Apologies, for the version of this article I posted earlier, for some unknown reason an previous draft was published ,and not the finished article. Mea culpa.
I want to go back now to the Tyneside of the early 1970s and one of the locations used in the film 'Get Carter', the Modernist St Cuthbert's Village, Gateshead. (I really can't show you the scene in question, not simply because of any reasons of copyright.) It serves as a prime example of the sort of urban re-development that took in the first three decades after the end of WWII in Britain's major cities, as local and national government tried to solve the housing crisis. It was miles away, figuratively and physically, from the 'New House Book'.
What was produced, however, was a sort of simulacrum, a stand-in for an actual village, like one of those cream substitutes so beloved of food manufacturers Post-War. It had neither church nor green, nor school. Facilities were planned but they were late off the starting block and arrived after the residents. There was no traditional urbanism. It was a sort of enclosed community, introverted and not wholly integrated in the warp and weft of the community that surrounded it. A sort of ghetto.
There were problems almost immediately - flats were damp and roofs leaked. The project limped on for some 25 years before it was demolished. Its fate matched that of another council estate of the period, the nearby Clasper Village.
I now want to skip over the Pennines to Manchester and this BBC documentary, from 1974, about the redevelopment of the city on the 1960s. The documentary presents the council as struggling to keep up with the effects of its redevelopment policy, including apportioning blame to its own tenants. We underestimate the complete dislocation that working class people suffered as a result of these schemes. By the end of the 60s the Post-War vision of the New Jerusalem began to crumble and few years later it seemed that Modernism was itself defeated. For some on the left, including perhaps the director of Get Carter, Mike Hodges, it caused a cognitive dissonance. The failure of such estates as St Cuthebert's Village, really wasn't the result of corruption, but an intellectual failure. I think, that in some respects, it caused the breaking of the social contract.