ePetition details
Wray Crescent Park is a people’s park
There is a dire need to maintain or increase access to green space in Islington. Islington, population 239,142, is one of the most densely populated UK boroughs with the lowest percentage of open space of any borough. Access to green space is just 9.3% Friends of the Earth claims 100% of Islington’s 23 neighbourhoods are green space deprived -- no other UK borough is equally deprived.
Despite this staggering fact, Islington Council is forging forward with plans to "re-establish Wray Crescent as the home for local cricket". It is not clear when and how it was decided Wray Crescent would be the home of local cricket. That it has been used for this purpose in the past with the odd game of cricket every now and then, does not mean such use should continue. Far from re-establishing a lost home for cricket in Islington, current plans represent a cricket ‘mission creep’ in the park.
Islington claims the pavilion it hopes to build will support multiple sports and activities. However, the facts don’t seem to support this:
- The building design adheres to the England Cricket Board (ECB)
guidelines for cricket facilities and the council is unwilling to
change the design to accommodate a wider sphere of use.
- Middlesex County Club will have an office in the building
occupied Monday-Friday from 9am to 5pm.
- The use of the green space and the pavilion will prioritise
cricket games during the cricket season, between April and October
in the UK. Practice sessions and training for youth clubs and local
schools will take place there.
- Islington’s Sports Facilities Update (2018) references
Sport England data revealing just 1,682 adults currently play
cricket across Islington.
- The Pavilion offers one 65m2 non-private space which the
community may use. The presence of Middlesex employees in the
office erodes the privacy for such activities.
- When cricket is played, privacy is also compromised by players
who will require access and the lack of private access.
These facts suggest cricket will dominate the park, particularly during spring and summer on weekday evenings and weekends. These are times when everyone else in the community also requires access to green space. This reduces local amenity, while no local needs assessment has been made.
The COVID pandemic has transformed how we work.
During the pandemic, working from home has become the norm. This will continue as employers adopt hybrid workplace practises. This means access to open green spaces and support for multiple activities will become more essential. Yet more facilities and more playing hours for one activity in the park will dominate the space, leaving little for anything else.
Islington’s cricket players already have ample provision. They can use pitches at St Aloysius College and the Honourable Artillery Company Sports Ground at Artillery Gardens. Openplay.co.uk suggests there are at least 499 cricket pitches in London. 10 within 5 miles of Wray Crescent, 10 more within 5 to 7 miles, 78 more within 7-15 miles.
The decision to prioritise cricket in Wray Crescent open space fails to meet local need, fails to engage with the local community to identify existing needs, and delivers a service (a cricket pitch) that is locally available at the cost of green space the borough’s residents can't afford to lose.
We urge the council to engage with the local community to
develop a new plan that meets wider local need.
This ePetition ran from 23/06/2021 to 09/08/2021 and has now finished.
26 people signed this ePetition.