Forgotten Urban Histories: The extraordinary secrets of ordinary cities.
London is exceptionally good at appearances. From the surface, it presents as an entirely orderly, predictable metropolis that queues with mathematical precision and insists on calling things "temporary closures" even when the gates have been padlocked since the Second World War. But just fifty feet below the pavements—under the heavy thrum of the red double-deckers and the hurried rush of takeaway coffee cups—there is another version of the city entirely. One that does not rush, does not receive software updates, and does not particularly care whether anyone remembers it or not. In this episode of Forgotten Urban Histories, Mark Kerrigan takes us on a fascinating, brisk journey through London’s parallel metropolis of hollow spaces. We’ll break past the "Staff Only" doors to explore the beautifully suspended Edwardian time capsule of Aldwych station, and discover why the British Museum station quietly lost the transport argument to its neighbours. We’ll then reveal how the subterranean network was thoroughly colonised during the Blitz, tracing the remarkable domestic routines of the 150,000 civilians who slept on the platforms, and slipping into "the burrow"—the top-secret, deep-level Mayfair headquarters where Winston Churchill ran the war effort over fine silver and brandy. Finally, we’ll dig past the clay and into London's oldest logistical crisis: the seventeenth-century plague pits hidden right beneath the immaculate lawns of the city's finest public parks. It is a story of a city that never throws anything away, but simply builds its present right on top of its past. Listen now, and discover why the surface is never the whole story. * Website: www.narranimatestudios.com.au * Host: Mark Kerrigan * Category: Society & Culture / History / Urban Exploration
4 episodios
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