PLACE/Ladywell is a block of modular and mobile “pop-up” housing, currently occupying a council owned site awaiting redevelopment in Lewisham, South East London. It houses 24 families on the borough's homelessness register. The development has received multiple awards, been highly praised in the media, and cited by the Greater London Authority as prototypical of pop-up housing as a ‘solution' to London's housing crisis. Yet amidst the widespread excitement around PLACE/Ladywell, experiences of urban precarity persist for the families living there. In this paper we examine how resident experiences of being ‘on-edge' are defined both by personal crises as they await permanent rehousing, by job losses, evictions and school moves, as well as by...
This paper explores resident experiences of life in PLACE/Ladywell, a “pop‐up” social housing scheme...
There has long been a crisis of housing affordability in London, which the government and private se...
London's housing crisis is rooted in a neo-liberal urban project to recommodify and financialise hou...
PLACE/Ladywell is a block of modular and mobile “pop-up” housing, currently occupying a council owne...
PLACE/Ladywell is a block of modular and mobile “pop-up” housing, currently occupying a council owne...
In this paper, we examine the relationship between precarity, property and urban vacancy. Our main a...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
One of the hallmarks of the austerity agenda in the UK has been the discursive prevalence of both sc...
Temporary Measures: Housing Insecurity, Waiting, and Injury in Post-Grenfell London examines London’...
Despite widespread recognition that housing is a serious social concern, policy responses have tende...
Low-income municipal housing and its inhabitants have increasingly been construed as disposable with...
The idea of ‘crisis’ plays an important role in academic and policy imaginations (Heslop and Ormerod...
Local governments in the UK are experimenting with innovative modular housing solutions as a way to ...
This paper explores resident experiences of life in PLACE/Ladywell, a “pop‐up” social housing scheme...
London's housing crisis is rooted in a neo-liberal urban project to recommodify and financialise hou...
This paper explores resident experiences of life in PLACE/Ladywell, a “pop‐up” social housing scheme...
There has long been a crisis of housing affordability in London, which the government and private se...
London's housing crisis is rooted in a neo-liberal urban project to recommodify and financialise hou...
PLACE/Ladywell is a block of modular and mobile “pop-up” housing, currently occupying a council owne...
PLACE/Ladywell is a block of modular and mobile “pop-up” housing, currently occupying a council owne...
In this paper, we examine the relationship between precarity, property and urban vacancy. Our main a...
This paper provides a critical perspective on England’s housing crisis, characterised here as a conc...
One of the hallmarks of the austerity agenda in the UK has been the discursive prevalence of both sc...
Temporary Measures: Housing Insecurity, Waiting, and Injury in Post-Grenfell London examines London’...
Despite widespread recognition that housing is a serious social concern, policy responses have tende...
Low-income municipal housing and its inhabitants have increasingly been construed as disposable with...
The idea of ‘crisis’ plays an important role in academic and policy imaginations (Heslop and Ormerod...
Local governments in the UK are experimenting with innovative modular housing solutions as a way to ...
This paper explores resident experiences of life in PLACE/Ladywell, a “pop‐up” social housing scheme...
London's housing crisis is rooted in a neo-liberal urban project to recommodify and financialise hou...
This paper explores resident experiences of life in PLACE/Ladywell, a “pop‐up” social housing scheme...
There has long been a crisis of housing affordability in London, which the government and private se...
London's housing crisis is rooted in a neo-liberal urban project to recommodify and financialise hou...