Yes, Fleetville is busy; the district is crowded and expensive. If you have children and you would like to enrol your child to one of the schools here you will find buying a home nearby will cost you high prices. If your home is without a private driveway parking on a nearby roadside can be nigh-on impossible. For these and other issues Fleetville can also be attractive for all sorts of businesses. And businesses also need land; they also search for opportunities to land-share in inventive ways.
| The style of Hanley's grocery store between Albion Road and The Crown Hotel in 1904! |
When Fleetville was young – the first half of the 20th century – shops were small and, in the main, lined almost a mile-length of Hatfield Road's north side. Then retail changed; motor trades moved out, the Co-op lead the way in the supermarket stakes – the same site becoming Safeway and later Morrison's – but there seemed no further opportunity for others to move in; supermarkets are land-hungry. As it was, Morrison's arrived on the site of by far the largest former factory in the form of a printing works followed by a hosiery mill.
| The Co-op was first, followed on the same site by Safeway. The yellow egg of Morrison's grew even larger. |
Eyes have firmly centred on what used to be known as factory estates. Three of them were identified in the late 1930s to help de-factory the inner streets of St Albans. Porters Wood, previously intended as a cemetery; a roadside strip left from gravel working on Butterwick Farm and renamed Butterwick Wood; and the brick-works site in Ashley Road and now known as Brick Knoll Park. Notice how all three gained "green" descriptors for what were intended to be industrial processes, or at least businesses for employment on an extensive scale.
| Bricks were first made at Brick Knoll Park in 1899 (at least that is when the land exchange took place); the site was vacated around 1948. |
| Business have been coming and going ever since; the latest to disappear was the Vauxhall car sales; all part of the gradual change. |
At Brick Knoll Park access had previously been poor: unmade roads, low and narrow railway bridges and pot-holed by a generation of clay abstraction. Completion of what was then identified as the "ring road" helped to improve access, yet even before that was in place the brickworks site became the corporation's domestic waste depository of the day, the day being the 1940s and 1950s.
The urgent post-war requirement was to locate heavy plant businesses to focus on road building and similar infrastructure schemes for London and site preparations for factories elsewhere. So this St Albans factory estate played its part. Remember, there was then no made up Ashley Road south of the branch railway, no Drakes Drive and only minor Hill End Lane (Station Road), Cambridge Road and Hedley Road for heavy vehicles to negotiate.
The mature years of Brick Knoll Park developed from the 1960s with a mixture of vehicle-hungry sites such as letter sorting, car repairs and sales, and light engineering. More recently any business which could be accommodated within an easily erected warehouse became attracted to the location. So we now seem to have added two leisure addresses: Top Hat Stage School and BattleKart, the latter open for business away-days and weekends for the leisure market. Howdens, who might have previously been a street side location, have a kitchen and furniture display warehouse at Brick Knoll Park.
| A typical Lidl store. |
Now, preparations are proceeding to bring food retailing just inside the gates. Lidl are to open a supermarket with over 120 car-parking spaces, most being for fast-turnaround occupation, the downside is likely to be increased occupation of the public road space and local junctions which are not possessed with high capacity anyway. Although there are bus stops along Ashley Road the route 305 buses which use them cannot be defined as frequent and certainly not adequate.
| Many churches have put down their roots on factory estates and business parks. |
A further opportunity grabbed in the modern era is for church organisations – Christian and others – to acquire existing warehouses for use, especially on Sundays but also weekday evenings, for their meetings and services. The benefit, of course, is lower land costs and plentiful parking released from daytime business use. Central locations used to be sought but for the majority of members who have family cars centrality can be a turn-off as non-chargeable parking is rarely available. To finish on a personal note, a mile long walk from home to church twice each Sunday was a given, our insurance being there was a bus for seriously wet weather!
Let us hope that Lidl will succeed along Ashley Road.