Western Mail

Abandoned on a mountainsi­de – estate that feels it was left to rot

- MORGAN HUGHES Reporter morgan.hughes@walesonlin­e.co.uk

MOST people who live in the isolated mountainsi­de estate of Penrhys will tell you that the reputation it has is undeserved, or rather that it’s not how it used to be.

Yet they feel they have been abandoned – out of sight and out of mind.

Perched high – 1,170ft – above the rest of the Rhondda, Penrhys has one of the most stunning locations of any community in Wales.

But turn around and you see years of neglect, with tattered or abandoned blocks of flats and houses.

There is just one shop, one takeaway and a church. The children’s play park is locked because of vandalism.

And access to amenities is poor, with the nearest doctor’s surgery accessible only by bus or by car.

This is one of the poorest communitie­s in Wales – the fourth most deprived in Wales, according to the most recent official statistics.

Residents who are proud of their home feel more should be done to support them and the community they have built, despite the adversity

they have faced.

For them, the biggest issue isn’t the abandoned flats or the prejudice they still face, it’s the neglect.

Separated from Ystrad and the rest of the Rhondda by vertiginou­s Penrhys hill, the local residents say their isolation has strengthen­ed their community.

Callum Williams, originally from Aberdare, has lived in Penrhys for several years.

He said: “The best thing about Penrhys is how close-knit the community is. Anyone will do anything for any

one. You’ve only got to ask for help in the church, which is the centre of Penrhys, and everyone will rally around to help you.”

The image of the estate to many outsiders was fixed in the 1980s and early 1990s when there were reports of arson in derelict blocks and firefighte­rs pelted with stones when they came to help.

Yet things did change.

Nearly two-thirds of the homes were demolished and others were rebuilt and refurbishe­d.

Yet despite the determinat­ion of the community, they feel the authoritie­s have not done enough to maintain and support the estate.

They are miles from a train station or doctor’s surgery, but Treorchy – 2020 UK high street of the year – is a few miles down the road.

Ashley Rees volunteers at the Llanfair church, which has become a hub for the community.

There, after-school homework clubs are organised and the hub is a source of support and informatio­n for the whole estate.

Ashley has lived on the estate all his life and said: “People still think of Penrhys as it used to be, rough.

“It was, but you won’t find community spirit anywhere else like you do here.

“In the snow people were out knocking doors asking if people needed anything. That’s the only time being up on a hillside is a problem, but everyone was out on their quads and in their jeeps helping others.”

Developed in the late 1960s, Penrhys consisted of 951 houses built on 61 acres, which was the largest public sector housing site in Wales at that

time.

It was built on the site of a former monastery which became an important centre for pilgrimage.

The local authority hoped to provide spacious council housing – totally different to traditiona­l Rhondda terraced houses – that met the request of the National Coal Board for 250 homes for miners from the northeast. Yet before the building work was completed the coal board withdrew its request as the decline of mining in the Rhondda had already began, and so the demand for council housing would halve.

This then meant that when Penrhys estate was opened many of its first residents were unemployed and were seen as outcasts by the rest of the Rhondda.

Over the years the site has shrunk in size from the 951 homes that were opened here in the late 1960s. In the 1990s the demolition of many of the buildings took place and some of the remaining properties were refurbishe­d.

Paul Evans, originally from Cardiff, has lived in Penrhys for almost two years.

He said that it is no wonder people think it has a bad reputation – because the people were completely abandoned.

He said: “It really is shocking, the state Penrhys has been left in.

“It can’t be good for anyone. Behaviour has degraded over time with littering because people don’t respect the area because of the state of what has been left behind.

“There is a real sense of frustratio­n here, the community feels abandoned.”

In the Welsh Index of Multiple

Deprivatio­n, Penrhys falls into the Tylorstown 1 area.

It is of the fourth most deprived of more than 1,900 similarly-sized communitie­s in Wales and has been getting worse since the index was first compiled in 2005.

It has the seventh lowest average income in Wales, is the 10th most deprived for health and 11th most deprived for employment.

It was described as an area of “deep-rooted” deprivatio­n, which has consistent­ly been in the top 50 most deprived areas since the index was first compiled in 2005.

Ivor Williams, who moved here aged 10 in 1969, said: “This place used to have a massive problem with drugs, there was always trouble, it was wild here.

“It isn’t like that anymore, it’s a community, everyone knows everyone and everyone wants to help each other.

“The thing that lets it down now is the site, not the people, the state of the buildings and the fact that the only things here are a corner shop, takeaway and church.

“You can’t blame the people anymore, when this is what they’ve got to work with.”

Ron Belmont has been a resident for more than 40 years.

He said that the site has gone through many changes over the years, but like everywhere there is good and bad.

He said: “Years ago you used to have to fight your way into the pub.

“Quite rightly back then Penrhys had a name for itself, there was so much drugs up here and so much trouble. When you would eventually get into the pub, there would be people in there with crossbows and bats.

“Still to this day there is nothing here for the kids, the park has been padlocked for vandalism, nothing gets done to make it better, we’ve been left to ourselves up here.

“I’ve worked on a number of sites over my time, but this is by far the worst, you open the blinds in the morning and you just see these stinking houses in front of you.

“Even though this is my home and where I’ve lived for 40 years, if they asked me to leave, I’d leave tomorrow.”

Buffy Williams, MS for Rhondda, said: “Over the years, Penrhys has slowly become a household name in Rhondda for all the wrong reasons.

“We see and hear stories of old, especially from the media, of drink, drugs, anti-social behaviour, you name it. If there’s a crime to be committed in Rhondda, it’s as if we’ve been wired to assume it’s Penrhys.

“The reality is, there is no more or less trouble in Penrhys than other communitie­s in Rhondda, but that’s not to say the community doesn’t have its challenges.

“For too long, many have believed and fuelled the negative perception of the estate with no good reason to do so.

“Penrhys to me is a warm, welcoming community who look out for each other. The church and school are paramount in that all important community network, ensuring that nobody slips through the net, no matter how old or young.

“You’d be hard-pressed to find many other communitie­s who experience the sense of pride residents on the estate feel, and that’s partly down to the support of a handful of active volunteers, Daniel, Neil and Sharon.

“The team work day and night to support residents, and are determined to see the estate thrive.”

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 ?? ?? Penrhys has a shop, a takeaway and a church. The children’s play area is closed
Penrhys has a shop, a takeaway and a church. The children’s play area is closed
 ?? ?? > The estate once had more than 950 homes, but now only 300 or so remain
> The estate once had more than 950 homes, but now only 300 or so remain
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Ron Belmont
> Ron Belmont
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Paul Evans
> Paul Evans

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