The campaign to stop Network Rail shabbily selling off 5,500 railway arches for a short-term cash injection is gathering pace.
These spaces have offered affordable premises to entrepreneurs and small businesses for several generations. They are unconventional sites, which have allowed communities to flourish. The hike in rents that will follow the sell-off will kill off many of these vital spaces. Here is just one story of a business worth fighting for.
My name is Adam David Ge-Saelis. I have a row of railway arches in Herne Hill. When I started renting the first one, I was homeless. I had been living in an old transit van.
I was wandering around at night with my dog. I saw these arches were all boarded up, they were derelict. No one really wanted them. I saw a sign at the end of the mews, which said Network Rail. I didn’t know much about the arches, but called them up and told me I needed this much money to get them. I went to work as a chef, doing 30-hour shifts. Really tough work. And I saved up enough money to get the first arches.
The electricity didn’t work properly, the toilets were smashed. They were in a really derelict state. I was doing furniture making and writing a book – so I needed a place to work. I was still sleeping in a van. So I could park the van up the mews and work in the arch. Then the arches next door, which had been boarded up for 11 years. I asked how much they would cost and was told I could have them rent free because they were derelict and rundown.
I got artist friends of mine in there and we started a collaboration, almost an arts club. And slowly started putting more and more people in other arches. So over the years since I have been there, 350 artists have been in there.
We have done exhibitions for Camberwell Art College, St Martins, Chelsea, Wimbledon, Bournemouth. All the art schools have come to do their first shows in there. The whole place has been refurbished, all from recycled materials. I have done it all myself. Over 17 years.