Even somewhere as inauspicious as the Beckton Alp, a toxic 19th century spoil heap, is redolent with value for the people who use it.

Despite the only way in being a hole illegally made in the fence, the alp is a vibrant social space used by a diverse range of people for the kinds of adventure we just don’t have anymore.

During three months residency in a portacabin at the base of the alp we observed and documented use and evidence of use, both human and otherwise.

In 50 days of actual presence on site, over 300 people were observed.







The paradox of this “bad” landscape as also a place of the sublime and of adventure was tested during the residency by hosting social encounters. One of these encounters was an invitation to lunch below the summit extended to the scaffolders from the yard at the base of the alp. Both tested scenarios and observed use formed a brief to return the alp as a fully accessible, social, bioremediated landscape, but one that retains the intrinsic qualities that make it so beguiling.

The concept for bioremediation is to treat the surface rainwater as both a source of pleasure and potential poison and by making visible a treatment system so reference the hidden marsh landscape now sealed away beneath the surface. 

The design will separate the surface water from the leachate, rills and pools with reed beds as green sponges will cleanse the less toxic surface run off, and will keep it as far as possible from penetrating the reinstated clay capping.  

That water which does penetrate the cap will percolate through the toxins and as leachate will be collected at the base in an enclosed chamber, the “bad” water will be pumped up using renewable energy to be let down again through an enclosed serial system to filter out the toxins.   

The proposal is for a hybrid landscape of remediation and the sublime, for adventure and for the knowledge of risk.  The form this landscape may take is evidenced through the natural and cultural history collection of the alp. This collection is based the Enlightenment tradition of knowledge through observation and comprises of artifacts and “specimens” entirely constructed from material found on site. The Collection is cultural evidence of the value of the intrinsic paradox of the alp.

The collection was made in collaboration with local individuals and organizations, the Beckon adult education art class made landscape paintings, the director of the local undertakers narrated a roll call of loss, the Over 50s book club donated memories and a botanical illustrator made drawings of constructed species.


Date: Tuesday 12.02.08
Time: 09.15-17.20
Weather: Foggy clearing to sun by 12.20
Methodology: observation and clear rubbish from designated are (see diagram) Sort rubbish by type, cans, bottles, wrappers, paper, clothes, fireworks and miscellaneous.  Present project at Beckton Globe to over 50's reading club and arrange return date for presentation March 11th.
Tools used:
1 x good broom
1 x inefficient broom
Samples to laboratory: 
1 x religious pamphlet and scripture notes from retail park bushes
Human occupation on alp site:
12.15 two boys in school uniform scramble from ampitheatre to derelict wooden platform.
12.30 four women approach from derelict platform to summit.  Look across to Barking and West Ham, stay for three minutes and then descend.
14.10 one lone woman walks across the summit.
14.30 four well dressed mid twenties males taking photographs of each other at summit and practice martial arts, with wooden stick hitting, exit via wooden platform at 15.00.
15.00 chanting man from previous day pacing the summit.
15.20 four boys in school uniform ascend the summit from west carrying sticks descend via south face and settle in ampitheatre.
Non human occupation on site: 
seagulls circling summit
snails observed in collected rubbish
4 x wood pigeons
2 x magpies
Ambient sounds: 
on ascent: lorries hurtling down alpine way, hum of traffic on the A13, aeroplanes from city airport, clattering from industrial park, metal on metal like bells chiming.
at summit: the sound of aeroplanes and bird song prevail, reversing beeps of lorries and "comedy" hgv horn.
Ambient smells: 
13.00 sewage and bonfire from industrial estate.
Remarks:
all visitors so far have entered the alp site from the west, via the derelict viewing platform or up the slope, no verbal communication between ourselves and occupants which seems strange as no "ramblers code" is adhered to as is in other landscapes.
Occupation images:

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