1
Under the Eye of Mordor, Austin Village
These are three of the two hundred cedarwood houses of the 'Chester' type imported from the USA by Herbert Austin and erected in Longbridge, Birmingham in 1917 to house wartime workers at his factory. Six or seven women munitions workers would typically live in each three-bedroomed bungalow. They were well-appointed by British standards of the time, with an indoor toilet, and central heating powered by a coke-fired boiler.
The houses have survived, in private ownership and in various stages of modernisation. The middle house of the three shown here is probably the best-preserved and is a grade A locally-listed building (see the Birmingham list
https://www.birmingham.gov.uk/downloads/download/273/locally_listed_buildings ). It appears to have retained its original wooden clapboarding, used at Austin Village in place of the wooden shingles of the North American house. The American open porch was glazed over in the Austin Village version, supposedly because of the inclement British weather, but also perhaps because sitting on your porch or in your front garden is a very un-British thing to do.
Wooden houses require regular maintenance, and over time they have been modernised by their owners, as the houses to either side illustrate, giving the area a varied appearance, very like that of suburbs in the USA and Canada, but disapproved of by conservationists. The village was declared a conservation area in 1997 but now risks losing this status, which would in turn increase the risk of developers buying up plots and replacing the historic bungalows with higher-density housing. One such developer is apparently known to local people as 'The Eye of Mordor'.
On the Chester house see the Austin Village stories site https://www.theaustinvillage.com/new-page . On the conservation debate, see
Image
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 16 Sep 2023
0.06 miles
2
Hawkesley Drive, Austin Village Conservation Area
Northfield, Birmingham
Image: © Jeff Gogarty
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.06 miles
3
New cladding for an old house, Austin Village
This is one of the two hundred cedarwood bungalows imported from the USA by Herbert Austin in 1917 to house workers at his Longbridge factory on the southwestern edge of Birmingham. The bungalows were adapted from the Chester house made by the Aladdin company of Bay City, Michigan. These wooden houses were delivered in kit form, ready to assemble; apparently only the skirting boards needed to be cut to size. Ease of assembly was an important consideration in a war economy with military conscription, which meant that few skilled construction workers were available to build housing.
Removal of the cladding for replacement has revealed the underlying boards of cedarwood, a very durable, rot-resistant material. The North American Chester house was clad with wooden shingles, but the Austin Village version had clapboarding of thin horizontal planks instead. The North American open porch was closed with glazing.
Austin Village was declared a conservation area in 1997, but conflicts have arisen between conservationists, with their ethic of preserving the historic appearance of buildings, and homeowners, who want comfortable, warm homes using modern materials that are affordable and insulate well. The conservation area status of the village is now under threat.
On the Chester house, see the Austin Village Stories site https://www.theaustinvillage.com/new-page . On the conservation area, see the Historic England Heritage at Risk Register https://historicengland.org.uk/advice/heritage-at-risk/search-register/list-entry/6387
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 16 Sep 2023
0.06 miles
4
Austin Village monument Part 2
The blue plaque on this side of the pedestal reads:
"This plaque was erected in 2002 by members of the Austin Village Preservation Society to commemorate the life of Herbert Austin 1866-1941
The unique cedar wood bungalows were transported from Bay City, U.S.A. Conservation status granted by Birmingham City Council in 1997. This project was funded by Phoenix Venture Holdings."
For the blue plaque on the other side of the pedestal, see
Image
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 16 Sep 2023
0.08 miles
5
Austin Village Monument Part 1
The blue plaque on this side of the pedestal reads:
"Birmingham Civic Society 2002
The Austin Village
Built by Herbert Austin in 1917 to house his workforce for the Austin Motor Company, at that time engaged in the manufacture of vehicles, aircraft, ammunition and equipment to support this country's forces in the Great War."
The pedestal stands on the central reservation of Central Avenue, a miniature dual carriageway in the heart of the village. Behind it can be seen four of the cedarwood bungalows imported by Austin from the USA. For the blue plaque on the other side of the pedestal see
Image
Image: © A J Paxton
Taken: 16 Sep 2023
0.08 miles
6
"Austin" Houses, Hawkesley Crescent, Northfield.
View from crossroads with The Mill Walk.
Image: © Roy Hughes
Taken: 21 Mar 2009
0.08 miles
7
Austin Village Conservation Area (3)
Image: © Jeff Gogarty
Taken: 8 Mar 2016
0.10 miles
8
The Woodpecker, Turves Green, Birmingham
Image: © Jeff Gogarty
Taken: 28 Sep 2016
0.11 miles
9
Austin Village Conservation Area (4)
Image: © Jeff Gogarty
Taken: 8 Mar 2016
0.11 miles
10
Turves Green road scene
A bus stop and parked cars littering the roadside on Turves Green
Image: © Richard Law
Taken: 26 Feb 2020
0.11 miles