'Shaftesbury House 22 April 2026 ~ photo credit: Martin Ball
Haringey Council bought Shaftesbury House against the advice of the supposed users, the Peacock light industrial estate.
The £6,100,000 purchase was one of nine irregular council deals considered by external investigator Chris Buss in a version of the Report commissioned by the council itself. The "full" version of the Report was sent to the Metropolitan Police.
The tired old building was once described as a sh*thole, but the council's regeneration team considered it was good enough in which to decant Tottenham businesses.
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The council's rolling regeneration fiasco has many features
Video tour link: Haringey Council's factory
Muti makes a pitch for using the building as a community arts centre, Studio 101.
Was this a missed opportunity by London's Borough of Culture 2027 ?
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Enfield Council's enforcement letters (below) are dated 17 March and are posted on the front. There seem to be compliance issues relating to The Building Act 1984 (Sections 81– 83):
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Tags for Forum Posts: Enfield, Haringey Council, Regen, Regeneration, Shaftesbury, demolition, empty, factory, loss
We can't always undo past mistakes.
But we can try to learn lessons from them.
As Clive Carter explains in his video commentary and here, the losses on 3 Shaftesbury Road. Enfield are part of several dubious past property dealings within Haringey around the same time period.
Were lessons learned? I don't know. I hope I'm wrong, but I very much doubt it.
One obvious question for the future is whether sufficient changes were made which would prevent similar serious mistakes and misjudgements being made again.
Clive Carter deserves Haringey's thanks for shooting and editing this video, on his own personal equipment.
He also undertook the major part of the work digging out information. Several other people contributed to the project. I am proud to have been one of them.
Thanks Alan!
I was first alerted to the purchase of the factory when resident-activist Martin Ball drew attention to it on Twitter. The original purchase of a derelict factory in another Borough seemed odd and the council's recording of the deal ("non-key") looked suspicious.
By buying a building that was in a run-down state, the council appears to have done a favour to the previous owner, who had had the factory on the market for more than a year. And apparently over-paying, too.
The council considered the Buss Report in an entirely administrative-bureaucratic way, which was to hold no one to account, except possibly the referral to the Police. The municipal response included such shocking moves as … reminding council employees of their responsibilities. Was fraud ever dealt with more robustly?
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