New light on an old problem

Child-related archaeological finds and the impact of the ‘Radburn’ council estate plan.

Authors

  • Carenza Lewis University of Lincoln
  • Ian Waites University of Lincoln

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.39686

Keywords:

child, community, council estates, excavation, post-war, Radburn, social housing

Abstract

This paper uses new data from archaeological excavations to explore the effectiveness of the “Radburn” layout used in many post-war social housing estates in the UK, the name referring to a design modelled on Radburn in New Jersey in the United States. Their design aimed to provide healthy living environments for less-affluent families by fronting homes onto communal pedestrianized “greens”, enabling people to circulate and children to “play out” safely near their homes. However, many Radburn estates are now socially deprived and explanations for this have included suggestions that the Radburn plan was inappropriate to the wants and needs of resident families. Analysis of 20 small archaeological excavations carried out in 2016 by residents of a Radburn-type council estate in Lincolnshire recovered lost aspects of its heritage, including a large number of child-related items from sites on the communal greens. This suggests that the greens were indeed used as intended for children’s play, undermining suggestions that inappropriate design was a significant factor in the decline of estates such as this.     Open Access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives: CC BY-NC-ND

Author Biographies

  • Carenza Lewis, University of Lincoln

    Carenza Lewis is Professor of Public Engagement with Research at the University of Lincoln, UK. She is an archaeologist whose research interests include historic settlements and childhood in the past, and she has directed scores of projects involving fieldwork and excavation across the UK and beyond. She is particularly interested in approaches to research which engage wider publics in order to achieve wider societal benefits.

  • Ian Waites, University of Lincoln

    Ian Waites is a senior lecturer in the history of art and design at the University of Lincoln. His research explores the landscapes, histories, dreams and memories of the postwar English council estate. He keeps a blog on this subject – http://instancesofachangedsociety.blogspot.com – and he is the author of Middlefield: A postwar council estate in time (Uniformbooks, 2017).

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Published

2020-03-16

Issue

Section

Research Article

How to Cite

Lewis, C., & Waites, I. (2020). New light on an old problem: Child-related archaeological finds and the impact of the ‘Radburn’ council estate plan. Journal of Contemporary Archaeology, 6(2), 245-273. https://doi.org/10.1558/jca.39686

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