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Saturday, 17 January 2026

Get out, we want your house.

Good afternoon, or is it Good evening. 
I've been out today. Coming up later will be photo's and a video from the Quilt and Sewing Fair at Newark Showground.
I started to prepare this post when I got back on Thursday but didn't get round to finishing it. I took some photo's on the outskirts of Derby as I was passing through, inspired by this video I found about a week ago. Charles Veitch is an investigative journalist, and puts himself out there in the middle of all the mayhem. He comes across as someone a bit bolshie and not afraid to voice his opinion. You might even think he looks a bit rough on the outside, but he is a smart guy. I watched an earlier video from a few years ago when he describes his upbringing, his education, and and how he came to live in different parts of the world.  
I have copied a few of the comments underneath this video which sheds some light on how 16 houses in Derby came to be abandoned. 

Expansion of the adjacent A38 dual carriageway. They were subject to compulsory purchase orders several years ago.
m38 motorway πŸ›£️ £646 million over 4 years , starting in March 2026
They've been looking to widen the roads/A38 near there for years. Buildings and trees etc removed. Most people in these houses were simply bought out. I think the last person finally left but stayed in their house there, refusing to budge, for a long while after all the others were boarded up.
The row of boarded-up homes in central Derby, specifically those on Queensway near Markeaton Island, are vacant due to a long-standing plan to widen the A38 road. The properties were acquired by National Highways (previously the Highways Agency) through compulsory purchase orders for the now-cancelled road-widening project.
One house belonged to Gail Roberts who was the last to leave. See Derbyshire Live article "Last woman standing on Derby street set to disappear" You can read the story of Gail Roberts here.
These are my pictures.
This is a shocking state of affairs, though I suspect compulsory purchases are happening all over the UK when the Government wants the land. How much did they pay the owners of these 16 houses? Who owns them now? Will the widening of the A38 at Derby ever be completed? This has been going on a long time. The Government must be sitting on mega acres of land. 
Have a good weekend. See you tomorrow. 
Thanks for popping in. Toodle pip.   ilona 


9 comments:

  1. Ilona our society is crumbling isn't it meanqueen.. πŸ’”πŸ˜’previous generations wouldn't want to live in today's world..
    Just had a posh hot chocolate my friend got me very kind and surprise i said I smiled and said thank you.. I can't be bothered saying too expensive they already know that. I don't preach anymore. Just better too except the gift..

    Regards" Levi xx 😘 ♥️

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    1. There comes a time when you have to let go. Best stay in your own world and watch others. You and I are not going to change anything.

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    2. .. you said it ilona πŸ‘ πŸ™Œ πŸ’―
      Levi xx

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  2. I used your link to read the Gail Roberts story. I hope she finds a suitable spacious home like the one she has, which is adaptable for her health condition. In the USA we have this too, we call it eminent domain. That neighborhood and the houses are gorgeous. Could she use the money offered to have the house moved?

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    1. I can't give you an update on this. It seems that planning applications can take many years to come to fruition. It's just a shame that these perfectly solidly built houses will be bulldozed just to widen a road.

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  3. This is nothing new. In the 1960's and 70s thousands of houses were compulsory purchased and demolished. Called slum clearance and resulted in people having better housing conditions including inside bathrooms. Moterways would never have been built without CPO's. My husbands family home was purchased to build the M62 and Scammonden Dam. Obviously they weren't happy at the time but now looking back yes it changed their lives but they have had good lives, maybe done different things for the better

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    1. The plan seems to be let buildings rot into the ground, demolish them, then build new. In this case widen the road so the traffic will be able to whizzz around the roundabout even quicker. From the outside these 16 detached houses look perfectly safe to move into.

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  4. This seems to be a way for the government to buy houses so less people own homes, or atleast own smaller ones, to make way for more tiny new builds. New builds are so small now compared to how houses used to be. Being told your house is subject to a compulsory purchase must be extremely stressful - we don't really own anything.

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    1. I agree with you πŸ’― Yes you can't blame the wealthier people leaving Britain πŸ‡¬πŸ‡§..it's gone down the toilet. Town centres are depressing no Joy anywhere

      Regards " Levi x

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Merry Christmas.