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simon K S

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  1. Hi Barry, Firstly thanks for all your hard work on Peckham Rye station, it's really turned a corner over the last year, it looks so much better. My query relates to the part of the station I know you don't have direct control over. The area and shops outside the front are still maintained to a very poor standard. This is sad as it detracts and overshadows your work on maintaining and rejuvenating the main station. The main symbol of this for me is the broken windows in the buildings, there is a report from the US that details the social impact of broken windows, you can read it here: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/198203/broken-windows or an extract: 'In a 1982 Atlantic Monthly article titled "Broken Windows," James Q. Wilson and George Kelling argued that disorder in a community, if left uncorrected, undercuts residents' own efforts to maintain their homes and neighborhoods and control unruly behavior. "If a window in a building is broken and left unrepaired," they wrote, "all the rest of the windows will soon be broken. . . . One unrepaired window is a signal that no one cares, so breaking more windows costs nothing. . . . Untended property becomes fair game for people out for fun or plunder." 'If disorder goes unchecked, a vicious cycle begins. First, it kindles a fear of crime among residents, who respond by staying behind locked doors. Their involvement in the neighborhood declines; people begin to ignore rowdy and threatening behavior in public. They cease to exercise social regulation over little things like litter on the street, loitering strangers, or truant schoolchildren. When law-abiding eyes stop watching the streets, the social order breaks down and criminals move in. '"Stable neighborhoods can change in a few months to jungles," declare Wilson and Kelling. Disorder also can have dire economic consequences. Shoppers will shun an area they perceive as being "out of control." One study analyzing crime in 30 different areas found that the level of disorder of a neighborhood -- more than such factors as income level, resident turnover, or racial makeup -- was the best indicator of an area's lack of safety.' There are several broken windows around the site (for example the blue building at the front next to the dentist) and I think fixing them would go along way to restoring a sense of order. I was wondering whether it is possible for you to enquire whether the property owners, Spacia could see their way to having these repaired and bringing the general standard of upkeep in those buildings to a satisfactory level. Cheers Simon
  2. Hi Barry, Firstly thanks for all your hard work on Peckham Rye station, it's really turned a corner over the last year, it looks so much better. My query relates to the part of the station I know you don't have direct control over. The area and shops outside the front are still maintained to a very poor standard. This is sad as it detracts from your work that has been put into the station and means no matter how good the station gets people will still see the station in a bad light. The main symbol of this for me is the broken windows in the buildings, there is a report from the US that details the social impact of broken windows, you can read it here: http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/198203/broken-windows or an extract: 'In a 1982 Atlantic Monthly article titled "Broken Windows," James Q. Wilson and George Kelling argued that disorder in a community, if left uncorrected, undercuts residents' own efforts to maintain their homes and neighborhoods and control unruly behavior. "If a window in a building is broken and left unrepaired," they wrote, "all the rest of the windows will soon be broken. . . . One unrepaired window is a signal that no one cares, so breaking more windows costs nothing. . . . Untended property becomes fair game for people out for fun or plunder." 'If disorder goes unchecked, a vicious cycle begins. First, it kindles a fear of crime among residents, who respond by staying behind locked doors. Their involvement in the neighborhood declines; people begin to ignore rowdy and threatening behavior in public. They cease to exercise social regulation over little things like litter on the street, loitering strangers, or truant schoolchildren. When law-abiding eyes stop watching the streets, the social order breaks down and criminals move in. '"Stable neighborhoods can change in a few months to jungles," declare Wilson and Kelling. Disorder also can have dire economic consequences. Shoppers will shun an area they perceive as being "out of control." One study analyzing crime in 30 different areas found that the level of disorder of a neighborhood -- more than such factors as income level, resident turnover, or racial makeup -- was the best indicator of an area's lack of safety.' There are several broken windows around the site (for example the blue building at the front next to the dentist) and I think fixing them would go along way to restoring a sense of order. I was wondering whether it is possible for you to enquire whether the property owners, Spacia could see their way to having these repaired and bringing the general standard of upkeep in those buildings to a satisfactory level. Cheers Simon
  3. Hi, a little off topic I know! Does anyone know appartments or rooms to rent off someone in Grenada spain OR the sierra nevada? Thanks for looking.
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