 1920.[4]

View along the Parkway to the south from the memorial garden to Louis de Soissons in May 2017

The town is laid out along tree-lined boulevards with a neo-Georgian town centre.[5] It has its own environmental protection legislation, the Scheme of Management for Welwyn Garden City.[6] Every road has a wide grass verge. The spine of the town is Parkway, a central mall or scenic parkway, almost a mile long. The view along Parkway to the south was once described as one of the world's finest urban vistas.[7] Older houses are on the west side of Parkway and newer houses on the east side[5]

The original planners intended that all the residents of the garden city would shop in one shop and created the Welwyn Stores, a monopoly which caused some local resentment.[3] Commercial pressures have since ensured much more competition and variety, and the Welwyn Stores were in 1984 taken over by the John Lewis Partnership.

In 1948, Welwyn Garden City was designated a new town under the New Towns Act 1946 and the Welwyn Garden City company handed its assets to the Welwyn Garden City Development Corporation. Louis de Soissons remained as its planning consultant. That year The Times compared Welwyn Garden City with Hatfield. It described Welwyn Garden City as a world-famous modern new town developed as an experiment in community planning and Hatfield as an unplanned settlement created by sporadic building in the open country. "Welwyn, though far from perfect, made the New Towns Act possible, just as Hatfield, by its imperfection, made it necessary."[8] In 1966, the Development Corporation was wound up and handed over to the Commission for New Towns. The housing stock, neighbourhood shopping and green spaces were passed to Welwyn Hatfield District Council between 1978 and 1983.[3]

There was a large general hospital in the town, the Queen Elizabeth II Hospital, but in 2014 emergency and inpatient services were transferred to the Lister Hospital in Stevenage. A new hospital, completed in June 2015, offers outpatient, diagnostic and ante/postnatal services.

A shopping mall, the Howard Centre, was built in the 1980s, incorporating the original railway station.

There is a resurgence of interest in the ethos of the garden city and the type of neighbourhood and community advocated by Howard, prompted by the problems of metropolitan and regional development and the importance of sustainability in government policy.[9]

Roman baths are preserved in a steel vault underneath junction 6 of the A1(M) and are open to visitors.[5]

The local civic society, which aims to preserve and conserve the garden city ethos, is the Welwyn Garden City Society.

The international ecumenical Focolare movement has its British headquarters at Welwyn Garden City.

In 2008, during construction of a site for HSBC, 60 unsecured argonite fire suppressant cylinders discharged, killing one person, injuring six others and causing substantial damage. Three firms were later convicted of health and safety offences.[10][11]

Population

Welwyn Garden City had a population of 46,619 in 2011,[12] and 51,735 (estimated) in 2016.[13]

Governance

Welwyn Garden City is part of the Welwyn Hatfield Borough and comprises seven local authority wards. It is in the county of Hertfordshire and the parliamentary constituency of Welwyn Hatfield. The MP for Welwyn Hatfield is Grant Shapps (Conservative). The nearby town of Hatfield[14] and the village of Welwyn[15] have parish councils with limited responsibilities, but Welwyn Garden City has none, although it had one between 1921 and 1927.[16]

Geography

Welwyn Garden City experiences an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification Cfb) similar to almost all of the United Kingdom. The town experiences warm summers and cold winters.

Climate data for Welwyn Garden City
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 8
(46)
9
(48)
12
(54)
14
(57)
18
(64)
21
(70)
23
(73)
20
(68)
20
(68)
16
(61)
11
(52)
8
(46)
15
(59)
Average low °C (°F) 5
(41)
5
(41)
6
(43)
8
(46)
10
(50)
13
(55)
15
(59)
16
(61)
13
(55)
11
(52)
8
(46)
5
(41)
10
(50)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 50.7
(1.996)
39.9
(1.571)
31.7
(1.248)
46.2
(1.819)
38.9
(1.531)
46.4
(1.827)
33.1
(1.303)
43.6
(1.717)
49.7
(1.957)
70.7
(2.783)
58.1
(2.287)
56.9
(2.24)
565.9
(22.28)
Source: [17]

Economy

Ever since its inception as a garden city, Welwyn Garden City has attracted a strong commercial base with several designated employment areas. Among the companies trading in the town are:

  • Henleys Medical Supplies Ltd
  • Baxters
  • British Lead Mills
  • Cashbrokers
  • The Danish Bacon Company (DBC foodservice)
  • Emis Professional Publishing
  • Figleaves.com
  • HSBC's high-security global data centre
  • Roche
  • Ocado
  • PayPoint
  • Ratcliff Palfinger
  • Duncan Print Group
  • Sigma Corporation
  • Tesco has a head office at Shire Park, and a business park in the north of the town.
  • VEGA Group
  • Welwyn Tool Group (formerly Welwyn Tool Company)
  • Xerox[18]
  • Hertfordshire County Council's County supplies and contract services centre
The Shredded Wheat factory as it was in 2007 while still in operation. The landmark Shredded Wheat sign, visible from trains arriving in Welwyn Garden City, has now been removed.

Welwyn Garden City was once well known as the home of the breakfast cereal Shredded Wheat, formerly made by Nabisco. The disused Shredded Wheat factory with its large white silos is a landmark on rail routes between London and the north of England.[3] The factory, designed by de Soissons and built in 1924 by Peter Lind & Company, is a Grade II listed building. Cereal production moved to Staverton, Wiltshire in 2008 when the owner, Nestlé, decided that the factory required significant and prohibitive investment, due to the age of the building. Tesco applied to build a new supermarket on the site, but planning permission was refused by the local authority in January 2012 after significant public protest.[19]

The former supermarket chain Fine Fare had its head office in the town at one time, as did ICI's Plastics Division.

There is now a redeveloped and enlarged Sainsburys in the town centre, and a Morrisons in Panshanger along Black Fan Road.

Welwyn Garden City's proximity to London makes it a convenient commuter town.

Transport

Welwyn Garden City railway station with the Howard Centre behind it in May 2017

Buses are provided by Arriva Shires & Essex, Centrebus and Uno, with some assistance from Hertfordshire County Council. Arriva's 300/301 Centraline service links Welwyn Garden City to the major nearby towns of Stevenage, Hatfield, St Albans and Hemel Hempstead, as well as neighbouring villages Woolmer Green and Knebworth. The 301 additionally connects both the nearby hospitals in Stevenage and Welwyn Garden City, while the 300 provides a direct link to recreational areas such as Stanborough Lakes in Welwyn Garden City and Verulamium Roman town in St Albans. Service 314 is provided by Centrebus, connecting Welwyn to Codicote and Hitchin. The bus station is close to the railway station.

Uno buses serve the nearby towns of Hatfield, St Albans, Potters Bar, Hemel Hempstead, Watford and Barnet. Uno buses also serve further out into North London. Both the 601 and 653 also provide links to the University of Hertfordshire.

Green Line bus route 724 runs a service from Welwyn Garden City to Heathrow Airport, stopping at stops such as Watford and Rickmansworth.

The railway station is in the town centre. Trains are operated by Great Northern and run south to London King's Cross and London Moorgate and north to Stevenage, Hitchin, Cambridge and Peterborough.

Welwyn Garden City is well-served by major arterial road routes, namely the A1(M) and the A414. The Great North Road also passes around it next to the A1(M). In addition, there are other links to St Albans, Harpenden and Luton (via B653), Hatfield (via A1000 and A1001) and Hertford (via B1000). During the growth in car ownership in the 1950s and 1960s, the town struggled to build enough garages or hard-standing spaces for the additional vehicles, which has led to many properties losing their traditional hedges and front gardens to accommodate driveways.

Education

Welwyn Garden City has five secondary schools:

Tewin Water School moved from Digswell to Monk's Walk School in 1998 and was later renamed Knightsfield School to create links with hearing pupils.

The former Sir John Newsom School merged with Stanborough School on 1 September 1998.[20]

Monks Walk School, Stanborough School, and Sir Frederic Osborn School are part of the Welwyn Hatfield 14–19 Consortium, which includes a variety of secondary schools in Welwyn Hatfield.

Culture

Welwyn Garden City cinema and library in May 2017

Welwyn Garden City's Music Society gave its first concert in 1921 within weeks of the town's foundation; its choir and orchestra, led by James Ross, have performed a regular concert season in the town ever since. The town also boasts a Concert Club, which promotes chamber music recitals, and a Male Voice Choir. Welwyn Garden City Band was founded in 1934.

Sport and leisure

The Gosling Sports Centre houses a dry ski slope, golf driving range, indoor and outdoor tennis, squash, football pitches, an athletics track, velodrome, a gym and bowls.[21]

Welwyn Garden City football team founded in 1921, known as the Citizens, are based in Herns Lane. The King George V playing field, on the boundary of the old Hatfield Hyde village, was once used by the England football team for training.[22]

There are three golf courses: Panshanger, owned and operated by the borough council, Mill Green Golf Course located in Gypsy Lane and the Welwyn Garden City Golf Club, of which Nick Faldo was once a member.[23]

The Digswell Park Sports Association brings together Welwyn Garden City Cricket Club,[24] Welwyn Garden City Bowls Club and the Digswell Park Sports and Social Club, at Digswell Park, Knightsfield. Welwyn Garden City Cricket Club was founded in 1921 and runs 7-weekend senior sides along with a youth cricket programme. WGCCC First XI competes in the Saracens Herts Premier League.

The town has a rugby club called Welwyn RFC.

The Stanborough Park and lakes are the venue for a free annual Water Carnival and firework display and a 5 November fireworks display.

See also

References

  1. Office for National Statistics, 2001 Census, Key statistics for HCC settlements Archived 26 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Usual resident populations
  2. "Town Population 2011". City Populations. Retrieved 3 November 2016.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 Maurice de Soissons, Welwyn Garden City, Cambridge, Publications for Companies, 1988
  4. Review of C. B. Purdom, The Building of Satellite Towns, J.M. Dent & Sons Ltd, 1925
  5. 1 2 3 "Hertfordshire.com". Archived from the original on 17 August 2009. Retrieved 24 September 2009.
  6. Welwyn Hatfield Borough Council Archived 30 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine.
  7. Welwyn Garden City Conservation Area Appraisal 2006.
  8. The Times, Saturday, 3 January 1948, p. 5
  9. David Schuyler, From Garden City to Green City: The Legacy of Ebenezer Howard, Johns Hopkins, 2002
  10. Fatal Welwyn Garden City explosion: Three firms admit safety failings. Welwyn Hatfield Times, 20 March 2013. Accessed 26 February 2016
  11. 'Flying gas cylinder' firms fined over death and injuries. BBC News, Northampton, 8 July 2013. Accessed 26 February 2016
  12. Welwyn Garden City is made up of seven wards in the borough of North Hertfordshire http://ukcensusdata.com
  13. Welwyn Garden City is made up of seven wards in the borough of North Hertfordshire https://www.citypopulation.de/php/uk-england-eastofengland.php?cityid=E35001153
  14. Parish Councils
  15. Parish councils
  16. National Archives
  17. "Averages for Welwyn Garden City".
  18. "Xerox Ltd". www.ihertfordshire.co.uk. ihertfordshire. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
  19. Tesco scheme for Broadwater Road http://www.broadwaterroad.com
  20. School Index
  21. "Gosling Sports Park". Better.org.uk. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  22. "Welwyn Garden City Football Club". welwyngardencityfc.org.uk. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  23. "Panshanger Golf Complex". panshangergolfshop.co.uk. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
  24. "Welwyn Garden City Cricket Club". hitssports.com. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.