Walk the Route – https://www.google.com/maps/d/u/0/edit?mid=1vuxslP5Zm7fsN6GOn1JSGJv-x-kfgfQ&usp=sharing

    Chapters…

    Intro 00:00
    Peverell Avenue East 00:50
    Hamslade Street 04:00
    Shaiba Place 06:11
    Pavilion Green 07:06
    Pavilion Green West 09:07
    Queen Mother Square 09:39
    Poundbury Farm Way 11:55
    Lower Blakemere Road 13:46
    Bridport Road 14:28
    Hessary Street 15:24
    Woodlands Crescent 16:34
    Sign Off 18:27

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    In 1987 West dors District Council selected  duy of cormal land for the expansion of   Dorchester with the Prince of Wales also  known as a Juka Cornwall collabor and on   a Model Urban extension architect Leon cre was  appointed in 1988 to develop a concept adhering  

    To the traditional Dorset architecture and the  principles outlined in a vision of Britain palb   was divided into four quarters each designed  by selected Architects maintaining overall   principles construction began in 1993 and the  Northwest Quadrant is expected to be completed   by 2027 contributing to a 25% population  increase in Dorchester to approximately  

    5,800 people so if you’re ready let’s go  take a look around this experimental Urban extension the date today is the 3rd of December  it is 8° it’s pretty chilly and it’s a bit wet   as you’ve probably seen but we’re going to  be having a little look around pound and  

    See what’s what now you may know that poundur  used to be owned by Prince Charles who is now   King Charles and I believe that it’s been  passed down to William now this is all of   his estate now as we walk around this wet day  you’re going to see it is quite interesting  

    Looking some people really like the look of  it and others don’t now I’ve got my umbrella   up today so you might just see that in there  just trying to protect this camera from the rain but it’s an interesting place I  think it looks more like a film set  

    Personally I’ll just go over here you’ll  see some of the buildings and you will see how film set like it looks now we  are heading up to the central bit where   everything is really a lot of it very  mazik winding lots of little streets  

    But what I’ll do is I’ll cross over  I really haven’t chosen the best day   so I hope you enjoy this guys oh wow  it’s proper pouring now let’s cross over flip all right there we go you can probably hear the  rain but check out some of these buildings  

    And you got the streets down there all  the buildings have a similar sort of look Bo this is nasty it is teaming it down guys there we go I turn it this way you’ll see  some of these they might remind you of like old  

    London I think I’m going to have to stop this  guys cuz the camera is getting quite wet okay   guys I’m back that weather got quite bad as you  saw so I think I was saying uh about the buildings  

    And the way that they look they’re quite unique  uh they’re designed to look quite oldfashioned   and you’re going to see as we walk around some of  these doorways and that in the fronts they do look  

    Very nice especially on this side look at that  so we’ve got the main square up there but I want   to show you some of the properties so let’s go  down here let cross over try not to slip cuz this  

    Will give you an idea this looks quite nice from  here this is ham Slade Street we’re about to walk down and this should take us around  to the back someone’s got a Christmas   tree on top of their car there ready for  Christmas one of those real ones quite

    Messy excuse me still getting  over a bit of a cold here guys so here we go you can  see it’s starting to look   quite all right here like some  of the buildings do look quite nice oh lovely look at this look at these big door knockers guys wow

    So this here will be a block of  flats does remind you of London a   little bit doesn’t it some of the  dock side buildings we’ll keep on walking see that blue building  at the end does look quite nice now last time I come up here  they were still building towards this

    End oh you can see they’re still  building more they’re expanding pound like some of the uh some of the street names  here as well there’s like one called shereton   Avenue very British there we go you can  just see the tower in the Square there as

    Well see some of it it’s really quite  Posh looking look at those big Gates you see the big raincloud oh my word there  we go so construction is continuing down   there look at this nice big door they  got a big wreef on the front wow it’s  

    Incredible let’s have a little look  to see how the uh construction site   is you can actually see that they’re  just constructing just over there as well nice so prices here are going to be quite  expensive expensive we might be able to walk past  

    An estate agent somewhere I would say half a m  would get you something fairly decent here a flat maybe it’s almost like a little  taste of London but endorse it is quite a nice looking  building here in front of us you can see there are beautiful  views as long as I don’t build  

    On that Farmland over there there’s some beautiful views and this is like a little like I  saying it was a block of flats struggle   to get my words out then but check out the details gone for the old candles candle light got the  

    Nice metal guttering is it the  Victorian stuff that used to be metal see these are not Victorian but looks nice   let’s see if they last as  long as a Victorian stuff did right here we are then so this  is kind of like the main area  

    And we got a spa spa here monart Spa  poundbury steam room Himalayan salt Gro and of course anywhere like this is always  going to have a wait Ros which is just over there so we’ll carry on around here we go we’re about to see the prices here

    Hopefully oh there you go look  at this so one of these is 610   W far off I need another 110,000 this one there 395 1.2 that’s crazy money that is crazy  money it’s quite busy here today for a   Sunday there is a garden center up ahead  and this restaurant is a Halland Woodhouse  

    Restaurant it’s called The Duchess of Cornwall  I have eaten in there it’s actually quite   nice to be honest not overly expensive as  well I’ll get you a better view from over here there we go and you eat up the top there look at that  lovely behind us is the Queen Mother Memorial  

    So when the queen died this was full of  flowers I came in and had a little look   it was absolutely full this also doubles up  as a roundabout which always causes a lot of confusion so there’s a look where we’ve  just been so we’re going down pound Farm way

    Now here’s the garden center this one is quite Expensive so I think we’ll head down  towards this way then down to butter   Market butter Market shall I say  sorry that’s my bad English there   being from the south of England the  sath spelled with two A’s and an F got the old style railings here look  at that that property oh wow that’s

    Lovely beautiful I’m definitely glad that that  rain has calmed down for a bit   that got quite bad earlier that’s  interesting someone’s put a pink door on what looks to be a very gray house so looks like there are some  little businesses is down here Sunset

    Boulevard not quite sure what that  place is oh it’s a hair place there you go and you’ll see now in front of us there’s  like a an octagon if you like the batter Market or the butter cross there we go I’m getting quite confused  here guys all these different names Bella

    Kitchens oh this looks like a  nice bath look at this looks lovely so it’s a Sunday today and all the shops  are closed at appear appear have a little view back there we go this is quite a big  area obviously I can’t cover it all  

    In this video guys but it’s definitely  quite cool just having a little look around this place is a cafe dog friendly bonjour Cafe if you just picture that  does look a little bit like it’s in France doesn’t it and we’re back around at Sunset

    Boulevard I don’t know if I would  like to live here guys doesn’t   feel like there’s much going on  I quite like being by the coast there are loads of little nooks and crannies here guys pict it take you all day to explore this place let’s have a look down this

    Way and I think we’ll end the video off at the  main road so do stage just to enjoy the look   at some of these properties cuz some of these are  looking quite nice bit festive of Christmas coming up was very nice o look at

    That hopefully that’s coming out on camera  they’re quite bright in real life those lights say these doors do look solid I like  to think they’re made out of proper wood I should think they are okay I think I will conclude my video  on poundur just here guys if you did enjoy  

    That don’t forget to click like as it helps  likeminded people find the video if you’re   new to the channel and want to see more don’t  forget to click subscribe and the people still   hit the Bell button if they do definitely  hit it and you’ll get a notification when  

    I upload anyway I hope you enjoy that guys  and I will see you on the next video take care

    25 Comments

    1. It looks beautiful! The buildings are made to look good with age, and they already are starting to display patina. It does not matter that they are not really old yet. One thing I noticed is that there are not too many street trees. US cities tend to have more street trees except for the real urban centers.

    2. Very sensible not to put a drive onto each house…a DFL’s dream..this just shows what can be achieved with excessive amounts of money….very nice..

    3. It's very pretty, but I am glad I live in a slightly scruffy inner city suburb in the north of England. For one thing, we have a lot more trees, dozens of different bird species, and foxes. For another, we have neighbours we actually talk to and keep an eye out for. And another, we live within walking distance of three cinemas, five theatres, a world-class music centre, a Norman castle, several museums, two universities and a Premier league football club's home ground. Although I have to admit we don't have anything like the Cerne Abbas Giant, a BIG win for Dorset.

    4. Sorry, that looks exactly like what it is: fakery upon illusion upon hubris.
      It's a movie set, built not for working and living and whatnot; it was designed to be pretty because that's what Charlie boy wanted.
      I see lots of cars, but no indication of people: what are they doing? Hiding in their cellars and doing obscene things? Of course not: even at those prices, every expense has been spared to give the illusion of no expense being spared – no cellars. You couldn't even dig one, the foundations are too shallow.
      It was castigated at the time by many a reputable architect, and I saw nothing there to convince me that it's merely an illusion and not a properly functioning place.
      That, me old son, is what the Poshtopolypse looks like.

    5. A play area for children was opened in the autumn which is a great addition. My only thought recently was that it would be nice for some additional trees to be planted. There can be quite a wind tunnel through the buildings which could be softened and the views enhanced with additional greenery. I've heard that the community are coming together to add this which highlights the fact it is a good neighbourhood to live in.

    6. Nice. … visited a few years ago. And I remember there being very few gardens which surprised me ……. But good attempt and modern urban planning

    7. This is the most poorly prepared 'walker' video I have ever watched! If you want to give a running commentary to "you guys", then brief some facts beforehand. In this case, quite obviously, you should have researched what the Poundbury project set out to acheive, both architecturally and socially. Then let the viewer make up their own minds on what you show them. Keep your own ill-informed comments and thoughts to yourself – you destroy your own authority with such comments as a begrudging "it's actually quite nice, to be honest".

    8. Looks very nice to me. The only critique I have is that the streets look too wide and the asphalt is kinda ugly. Oh, and it could use more trees!

    9. Judging by the spaciousness overall, land must be cheap and abundant in the area. Couldn't do the same in a typical city where land, for houses, roads, etc, costs a lot. I read elsewhere that car usage did not drop, but at least it is being provided for, not made impossible by removing car parking spaces and building houses without garages or driveways to make a point.

    10. It’s designed for cars. While towns in the rest of the uk are trying to row back the dominance of cars and encourage pedestrians and cyclists, here you have a town built for cars with huge car roads and car parks everywhere. That’s why — along with the pastiche architecture — it resembles a Tesco car park!

    11. poundbury is part of the Duchy of Cornwall Charles never owned it personally, he was duke of cornwall the title has now been handed down to William

    12. I think you have nailed it by describing it as a film set. That is brought about by constructing it over a short space of time. Towns and villages evolve, sometimes over several hundred years and usually with a mixture of architectural styles. Correct me if I'm wrong but I think the development is predominately 'Georgian' in design. If there was a true small town that had evolved there may be a mixture of tudor, stuart, georgian and possibly victorian.

    13. People say Poundbury is a beautiful success, but I disagree. To me it seems soulless and pastiche; A giant Disney-esque town of facades and mish-mashes of vaguely 'old fashioned' styles discordantly butting up against each other. Most of the houses have no land or garden to speak of. The town itself is anchored around a series of banal diversions such as a Waitrose supermarket and communal function rooms designed to hold hundreds but see precious little more activity than a weekly yoga class. A large proprotion of the buildings look very fancy from the first floor upwards but at ground level present nothing more than a series of hastily punched roller shutters and brick-blanked windows.

      The town itself is pretty hellish for both motorists and pedestrians, with roads suddenly chicaning, narrowing, and roving across open squares for seemingly no other reason than to have a more unique street pattern, and pedestrians are often in the position of having to negotiate their way across open lanes of traffic, cater-cornering across roundabouts, and being denied sensible crossings because they look 'ugly'.

      Where are the pubs? The corner shops? The laundrettes? The petrol stations? The bus shelters? The take-aways? The greasy spoons? The taxi booking offices? The shopmobility centres? The civic centres? The homless shelters? The GUM clinics? The Job Centres? They don't exist because the whole edific is a not-so-subtle nod towards social engineering; A deliberate lack of facilities needed by the poor, or considered 'unseemly' or 'unecessary' to those who have no need for the scattering of state services found in normal towns and cities. Like Port Sunlight, Saltaire, and Bournville, Poundbury is a town built and controlled by wealthy plutocrats who wish to bend the social fabric to their whim by denying or whitholding services and social spaces that they'd rather not think about, or consider to be the haunts of the louche and the penurous. Poundbury is happy to call itself its own self-contained settlement, but then smugly offloads all the services it would rather not see or deal with to neighbouring Dorchester.

      Part of Britain's urban landscape is that it tells a story, a history, a heritage, that links people to the past, reveals how the past has influenced the present, and provides ambition for the future.

      Poundbury is a giant two fingers presented to that urban landscape. A grotesquely oversized Portmeirion without the dramatic landscape. A EuroDisney Main Street USA dumped like a wet pile of laundry onto one of Britain's most ancient and undisturbed landscapes. To me it would seem like living on the grounds of one of the enormous, near identical post-War county council offices that are scattered throughout the country.

      As it grows its ambitions will run out, becoming nothing more than a smattering of vaguely Italianesque campaniles and terraces ordered built by some cultural and aesthetic philistine hereditary monarch, surrounded by the same godawful Redrow box estates.

      It would have been better for Dorchester to have simply expanded than to have this bizarre monstrosity blight the beautiful Dorset countryside.

    14. This (and the comments) tell you everything you need to know about present-day England. A place that would rather continue looping through imaginary reconstructions of its long-lost past, than face its true position in the modern world with something forward-looking. Not surprising that this country is unable to innovate any more.
      The build-quality of Poundbury is OK, certainly better than the hundreds of cheap imitations that have been foisted on usnsuspecting places across the country, no matter how incongruous. Then, it has had a fortune lavished on it. But it does nothing that decently-built modern architecure can do – except help certain relatively priviliged sectors of the population feel that they still live in Jollie Olde Englande rather than the failing place that much of this country is becoming.
      So much for an organic, socially-mixed traditional settlement – how can any 'ordinary' people afford those prices? It is just a middle class bubble; I wonder if they will start controlling entry at some point, to keep the plebs out. Much more interesting and challenging to see what can be done to rejuvenate our genuine historic cities.

    15. Have walked around here, been to the Waitrose,and delivered parcels there. On the whole I felt that more green spaces and trees and are needed.

    16. The buildings seem to be ageing quite gracefully, and I like the mix of building heights and materials.

      Scale and proportion wise I like how there'll be a cluster of buildings sharing a relatively unified theme without being street upon street of the same, it's visually stimulating having a unique building on a corner or an interesting shape.

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