London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham | |||
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— London borough — | |||
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Hammersmith and Fulham shown within Greater London | |||
Sovereign state | United Kingdom | ||
Constituent country | England | ||
Region | London | ||
Ceremonial county | Greater London | ||
Status | London borough | ||
Admin HQ | King Street, Hammersmith | ||
Incorporated | 1 April 1965 | ||
Government | |||
- Type | London borough council | ||
- Body | Hammersmith and Fulham London Borough Council | ||
- Leadership | Leader & Cabinet (Conservative) | ||
- Mayor | Andrew Johnson | ||
- MPs | Greg Hands (Con) Andrew Slaughter (Lab) | ||
- London Assembly | Kit Malthouse (Con) AM for West Central | ||
- EU Parliament | London | ||
Area | |||
- Total | 6.3 sq mi (16.40 km2) | ||
Area rank | 322nd (of 326) | ||
Population (2008 est.) | |||
- Total | 172,200 | ||
- Rank | 99th (of 326) | ||
- Density | 27,194.9/sq mi (10,500/km2) | ||
- Ethnicity[1] | 59.8% White British 3.9% White Irish 14.4% Other White 1.1% White & Black Caribbean 0.6% White & Black African 1.1% White & Asian 1.0% Other Mixed 1.9% Indian 1.2% Pakistani 0.8% Bangladeshi 1.3% Other Asian 4.4% Black Caribbean 4.4% Black African 0.9% Other Black 1.1% Chinese 2.0% Other |
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Time zone | GMT (UTC0) | ||
- Summer (DST) | BST (UTC+1) | ||
Postcodes | {{{postcode_areas}}} | ||
Police force | Metropolitan Police | ||
Website | lbhf.gov.uk |
The London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham (pronunciation) is a London borough in West London, and forms part of Inner London. Traversed by the east-west main roads of the A4 Great West Road and the A40 Westway, many international corporations have offices in the borough.
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The borough was formed in 1965 by merging the Metropolitan Borough of Hammersmith and the Metropolitan Borough of Fulham. It was known as the 'London Borough of Hammersmith' until its name was changed on 1 January 1979 by the borough council. The two had been joined together previously as the Fulham District from 1855 to 1886.
In 1908, the Franco-British Exhibition and Olympic Games were hosted in the borough, at White City, but the site then took many decades to be redeveloped. In 1960, the BBC opened the BBC Television Centre, and in 2008, Westfield London, a large development with new transport links and a shopping centre, finally completed the redevelopment after one hundred years.
The borough includes the areas:
According to the 2001 census Hammersmith and Fulham has a population of 165,242. 58% of the borough is White British, 20% white non-British (among which are large Polish and Irish communities), 5% black Caribbean, 5% black African with various other ethnicities (including Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Chinese) making up the remaining 11 percent.
The borough has the second-highest proportion of single adults of any borough in England and Wales (55%), and a higher than average for the London area of young adults aged 20–29 (24%).
Forty-four percent of households are owner–occupiers, and 22% of households were listed as "other" - that is, not single persons living alone or families. These are generally two or more unrelated adults living together, such as students or cohabiting couples.
The borough comprises a patchwork of affluent as well as deprived neighbourhoods; The areas of Brackenbury Village, brook green, and the riverside compose of expensive Edwardian terraces, contrasting to the areas of white city and shepards bush, with a more diverse and edgy backdrop. The unemployment rate is only 5%, although of these, 29% were listed as long-term unemployed.
See external links below for more census information from the borough.
Virgin Group operates its headquarters at The School House, 50 Brook Green.[2] Sony Ericsson has its headquarters in the borough.[3]
All Nippon Airways operates an office on the fourth floor of Hythe House at 200 Shepherds Bush Road.[4][5] South African Airways has its United Kingdom office in the South African Airways House.[6]
For a 15 year period Air France had its UK and Ireland office in Hammersmith. In 2006 the UK and Ireland office was moved to Hatton Cross, London Borough of Hounslow.[7]
Hammersmith & Fulham is administered by 46 councillors. At the 2010 council elections held on 6 May 2010, the Conservative Party won a majority with 31 seats. The present administration was first elected at the 2006 council election, and this is the first time in the history of the borough that the Conservatives were re-elected with a majority of seats. The Council leader is Cllr. Stephen Greenhalgh (Con). The Labour Party forms the opposition on the Council, with 15 seats, led by Cllr. Stephen Cowan.
The borough is divided into 16 electoral wards, all bar two electing three councillors apiece. These are:
The 2006 Conservative administration introduced a number of changes to the running of the council following their election in 2006, including a 3% per year cut in Council Tax in each year between 2007/8 and 2010/1. This worked out at a average reduction of £26.30 per year for that period. The Conservative administration privitised many front line services including refuse collection and parks maintenance. It provided funding for a 24 hour police team in Shepherds Bush Green ward. The Council received the Local Government Chronicle award for "Council of the Year" in 2010.[8] The authority has repeatedly been described as a "flagship" Conservative borough and a favourite of Tory Prime Minster David Cameron. Between 2005 and 2008, the Audit Commission found that services improved from an overall rating of three stars and "improving well" to four stars and "improving strongly". According to the government 2009 Place Survey, the Council was rated as the sixth most popular major authority in the country.
The opposition Labour Party and media critics, such as Johann Hari in the Independent 5 May 2010, have criticised the introduction of new or increased stealth taxes such as the new £12.40 per hour home care charge for the elderly, sick and disabled, a nearly £600 increases (over the four year period) in fees for meals on wheels and a 50% increase in parking fines. The Conservative Administration are also criticised for renting out parks for exclusive private events and selling off the borough's buildings such as librarys, schools, council homes, community centres, Sure Start centres, early learning centres and youth clubs.
During the 2010 general and local elections the Conservative administration was accused by Labour opponents, the media and residents of intending to demolish 3,300 Council homes leaving many people with no option but to move out of the borough - an allegation described by the Prime Minster as "appalling Labour lies" in the Daily Telegraph, 22 May 2010. Stephen Cowan (Lab), the Council’s Leader of the Opposition strongly disputed this allegation and wrote to the Prime Minister challenging his comments and detailing why he was wrong to make them.
Hammersmith and Fulham’s alleged housing plans have been covered by the UK media notably in this video made by the Guardian Newspaper, 9 October 2009. Housing issues in Hammersmith and Fulham gained greater publicity after Cllr Greenhalgh co-authored the Localis policy paper Principles of Social Housing Reform in 2009 which called for a move to “near market rents” and an end to life long secure tenancies for social housing tenants.
Former councillors for Hammersmith and Fulham who are current Members of Parliament include Dominic Grieve MP (Con), Aidan Burley MP (Con), Greg Hands MP (Con), Lisa Nandy MP (Lab), Andrew Robotham MP (Con) and Andy Slaughter MP (Lab).
There are a number of sporting teams and players based in the borough. They include:
Football
Chelsea Football Club and Fulham Football Club are both based in the borough and play Premiership football. Queens Park Rangers currently play in the country's second level, the Championship, but still can contribute to the borough's claim of having three of the nation's top 44 football teams.
Footballers:
Rugby
Hammersmith & Fulham RFC have been playing in the borough at Hurlingham Park for over 30 years. They boast four senior men’s sides and one Ladies XV. The men’s 1st XV currently compete in London's NE2 League with the remainder of the sides participating in the Middlesex Merit Tables.
Boxing
Rowing
Lower Mall was home to a large number of rowing clubs at the end of the 19th Century, of which there are now only a few survivors. The headquarters of the national governing body, the Amateur Rowing Association, is also on Lower Mall, in a building, The Priory, which used to be occupied by rowing clubs.
The first half of the Boat Race course is along Hammersmith and Fulham's southern border, on the River Thames.
Public libraries in the borough include Askew Road Library, Barons Court Library, Fulham Library, Hammersmith Library, Sands End Library, and Shepherds Bush Library.[9]
The borough is also home to two prestigious independent girls' schools - St Paul's Girls' School in Brook Green (often ranked in first place in the country in league tables, with nearly 50% of each year group gaining entry to Oxbridge), and the Godolphin and Latymer School, situated a few minutes' walk from Hammersmith Broadway.
Latymer Upper, a mixed school, is also in the borough, on King Street.
The exclusive independent girls' preparatory school Bute House is also in Brook Green.
London/Hammersmith and Fulham travel guide from Wikitravel
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