New brand identity strategy for Haringey
"I am in"
Discuss.
CDC
Haringey Councillor
Liberal Democrat Party
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update to mark the 'soft launch' (click to enlarge):—
The £20,000 film, The Haringey Story
Tags for Forum Posts: I am in, Local Government, brand strategy, folly, identity, nonsense, vanity, waste of money
Clive and his petty bunch of cronies 'Know the cost of everything and the value of nothing'.
Well, the Evening Standard editorial on the matter (goo.gl/OYypx4) suggests that, in respect of the (fashionable-childish) logo, residents might wonder whether their story has been overpriced but undersold.
Some things – more deserving – will not happen or get done, as a result of the spend on this vanity project. I hope you see that.
Sadly Clive all I can see is a man with an agenda and a hatred of any Labour initiative at the council. (Maybe you'd prefer a Tory one).
Yes, of course, I would have preferred it if £86 thousand pounds had been spent on renovating the BBC studios at Ally Pally, or used to preserve the victorian buildings at St Ann's Hospital, maybe even on some of the services that Zena is worried about. But you know far better than me, that 86 thousand pounds won’t even cover the cost of removing the asbestos from the average sized scout hut. They spent the money Clive, get over it. What they’ve done is not great (I think we can all agree on that), but it’s not a crime against design or an affront to the eyes, and maybe just maybe it might change some of the more jaundiced views of Haringey. I should at this point say for the record, I have no connection with the council and I have never voted for a labour councillor in the 20 years I’ve lived here, (I had the misfortune to move in next to one, and what a supercilious, smug, git he was, in fact I used to favour the Lib Dems, but you’re changing that by the minute). So I say to you again Clive, get off your soapbox and see the ‘I am in’ campaign for what it is, a flawed but honest attempt to try and improve things, and that needs to be acknowledged.
"....maybe just maybe it might change some of the more jaundiced views of Haringey."
"...a flawed but honest attempt to try and improve things, and that needs to be acknowledged."
The problem is we get so much of this flawed stuff and the dishonesty and mediocre compromises are doing precisely what the new logo purports to try and reduce.
It is depressing such wasted doportunities. we need much more than this and it is possible!
PS: I don't support the Lib Dems and certainly do not support the Haringey Labour kabal nor the waste-of-time MP we have been burdened with.
Shem - I agree with you about the importance of design, architecture and art in brightening our daily lives, and do believe that we should spend money on beautifying our environment as well as on mundane services but, as a design industry professional, maybe you could help me here.
How does the new logo meet the stated objectives -
" improve the profile and image of the council with residents and key stakeholders
ensure the identity reflects our vision for the borough as a place of true potential and ambition
be a catalyst for a wider programme of culture change
help with the recruitment and retention of staff by creating a stronger sense of identity for the council "
To me, the logo just says " This truck " ( for example ) " is working for Haringey, a borough in London "
A cynic might think that the shaky lettering is an apt reflection of the competence of the Council and might read into the choice of red that it is a Labour-dominated council, but there my imagination stops.
Can you, as a design industry professional, explain the symbolism that reflects our vision for the borough as a place of true potential and ambition ?
In 2002 Wiloughby Rd (west side of Duckett's Common) was regularly a dumping ground for unwanted motor vehicles.
THE jagged forms behind the H are fashionable at the moment. For me, they suggest broken or falling structures (buildings to come down in Tottenham?). Or a blocky, highly stylised bat.
These jaunty, playful angles have been popularised by architect Daniel Libeskind.
Nearest relevant example: London Metropolitan University (see Alan Stanton's photo of the Orion building).
Currently, this style is IN vogue.
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