Bristol Squatters Occupy Lloyds TSB Private Bank
inks | 01.10.2012 12:56
Early Sunday morning a group of squatters occupied a former Lloyds TSB private bank in Clifton, Bristol.
Police, a security guard and the estate agents have all been round. The new Section 6 for commercial buildings worked and we're still in the building.
Police, a security guard and the estate agents have all been round. The new Section 6 for commercial buildings worked and we're still in the building.
You can't keep good squatters down - we just took a private bank!
The former Lloyds private bank in Clifton is in a grade 2 listed Victorian mansion. It's got four floors of big rooms and a veranda at the back. So far we've spent most of our time relaxing in the first floor conservatory which is light, airy and has a good view of the gate.
We got in on Sunday night through an open window at the back. We secured the building and made the burglar alarm go off by taping over all the movement sensors.
Police attended at 1pm on Sunday giving us time to wake up, have a coffee and enjoy our new home. There were six car loads of them including some plain clothes police. The new Section 6 for commercial buildings issued by ASS held them off even though the building looks fairly residential - it was originally built as a family homw with accommodation for six servants.
A security guard turned up at about 3pm on Sunday. It turned out his company had only been hired to protect the building "a few hours before". Heh! He was friendly and went away when we told him it was squatted.
Monday morning two reps from the estate agents marketing the building came round. Looks like they're going the legal route rather than trying anything dodgy.
We've talked to several of the neighbours already and generally they're friendly and supportive - more than we expected - which is good. They're unhappy about the building being left empty by the bank.
So BIG WIN - we'e loving being inside a posh as you get banker's building!
The former Lloyds private bank in Clifton is in a grade 2 listed Victorian mansion. It's got four floors of big rooms and a veranda at the back. So far we've spent most of our time relaxing in the first floor conservatory which is light, airy and has a good view of the gate.
We got in on Sunday night through an open window at the back. We secured the building and made the burglar alarm go off by taping over all the movement sensors.
Police attended at 1pm on Sunday giving us time to wake up, have a coffee and enjoy our new home. There were six car loads of them including some plain clothes police. The new Section 6 for commercial buildings issued by ASS held them off even though the building looks fairly residential - it was originally built as a family homw with accommodation for six servants.
A security guard turned up at about 3pm on Sunday. It turned out his company had only been hired to protect the building "a few hours before". Heh! He was friendly and went away when we told him it was squatted.
Monday morning two reps from the estate agents marketing the building came round. Looks like they're going the legal route rather than trying anything dodgy.
We've talked to several of the neighbours already and generally they're friendly and supportive - more than we expected - which is good. They're unhappy about the building being left empty by the bank.
So BIG WIN - we'e loving being inside a posh as you get banker's building!
inks
Comments
Hide the following 11 comments
Make the fuckers pay
01.10.2012 16:35
The harder the state comes down on us, more more people will get a thirst for real resistance - people will start waking up to the facts that our comrades from Chile to Greece have known for a long time: we are descending into fascism.
Well done for getting such a plush place - must have pissed them off at least.
pigeon
yay - my dongle is working
01.10.2012 17:50
Rumours we've been evicted are, I'm happy to say, entirely false. And as the owners haven't served papers on us today we're good until after the weekend at least.
We sent out a press release earlier, one local journalist has already been in touch, so we should get a bit of coverage in a day or two.
inks
solidarity from amsterdam
01.10.2012 21:41
amsterdoom krakers
you let the press in and...
02.10.2012 22:50
anarko squatter
We let accredited press in and
03.10.2012 10:49
They've also reported who the owners are and what purpose the building was used for and that it's been empty for a year.
The owners are Lloyds TSB private banking, they specialise in advising high yield individuals who wish to invest between 2-20 million in off-shore accounts.
Question to ask the leaseholders, Lloyds TSB, is; Why as a majority owned public bank, are they providing these offshore tax haven services.
Question to ask the freeholders, which is Coventry Diocese Finance Board; Why as a church body are they leasing one of their properties to a tax dodging private banking arm of what should be a nationalised bank?
Why has the building been empty for over a year?
They've also reported that the section 6 worked fine with the police, we used the new A.S.S one , despite the property looking exactly like a residential from the outside, we did provide the police in attendance with a laminated floor plan we found inside that showed it was offices.
We also now feel a lot more assured that CBRE (property agency) and Lloyds wont be trying an illegal, drill the locks out, eviction attempt at 7 in the morning.
Resident
@ Resident
03.10.2012 12:25
the tories are starting their anti-commercial squatting campaign right now, and the last thing we need is a repeat of last years stories. wise up, the media are not out to help us.
anarko squatter
surprise surprise
03.10.2012 13:13
All the article does is reinforce the stereotype that all squatters are middle class occupy-types living in million pound mansions.
@
Oh hush now
03.10.2012 13:27
All the press coverage has been more favourable than we expected. We're going to try for a licence from Lloyds or at least not possession forthwith from the courts so everything helps. Bluntly we've not got our next squat lined up so every day we can squeeze out of this place is important.
And we are getting - in a small way - a message across about the finance industry, properties being used as investments, commercial buildings being empty and people needing housing.
inks
@ inks
03.10.2012 14:06
Old enough to know better than to let the Daily Mail into your squat then.
>> All the press coverage has been more favourable than we expected.
If you were expecting bad coverage then why stage it as a media event in the first place?
>>We're going to try for a licence from Lloyds or at least not possession forthwith from
>>the courts so everything helps.
What possible reason would Lloyds have to give you a license?
>>Bluntly we've not got our next squat lined up so every day we can squeeze out of this
>>place is important.
Join the club, pal!
If this is about housing yourselves, then get on with it and house yourselves, what do you need to get the media involved for? If it's a media event or an action, then give them something better than a few squatters sitting in an empty house!
Sorry to be so negative but if we're going to stop a repeat of the kind of media coverage that aimed to manufacture consent for S144 then we need to be a bit more clever with how we interact with the media.
@
I dunno
03.10.2012 17:13
You want us to stay in semi-derelict places in east Bristol, not talk to the media and not even bother trying for a licence or getting possession delayed.
No doubt you will shortly be carrying out much better thought through actions that will really change things for everyone for the better. Let us know when you get started. Meanwhile we'll carry on, if that's alright with you.
inks
@ anarko
04.10.2012 10:04
Yes we're aware there's propaganda starting about commercial squatting, I remember Ken Clarke spouting about it last year when criminalisation was first being reported about. There's also a lot of rhetoric about the need for work-houses to be brought back and benefit vouchers to be issued to the "deserving poor" and this is in the context of worsening economic indicators for most people across the E,U,
If your going to challenge and change peoples thinking just a little bit then using all means at your disposal is a better option I find, rather then limiting yourself to certain political dogmas, like never talking to the press and other restrictive un-questionable anarcho points of view.
We were talking about housing benefit being stopped to under 25 year olds and restricted to shared occupancy for under 35's, one of the journalists said she would never have been able to be a journalist had that come in when she was claiming and studying.
More and more people are being run over by the austerity bus and to keep ourselves within what you might see as a safe medium isn't the best way forward, We are people who are homeless, it can happen to anyone, and getting that basic message across is, I feel, important. I have no problem with you wanting to do what you want but I do have a problem when you start telling me what and how to do things, suggestions on how to do things better though is welcome.
And yes I believe we would of got negative press, given squatting events in the area this year. so instead of initial random press turning up we arranged things first and we think gave ourselves a better angle to begin with.
Mike Weatherley would sell his family to slavery if it benefited his financial backers, we can't do anything about changing that but we can show our neighbours that most of us who squat are just everyday people. Do you see the message we're trying to put across here.
Resident